No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Prehistoric Air Fryer
Episode Date: February 29, 2024Dan, James, Andy and Melanie Bracewell discuss swooping birds, shooting baskets, gaming downloads and grilling dinosaurs. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more ...episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hi everyone, welcome to this week's episode of No Such Thing as a Fish.
Anna Toshinsky is still off on her holly bobs.
And so we have for you a very, very special guest.
It is Melanie Bracewell.
Now, those of you down under will know who Melanie is.
She is a regular on television in Australia and New Zealand.
She's recently been on New Zealand Taskmaster.
If anyone outside of New Zealand has nautily managed.
to get hold of that on the tubes.
You'll know her from that.
But we've actually known Mel for many, many years.
We first met her when we did our New Zealand tour many years ago.
We've been wanting to get her on the podcast for ages and ages.
And finally, she is in the UK and she came on the show.
And actually, that brings me to the fact that she is touring the UK at the moment.
So if you listen to this podcast, you like what you hear.
I know you will because she's absolutely brilliant.
she's so funny, then definitely get down to one of her gigs.
You'll have to get in there fast because she is already right in the middle of that tour.
But if you're listening to this as soon as it comes out,
then you just about have enough time to get to her gigs in Stafford, Edinburgh,
Glasgow, London, Cambridge and Birmingham.
That's all happening in the next week or so.
And of course, if you are in Australia or New Zealand,
then she's doing loads of gigs down there.
And actually in the UK, she'll be back to do the Edinburgh Festival in the summer.
So if you want to know any more about Melanie, go to Melaniebracewell.com.
And if you want to know where she's playing, then go to Melaniebracewell.com forward slash gigs.
Really hope you enjoy this show. I'm absolutely certain you will.
So let's just say on with the podcast.
Hello and welcome to another episode and no such thing as a fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hovern.
My name is Dan Shriver. I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter.
Murray, James Harkin, and Melanie Braswell.
And once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, that is Mel.
Yes, my fact this week is that a study of magpies in Australia has revealed that magpies do not like to be studied.
So this was a study that they did at the University of the Sunshine Coast.
They were trying to track flight patterns and things of magpies.
They developed these very special trackers that were only 1% of a magpie's body weight.
They're like, this is perfect.
And they put these trackers on the birds, and they quickly just started pecking them away.
And they went, oh, they're not being very successful.
It'll be okay.
And then other magpies came and just helped them pick the trackers off of them.
So at first they were sort of, you know, you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours,
and they were picking them off each other.
But then they found that other magpies who didn't even have a trackers,
in the first place were helping the other Megpies to get rid of their trackers.
So they were showing behaviours of like altruism.
And so they were like, actually, this is quite a good study.
So that's how they know.
I was hoping they decoded like some corals of theirs and then translates as piss off, mate.
Probably.
Actually, you know, 1% of your body weight, be almost a kilo.
What are my clothes?
What are my clothes weigh?
I don't know.
Let's weigh your clothes now.
No, let's not take them all off now and weigh them.
But you do have a good point because magpies do have a reputation for being dicks.
But falsely, so basically only 8 to 10% of magpies will swoop people.
Only the male magpies and only in one month of the year.
Hashtag not all myvies.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, this is a really interesting thing because magpies are over on this side of the planet as well.
But Aussie magpies, they're actually a different species to the European magpie.
There's just not anything to do with each other.
So I remember saying to people, oh, magpie swoop,
and that being an alien concept here,
but you live in Australia.
You know the danger, the fear of walking down a street
and a magpie swooping on you.
And the problem is because they're very smart
and they recognize faces,
if they decide that they don't like you,
they will target you.
So some people will just get swooped every day
on their way to work.
And so that's why they've earned that reputation.
Have you been swooped?
I have been swooped once in my life,
but my boyfriend loves booed.
a lot and he has decided when we first moved to Australia he was going to become friends
with all that's the other thing because they can recognise your face you can actually
make a friend for life yeah and they stay in the same neighbourhood so if you move into a
neighbourhood and there are magpies there they will be the same magpies for like 20 years it's really
high stakes when you move in so you've got you've got a chance to make a good impression
and if you blow it long-term grudges are held yeah but they only usually live for about five
years. Can't the family like in the mafia
remember and bear a grudge?
Didn't we save age? I mean that was crows we were talking about ages and ages ago I think
Christ Barragh Grudge.
They do, yes. And they, the school children are often targeted by magpies because
they often wear school uniforms. So if one child has thrown a rock at a magpie,
they will then view all children as threats. And so
they will just attack. Same with like if they determine if you're wearing like something
covering your face or your head.
a bike helmet, they view that as a threat of like, what are you hiding from?
And then they will then swoop you for that.
Does anyone come across Emma Glenfield when you're doing this research?
No.
So we're talking about school kids.
She was in Australia and she'd been watching people be swooped by these magpies.
And she thought, it seems to me like they're going for bold people more.
The bold teachers, they seem to be going for the bold teachers.
And she asked her mom, is this a thing?
And her mom said, well, I don't know if it's a thing.
you know, do your homework or whatever.
And anyway, she decided to do a study.
So she went to her school and she watched as these magpie swooped people
and then did a survey of anyone who'd been swooped saying, you know,
how tall are you, what's your hairstyle, what's sexy you, all that kind of stuff.
What's your hairstyle?
None.
Well, then she spoke about 100 people around the school.
But then it went online and she got 30,000 people to part of it.
on her survey online and she found that statistically magpies are more likely to go for bold people
And according to a magpie expert called Darrell Jones
Her study is the first time anyone's ever examined this link and so she's doing brand new science
I love this about people so you know what bold people should do then draw a face on the back of their head
What magpies are less likely to go at anything that has eyes and so if you're if they're sweeping from behind they're just seeing a bold head
altogether. Oh, that could be icy. Yeah. So there are a few things that people think they've
worked out that magpies won't sweep out. One is if you have eyes at the back of your head. So
people are often cyclists might often wear glasses, sunglasses on the back of their head facing
that way to give the impression there are eyes there. A bit like in, is it in Africa, we might have said
before, where they draw eyes on the bums of cows. Yes, exactly.
To stop them being attacked by lions. Yeah. Yeah. Because you can't be sneaked up on.
Yeah. It's so funny, they're a protected national species. So if a bagpie attacks you, you can't attack
back, you kind of just have to let it happen.
Really? Yeah. That's funny. And so what they
do then is if they've identified an aggressive
magpie, they have to
ship him out of there. But there's a minimum distance
which is like 25 kilometres so
because they'll just fly back. They don't
respect the restraining order. Yeah, exactly.
Have you heard of the Windsor Road monster?
No. That's an Australian
magpie. Specific
one, which was especially aggressive
and had to be put down in the end.
But it took a very long time.
I'd have to say, the Windsor Road Monster
was given multiple chances to learn and change.
And it attacked, well, there were more than 40 complaints.
One person had a heart attack shortly after being swooped.
Which is not the fact...
You know, there could be other things happening in that person's life
that makes them more susceptible to a heart attack.
It's not necessarily the...
That's true. That's true.
But it did...
No, you're right.
But it was going for people's faces.
It was going under cyclists' helmets to get them.
It was even for an Australian magpie.
It was being especially aggressive.
You're bald under their mate?
What's your one?
They're just trying to protect their ground.
They spend most of their life just protecting their area.
So they choose their radius and it's quite small
and they will just spend the whole time just standing like as bounces
on the edge of their patch being like, don't come in here all the time.
There was one cyclist who I read about called Dr Richard Osborne
who came up with this new cycle helmet.
I think I've seen this.
Does it have a face on it?
No, it doesn't have a face. Can you guess what it is?
He uses a thing I have around my house to scare them away.
So I know this, so I won't guess.
Okay.
I could have seemed really smart.
Oh, it's tough using James' personality to like out.
A golf club.
What do you know about things that happen in my life in the last two weeks?
In the last two weeks?
Yeah, yeah.
All my family members.
Your kid has had a birthday.
Great.
Yeah.
Your daughter was two years old
So you see
You put the hours in with people
What a lot?
What a way to find out
That's your daughter's both day
Oh no
Uncle Dan hasn't forgotten about you
No no he's been very busy
I've shown the gifts on its way
Oh my God
She's built a helmet
To ward Dan away
And does the bike have a model
Baby pinioned on top of it
Or a doll
It has
You know these party blowers
Where you blow them
And they go
and they kind of stick out
he has those attached to his helmet
and there's a tube attached to them
so that wherever a magpie comes there
he blocks into the tube and they all go
Is this what you were thinking about?
No!
I had to see the guy who had tied
a lot of cable ties to his ears
and that's very funny. And does he
has it sort of caught on
and more than... Well no it's not caught on
because he looks like an idiot but
he said it seemed a bit safer than
carrying a stick of waving it around which was
his other option. Or having spikes, which a lot of
people do. They're not sharp spikes, but they are
sticky out. Is that right? Yeah, yeah.
Just as a deterrent. The best thing to do is to
just be nice to them. Because they will remember you being nice. So what happens is
people run away and they go, oh, you are guilty. Why are you running?
Therefore, it just tells this prophecy
in their head. But to be nice, if you're in their area,
how can you be nice? You just feed them. You just
leave them out like little peanuts and things. That's what my boyfriend has been
trying to do, like leaving peanuts outside our young.
Is it working?
Yes.
And then when they like you, they'll bring their kids along to be like, here's my kids.
You miss their birthday.
Yeah.
But one nice thing that you can do for them is actually something that will get you in trouble
with them, which is if you see one of their babies struggling and you go to help it, they
will view that as you hurting their babies because they haven't introduced you to it.
So be careful how nice you are.
And that's why you didn't give a gift.
Yeah.
It might be viewed as a threat.
Playgrounds are like that, you know.
Are they?
that's struggling and you go over to help it,
their parents might think,
who's this guy who's approaching my child?
Yes.
This guy is left the fence.
I can't remember not or wear my costume when I'm doing that.
I'm weighing my clothes.
Do you have lots of superstitions about them in Australia?
I have heard of these superstitions,
but I don't think I follow them in my day-to-day life.
Because that's pretty much what they're well known for here, right?
Yeah.
I follow quite a few.
So when you see one, do you say like,
Hello, Mr Magpie.
Where's your wife or something?
Good morning, my lord, and has your wife and children.
Yes.
Right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And do you do that?
I do.
Yeah.
If you see one on its own, seeing two is fine, three is, whatever.
But one on its own, bad luck, so he's quickly.
Because in Australia, that's a lot to get out while it's coming for your eyes.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Australia, ah!
That's it's what they're saying, yeah.
But no, there are all these things.
Like, the Magpie landed on the cross when Christ was being crucified.
Or the tongue of the tongue of it.
a magpie contains a drop of blood from the devil himself.
I think if they open their mouth, there is a little bit of red in there, isn't there?
I think that's why they associated with Jesus.
And that's why if you scratch its tongue with the edge of a silver sixpence and put a drop
of blood into the wound, it will gain the power of speech.
We've all been there.
There's so much slander about them from back in the day, particularly religious.
So the one about the crucifix, apparently it was the only bird not to cry.
when Jesus was crucified.
Wow.
And that was big news.
And then in the 19th century,
there was a vicar who said
it was the only bird
that refused to go on Noah's Ark.
Rather, it just hung outside swearing instead.
In France, the idea is that a magpie
is a reincarnated evil nun.
I can see it, I guess.
British magpies eat a lot of dog poo.
Well, that's good.
Yeah.
Even if there's other food around,
they'll eat the dog poo.
No, really?
Yeah, yeah.
And so such the exchevice,
extent that people in parks have noticed that they'll, because they're quite smart, obviously,
magpies, they'll go to the dog poo bins, pull out a bag of dog poo, rip open the bag of dog poo,
and then have a little snack.
Oh, my God.
Have some self-respect.
What?
That's awful.
It was nutritious.
Might taste great.
I've never tried.
I don't know if it's good or not.
Oh.
I just said, we don't know.
You said might taste great.
Yeah.
And I heard you saying mine tastes great.
And I just were, actually, I'm just going to gloss on the move past it.
Because, you know, we've got a guest.
You guys at a park is that you're trying to go through the dog poo.
You're naked at a playground.
It's a whole image.
James has got a party.
He was scrimmed out his head.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
They do have them in New Zealand.
They do, yes.
But they've come over from Australia.
Apparently no one's trying to get rid of them in New Zealand.
You know, like in New Zealand, there's quite a lot of invasive species
and they're trying to get rid of them.
Well, they're not doing it with magpies because it's too hard, basically.
Yeah.
You get rid of two mag pies.
from an area and then the next two will move in.
But apparently what I read is they've got a bad reputation in New Zealand,
these mag pies, because they're big, showy, noisy, and according to the article,
it must be said, Australian.
Yes.
Yeah.
That really does rub us the wrong way.
So I can understand that.
Did you hear of these climatization societies?
Because that was the Australian magpies, but they were introduced to New Zealand.
by society's saying,
I'm not sure what the rationale was actually,
because it was not as though they were going to be hunted.
Well,
they thought that there wasn't enough nice animals in New Zealand.
And in fact,
I've heard that a lot, yeah,
famously,
it's not.
Well,
they're like,
you know,
there's not,
there's no endemic mammals to New Zealand
apart from a bat.
So,
like,
any mammals weren't really there.
They got there and they're like,
where's the rabbits?
Yeah.
You know,
where's the tweeting birds?
We don't know where they are.
But I feel like it's such a bird-heavy place.
or certainly would have been in the 19th century
as in why would you introduce more birds?
Yeah, maybe some that can fly
would be useful.
Exactly.
Like the Kakapo, that's a New Zealand.
Yeah, but a lot of them kind of hide
in the middle of the night.
Even the kiwi bird, I don't think I've ever seen one.
You go to the zoo and they say they're in there.
But I don't reckon that I think it's just
they put a red light in a like cave looking area
and they go, there's Kiwi in there.
It's like Tasmanian devils
I've gone every year to see a Tasmanian devil
at Tarongazoo in Sydney
and you never see one
You never see them spinning around like a tornado
You do hear a bit of that in the background
Okay
It is time for fact number two
That is James
Okay my fact this week is that the sport of netball
Was invented because its creator thought
Basketball made women grow bitter
And lose control
Wow
As a player of both sports, I will say this is true.
I play social netball, you know, and it's always very wholesome.
The slogan of netball is just, you know, here if you need.
It's so beautiful.
That's just what you say a lot, you know, when you pass the ball.
You go, here if you need.
Like, pass it all the needs.
Here, if you need, like, I'm over here.
It's very wholesome.
But then I play basketball and I become a feral beast.
So interesting.
So what's the key difference that causes that?
I don't know if this is...
Well, basketball is technically no contact.
But you're trying to take the ball off someone and you can run beside them.
So basics and netball is once you catch the ball, you can't move.
If you're taking a shot, no one can defend you.
They can...
From three feet away.
Which is, I would argue, too many feet.
And you can't dribble along the call.
You can't dribble.
Okay, okay, okay.
So anyway, this all comes from a woman called Clara Bear,
who was working at Newcomb College in New Orleans.
and she'd been asked to come up with a new sport for women to play
because this was an all-women's school.
And she decided, she came up with a few ideas,
but her main one was to adapt sports of being played by men.
So basketball had just become really popular,
had been invented by James Naismith a few years earlier,
and so she wrote to him and asked for the rules.
She got the rules and said, right, we're going to play basketball.
But anyone who was there said it was a mad game
in which the women grew bitter and lost control.
Even she herself said it was not entirely satisfied.
satisfactory. And so she thought, well, I'm going to have to invent a new game which doesn't have all this stuff because this is just not appropriate to women. And so she came up with netball.
Interesting. You say that netball is a non-contact sport, but I don't think it actually is because non-contact would be something like tennis where you genuinely don't touch anyone else. But netball, there are certain rules. So if I was to run into the space to get the ball and someone else is running in and I shoulder barge them on the way, that is completely within the rules of the game.
The art of learning to play netball
is to learn how to be very aggressive
within the confines of the rules
Yeah, yeah, okay
Yeah, we used to play it at school
And I went to a studio
Yeah, I went to a Steiner school
So I think that was more,
It feels like a made up Steiner sport, really
Steiner's a very hippie, non-competitive kind of thing
And it feels like instead of basketball
Let's do netball instead
So can I check a few more rules?
Yeah, so Mel, do they still
No shouting or talking during the game?
Is that still observed?
Interesting.
Where is that from?
That's from the most recent rule.
That's from Clara Baer's founding rules of the game.
You can't talk back to the umpire, so you couldn't say, oh, what was that?
In the first rules for sure, if you spoke, if you said anything in the game, it was a foul.
Oh, wow.
Even here if you need.
Yeah, you won't want to say that.
I read No Falling Over was also a real thing.
It's struggling to compute.
That seems a bit harsh, isn't it?
It does.
It's a weird rule.
there's sort of a hangover of that
if you catch the ball and you fall over
you're not allowed to move with the ball
but if you are on the ground
you can't throw the ball from the ground
so you have to make your way back up to standing
before you can throw the ball
but you have to keep your feet planted
so where your feet landed when you fell over
you have to just weirdly stand up
do you look like one of those inflatable car selling
balloon guns
you just have to rise up
yeah that's great that's brilliant
that's a good rule I like that
She also said no needlessly rough play was in her rules.
And all shots had to be taken with one hand.
Because there was a thought that by throwing it with two hands,
it was unladylike and might somehow make women less feminine.
It was the idea.
I read there would be inclination of the shoulders forward
with consequent flattening of the chest.
Oh.
Precisely.
And that would not be a graceful position for girls.
That's what they said.
But it's interesting because the one-handed throw was in netball.
From the very start, they had one-handed throw.
But in basketball, there was none of it until about the 1930s.
It was all two-handed throwing into the baskets.
As a rule, was it?
No, it's just...
That was the way they did it, yeah.
Yeah.
I love as well that she basically, she originally was starting basketball as a female
version of it.
And she called it Basketball.
She just changed it to Q-U-E-T-E-Baskuit.
Well, I think what happened there is she wrote to Naismith, who came up with the original thing.
And she said, here's my new sport.
What do you think?
It's women's basketball.
And he wrote back saying, well, it's...
not really the same as basket bowl, so you should change the name a little bit.
She said, okay, I'll change it to basketball.
And then part of the rules were developed because she just misunderstood what he'd sent back.
There were dots all over it, and she took that to mean seven different zones,
so you would be stuck in your zone, and that, yeah, that got applied to the initial rules.
We should have not still changed.
Yeah, yeah.
A goalkeeper is still in one third of the court.
A center can go in most of the court, but not the two.
It's very complicated.
It's not very sociable, is that?
Like if, there's some people.
who never really see.
Exactly.
Like I will chat to a goal shooter as a goalkeeper a lot,
but I will never see my team's goal shooter.
I just go, oh, well done.
But it's safe and the women look very womanly as a result.
What a relief.
The vision has remained from Clara Bear.
Do you play volleyball as well, Mel?
I don't.
I just play netball and basketball.
Because apparently volleyball may have been nicked
basically a month after the first game of Newcomb.
ball, which was another thing.
Clara Bear invented Newcomb ball, but you throw the ball
into the other team's area, so it hits the floor.
Yes, without them being able to catch it.
One month after that, first game was written up.
William Morgan, the YMCA director
in the USA, he invented volleyball.
And it was basically, apparently, for older businessmen on their lunch hour,
was how it was described.
Which I think it has not stayed true to over the years.
You know a beach volleyball?
Yeah.
There's an official rule that you're only allowed to wear one watch.
Oh, wow.
It's in the actual rule.
It says only one watch.
What possible advantage do you go in from two watches?
What do you think?
How interesting.
You would know what time it is in another part of the world.
Do you know the answer?
I think I do, yeah.
Okay, so what advantage would you have?
I mean, you're never going to.
I have a punt.
Is it that people were doing sponsorship deals with multiple watch companies?
I can't believe that.
Interesting.
Yay.
Wow.
Because there's actually some rules about how many tattoo, like temporary tattoos you're allowed
because people use those for advertising.
No.
Obviously, don't have...
Small real estate.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
It was so funny, isn't it?
Because netball is so big in New Zealand and Australia.
I wasn't sure how much you guys knew about the sport.
I know you play it in England.
You've got a very popular team.
But I was like, oh, I wonder what's some unknown facts about netball.
So, of course, I looked it up.
And I found an article titled Fascinating Facts about Netball that you never knew.
Okay.
Number one was, how long is a netball game?
Oh. Okay, well, let's try.
Does anyone here know how long?
I do not know.
I will guess it's 80 minutes.
Oh, I think it's less.
I've watched games, but I can't remember how long they were.
I reckon maybe 60 minutes in quarters.
Yeah.
That's what I'm thinking.
I'm trying to work out is it quarters as well.
And so I'm going to say 60 because I heard you just say yes.
Yes, I acknowledge your answer and it's incorrect.
No, no, it is actually.
It's four 15 minute quarters.
Nice.
Fascinating fact.
Yes, fascinating fact.
Number two, what is netball?
That's funny.
I think there's an real entry-level article that I'd come across.
I love the way that the first thing you need to learn is how long it is.
And then the second one is what is this?
It's like, do you want to play netball?
Well, how long will it be?
It's 60 minutes.
I've got two watches on.
You're right.
So I grew up in Oz for my teenage years.
Netball was massive there.
And I assumed it was globally massive.
It's an American invention.
But in America, it's not really played.
It's getting back now.
And particularly, Ozies and New York,
New Zealanders keep going over to schools to try and reintegrate it.
So Ross Day is someone who went over to try and get it done.
And she said, what are the biggest challenges?
I can't believe this is true.
It must be tug-in-cheek.
She says, one of the biggest challenges is that when we're pitching netball,
is that because of our accents, being Aussie and New Zealand,
everyone thinks we're saying nipple.
Yes, I get this.
I will say something about netball on TV.
I'll be like, oh, that was a great netball play.
And it has a whole different meaning in the comments.
like, what are you talking about?
Wow.
So someone will come up to you and say,
do you want a better nipple play?
How long will it be?
Wait, quick double check.
It is what you think it is.
What is nipole?
That's so funny.
I like the early forms of basketball
were interesting as well.
I like how they first started with like a peach basket,
but they didn't think to put a hole in the bottom.
So in the early games,
they would have to stop the game to go retrieve the ball from the basket and like climb up a ladder.
I suppose in a way if you have a hole it's not always certain if the ball's gone in.
Yeah, that is true.
Is that that presumably never?
Sometimes if I shoot in it, like because you go for the swish sound, but sometimes you could just shoot so far that it just hits the net and makes that sound anyway and you go, oh, I'll count it.
In football, there's been in soccer there's been this thing where you have like a board next to the goal.
I think it was in Queens Park Rangers
and they scored a goal
and it hit the board
and then bounced straight back out again
and the goal didn't get given
because...
What?
Yeah.
I don't understand how that...
So it hit the board next to the...
So it's gone into the net?
Yeah, sorry, I didn't explain that very well.
So you've got the goal, the goalposts
and you've got the net
but then you've got an advertising board
right behind the goal
and so the ball goes in,
hits the advertising board
bounces straight back out again
and the referee goes,
well, I didn't see it going.
Oh!
And it happened quite really.
recently where there was a hole in the net, as in one that wasn't supposed to be there,
are bigger than the normal holes in.
And the ball went in and it went through the hole and no one could tell whether it had gone in or not.
That's good.
That's a good thing for a goalie to do when the action's happening up the other end.
Selectively saw through the net and then you'll be...
Saw.
Like more widely clearly.
When you were sort of part of the New Zealand netball scene,
did you, do you know anyone who played for the master baiters?
Do you remember this?
No.
Okay.
It was just a cheeky little fun New Zealand thing,
but there was a Sydney World Masters games
where all netball teams were coming,
and there was a lot of New Zealand teams that were coming over,
and they named themselves the masturbators.
Why?
Well, it was a Masters, and they were baiting.
So with the Master Baiters.
Yeah, the second part is that they're baiting?
What are they baiting?
What are they baiting the other teams?
Oh, I see.
I didn't come up with it.
I like how the sport of netballs evolved quite a lot.
There's different versions of these fast five,
which is basically made it more like basketball.
There's five people on the court,
and you can shoot three-point or two-pointers and things.
The Northern Mystics used a new move called the Harrison Hoist,
because you have to be three feet away,
and so they have been practicing like a cheerleader lift.
And so she lifted her up
and she was able to bat the ball out of the air
as it was going into the hoop.
And yeah, it's allowed.
It was in the rules of the game
and they were going to go,
oh, we'll save this for the finals,
but then they were like,
okay, we might not get a finals.
So they had to do it in like a qualifying match.
It's one of those things that they don't do all the time now
because in theory if you knew it was coming,
you could kind of counter it
because you could only have two defenders in the circle.
So they had to use all of their resources.
But if you didn't see it coming,
you were like, oh, just a shot.
You know, and then suddenly she's in the sky.
So it's like a rugby throw-in, basically,
the way that they're lifted into the air.
You're not allowed to do that in football, by the way.
Yeah, wow.
It's in the rules, officially in the rules.
Isn't it?
As in piggybacks.
Spoken like a true athlete.
And it's in the air and you want to head the ball in.
And I think, well, I'm going to give my mate a piggyback.
It's not allowed.
It's ungentlemanly conduct.
It's called it's an indirect free kick to the other team
and both players should be cautioned.
Get out.
Wow.
That's unfair.
I think you've got the weble to put together a piggyback in that time.
You should be allowed to do it.
That was in my, because I trained as a football referee.
And that was one of the questions that came up.
It's like, what do you do in this situation?
Wow.
You give him a stern finger wendles.
I really want to watch Andy's version of football, though.
It's a corner kick.
He's gone for the piggyback.
It's got in.
Oh no.
Someone's soared through the back of the lab.
And it has gone right through.
No points.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Andy.
My fact is that when the asteroid which wiped out the dinosaurs hit,
there was a brief burst of radiation so strong,
it would have immediately cooked some dinosaurs through.
Whoa, like an air friar.
Yes, exactly, like an air friar.
This is, it's much less fun than I've made it sound for the dinosaurs,
but what a, you know, for a brief...
Fun for like the mammals survived, did they?
So could they have come out and eaten some dinosaurs?
are cooked? Yes, yes
they probably could. But you say for a
brief moment so it was perfectly cooked
and then they were charred
beyond oblivion? Is that?
Because you could say, oh here is my
roast for a brief moment. It was
amazing but
it is a pile of ash
now.
Yeah, that moment, no, you're right. You're absolutely right.
I think a lot of the ones weren't precise
settings on. This is from a fantastic
book I've just read. It's called Not the End of
the World by Hannah Ritchie and
It's about completely different stuff actually.
It's about sustainability and the sort of big planetary challenges.
But she's writing in this bit about, you know,
extinct and events and how fascinating some of those have been over the past.
And this is about the dinosaurs.
65 million years ago, 66.
66.
A while ago.
And the asteroid hits.
It was an old book that you read.
Thing hits.
There's a shockwave that moves at 17,000 miles an hour.
It's quite hard to get your...
head around some of this stuff. And then this huge amount, like cubic miles of rock get lifted up by
the impact. They then, so they've been liquidized into these little glass balls, which go all the
way around the planet immediately, and then that falls. Literally the kind of sky falls down.
Yeah, it rains glass. Yeah, liquid rock, basically. And lots of it gets blasted by friction in the
atmosphere, because it's coming back into the atmosphere, if you see. So then the energy is released
as infrared radiation, which turns into this massive blast of heat.
Frankly.
And if you're a dinosaur out in the open, it's bad news.
And it's really interesting because why didn't everything burn immediately at that point?
And basically, there was a study in 2016 by a scientist called Sean Gulick,
who found out that either it was like being in a toaster for a few hours
or a pizza oven for a few minutes.
It's bad news if you were out in the open.
Okay.
So would there be some dinosaurs who were the furthest away that would be nicely cooked?
I think that'd be a medium round.
So they get cooked by the radiation.
Their innards are just completely just, they're cooked.
So they die immediately?
Or is it kind of like radiation where...
If you were out in the open,
there's a very good chance you would have died at that point.
Because it's such a blast of searing heat
for a relatively long time,
longer than you'd be comfortable with.
It's not just like a sauna.
No, it's...
For a brief moment in time,
their muscles were very relaxed.
It is nice.
reading about it.
I mean, it was pretty striking.
It was a big old rock, wasn't it?
A big old rock.
I found one weird thing.
This is good.
Right, so I think we've said before it was the size of Mount Everest, the rock there.
And it was travelling 20 times the speed of a bullet.
It was really, really huge.
Big and fast.
Big and fast.
And it was so big and first that when it arrived,
it was pushing the atmosphere in front of it so rapidly
that the crater from the impact started to form before it hit.
Oh yeah.
I just pushed the surface of the earth down.
Oh my God.
It's amazing that, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's insane.
I became friends recently with the dinosaur hunter, which is a paleontologist, who's the person who has verified that the asteroid landed in spring.
I think you guys met her very briefly in Belgium.
Oh, yeah.
When we're at Nerdland, the festival.
It was all to do with the specific fish that as it was being carried in the tsunamis, which was not just water.
It was also Earth, like an Earth tsunami.
So the glass that had come down went in through the filters of the fish,
like went through the mouth and were inside.
So when they found the fossilized versions of these fish,
they found the glass.
And these specific fish are the type of fish that have growths in their body
that change per season.
Oh, that's so handy.
So during spring they grow these extra little things.
So they spotted that and they went, well, that could only happen in spring.
Therefore, in spring on the side of the planet that it's on,
that's where that happened.
That is amazing.
It's really nuts.
It is not.
That's hard.
You know, you're going to deal with an asteroid and hay fever at the same time.
I was looking at extinct meat because a cultivated meat company in Australia made a mammoth
meatball last year.
Yes.
Yes.
I heard about this year.
Using a DNA sequence from the mammoth myoglobin, which is the protein that gives the meat its flavor,
and filled in a few gaps using elephant DNA.
and then they made this meatball.
They did not eat the meatball.
They just put it on display to be like,
this is a mammoth people.
I don't know.
I think they were just,
they were like,
we haven't really tested this
whether this is safe for human consumption.
Oh, really?
Just make the meatball,
I guess probably to get a bit of press.
Is it the size of a normal meatball?
Because you think if it was a mammoth meatball,
you would deliberately make it much bigger.
Yeah, exactly.
I didn't get, it wasn't next to like a can of Coke,
so I'm not sure.
But it looked regular meatball size.
Maybe you wouldn't because then it would just confuse the purchaser or the person looking at it.
Go, oh, I get it's mammoth. It's big.
It's like just not even considering the extraordinary science that it's got into this.
I would have eaten that.
You would have?
Without knowing the health implications.
Yes.
It's interesting.
How interesting.
Okay.
But I feel like they've grown it.
No animals have been harmed.
Yeah.
So I'm a veggie, but I would love to.
Yes.
I think the same thing because my boyfriend's vegetarian and he says that if they're
We reached the point where we could just have cultivated meat made from the actual sales.
Then he'd be, oh, it's fine, I don't eat that.
I think it's come a long way in the last few years.
I think the first patty they made, like a mince patty, I started just with mince patties,
was I think $300,000, so quite an expensive burger.
But it's come down now where they think that they could, you know, release.
To like $200,000.
Release them into supermarket.
So it's rapidly.
I experiment quite a lot with those.
I tried some salmon the other day, which I have to say was not there.
Oh, yes, like the fake salmon.
Not the like made from actual.
Sorry, yeah.
I think they just keep adding salt until it has some kind of flavor and then it's fine.
I had a vegan Domino's pepperoni pizza a couple of nights ago.
That's not an ad.
And I could not taste a difference.
Really?
Genuinely could not taste a difference.
I will just say for the listeners at home, he does have a Domino's tattoo.
He's trying to show off.
And he's wearing two watches, which seems to taste.
to be a domino's pizza.
Yeah, what's that?
Oh, pizza time.
Can I ask, did it have cheese on it?
It did.
Well, no, but it had vegan cheese.
It has vegan cheese on it.
Yeah, it's a vegan pizza.
They used to have a vegan pizza, because we're seeing it as we're talking about
pizza.
They used to have a vegan pizza express down the road from here, which only sold vegan pizzas.
And it was the most disgusting thing, though.
The cheese, like, they just couldn't do good vegan cheese.
Maybe they can now.
It's all about the mouth feel.
Sure.
And the stretch.
That's your Tinder bio.
The mouth feeling is strict.
I found an essay in a scientific journal called
Evolution, Education and Outreach,
and it asked which items a Jewish time traveller would be able to eat
because they were kosher or not.
Can you guess the headline of this article?
50 points to anyone who does is getable.
Oh, is it a pun?
Back to the jucha.
A juchin.
That's not that.
So it's about the food.
It's about the food that you're, you know,
might be eating.
Is it to do with time travel?
It's to do with a very famous dinosaur-based franchise.
Jurassic pork.
Jurassic pork.
Beautiful.
Jurassic pork.
Beautiful.
And it was, that's a good headline.
Yes, that's good.
And it was about what basically a Jewish time traveler who wanted to eat
contemporaneous food would be allowed to eat.
And basically very few dinosaurs are kosher, it turns out.
Some of them are birds, but even the bird ones lack the sort of
toe that you have to, if you're allowed to eat particular meats that are kosher, it's because
the, like, chicken, they've got a particular opposable toe, I think.
Right.
Mice are not allowed.
That's probably not relevant now.
So, sorry, Jurassic pork.
They actually just went with Jurassic.
They just went with Jurassic?
Yeah.
What Jew, Rassic pork?
I think they were correct in that.
I think Jurassic pork is...
It's sitting there.
I, yeah, I guess...
I had a complaint letter.
We said earlier,
65, 66 million years ago
with the extinction of the dinosaurs.
But do you know how long ago that is
in a galactic year?
I'd never heard of the galactic year before.
That must be something to do with the
travelling through the galaxy.
How long it takes the galaxy to go on once?
Exactly. I think it's three years ago.
In galaxy years.
Galactic year is 225 million years.
Roughly.
Sure of 10. Yeah. Incorrect.
Really?
So the dinosaurs were here 3.5 months ago.
in a galactic era.
So the dinosaurs were on Earth, but if you had a time machine, like, you know what does Doctor Who have?
It's like a TARDIS.
TARDIS, yeah.
You go into the TARDIS and you come back exactly in the same position in space.
Yeah.
But different time, the Earth won't be here anymore.
Yeah, we'll be further in space.
Yeah.
So you have to.
And if Dr. Jew was going through.
Sorry, I'm just trying to appeal.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah, it looks really.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show,
and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in the 1980s,
you could download video games over the radio.
What?
Wow.
Yeah.
What?
To a certain generation, that's going to be like,
there used to be a thing called Myspace.
Have you heard of DVDs?
I was alive in the 1980s, and I never heard that.
Yeah, no, I didn't think of this either.
This was the very early days of computers,
whereby hard drives were incredibly expensive.
So they used to have an audio cassette like you would in a stereo.
You could put a cassette in,
and that's where you would keep all the data of programs
that you were loading up.
So someone made the connection that actually,
if you're able to record onto a cassette,
you should be able to transfer multiple different kinds of data
over the radio.
And why not video games?
So what people used to do is they used to tune in to radio shows
that basically just played data over the waves.
You'd put your cassette in,
And you would press record and then you take it out, put it in your computer and there's your video game.
So these were dedicated radio stations.
It wasn't like, that was talking heads.
Now time for Tetris.
So what did the audio sound like?
Well, for people probably older than you, but younger than me, it would sound like, you know, when you had dial up internet?
Yeah.
And a fax came through on a phone line.
It's just like, yeah, it's exactly.
And the computer just takes that.
And if it's a high sound, it's a one.
And if it's a low sound, it's a zero.
And it just turns it into zeros and ones and makes games out.
Yeah. And to be fair, that could be confused as a very popular type of, like, techno.
The 18th century.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this was done for ages.
And then suddenly, obviously, modern technology and prices, you know, the equivalent of the mammoth burger coming down from 300,000,
they suddenly were able to afford to have hard drives and computers.
And so it slowly got wiped out.
But yeah, that was a thing that happened.
It's bizarre to think that you could take a video game,
Grand Theft also, by just listening to the radio and recording it.
I'm not used to the idea that data could be transmitted in ways that we can hear and understand.
It's so strange.
Yes.
Yeah.
And obviously data could be transmitted in ways we can hear and understand because I'm talking to you all.
Yeah.
But, yeah.
Yeah.
It's incredible.
And there was weird things that were done using this kind of novelty, I guess it was.
Radio West. Do you ever hear a Radio West James?
I think it's BBC and they just called it Radio West.
So it's sort of you get your local BBC in an area.
There used to be a host who was called,
what was he called? Sorry, hang on a sec.
There used to be a host called Joe Tozer, who used to work for...
How did you forget that name?
And it was number six this week.
Joe Tozzar and the masturbators.
I'm sorry, Joe, if you're listening.
But also, how was school?
That was a rough ride.
How do you spell it?
It could be Tozo.
Toza, yeah.
I'm sure he says Toza.
As in Fay Toza from Steps, her said.
Okay.
So we're pie to get together.
It's definitely a different name for me.
T-O-Z-E-R.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
He said, you went with Tozo.
Sorry, Joe.
But yeah, so he wants to broadcast the, the, the,
the data sounds of what ended up being a pixel image of one of Charlie's Angels Angels.
So the star, Cheryl Ladd.
So you recorded it down, put it into your computer, and slowly it pixelated together 40 by 80 pixels of the star.
40 by 80.
40 by 80.
It's sexy resolution.
It is.
It's not a boob or a head.
It's not clear.
And of course, you could do it with any.
You could do it with vinyl as well.
And there was some computer game.
magazines that would put little vinyals on front of the magazine and it would just play this
noise which your computer then would recognise as zeros and ones and would turn into a game.
It's all because you didn't have enough memory on your computer.
It's exactly that, yeah.
So your memory had to be on your cassette.
Yeah.
What are the limitations of it now?
So in theory, could we do it for a more complex game than Tetris or Pong?
You could for sure, I reckon.
But the problem is, because I used to have one of these computers.
computers with the cassettes on, it would take about 30 minutes to load any game onto your computer.
Okay.
And they were all really shit games.
They were fun, but the graphics were terrible and whatever.
And often you would get to the end of the 30 minutes and one of its zeros or ones would have
been read wrong and the whole thing would be NACA.
You'd have to start again.
And so if you wanted to put like Grand Theft Auto onto that, you'd probably have to make it play
for about 40 years.
Yeah, okay.
That'd be great to know because it can just start.
massive these. Mel, you're a gamer, aren't you?
I'm a little bit of a gamer, yes.
Can you get Boulder's Gate 3?
An audio form.
They did end up releasing very
specific audio blank cassettes that you could
get called Basic Code.
So it would guarantee
compatibility with your computer
as opposed to, I imagine there were a few audio
cassettes out there that didn't quite do it.
And so, yeah, you would tune in to either like
Datorama or Hobby Scoop, which were
specific radio stations that
just broadcast. But you can't
You can just put on Radio 4 and listen to the shipping forecast and make that into your own game, I find.
We used to do this as kids, actually, and we would have to guess whether it was rising slowly or, you know, I don't know if it's a pressure or something.
They go, doggar 75 rising slowly.
Yeah, right.
We had to guess what it was going to be.
That's good.
Who was the host of the shipping forecast?
I don't think it's got a host per se.
Or the person who reads.
I don't know.
I don't remember.
I think it's been the same person for about 40 years.
She's very famous.
Yeah.
she's married, I think, to Claire Boulding.
She, I was on a show with her once, and I was asked,
do you want to have any questions for her about the shipping forecast?
I didn't know what to ask because I'd never heard it.
So I said, what's your favorite ship?
That's a good question.
It's a good question.
Did she have an answer?
No, she was like, you haven't heard my show.
Have you?
I said, no, I haven't.
Good.
And she said, what's your favorite fish?
Did you hear of the game Great Britain Limited?
I was looking at some early spectrum games.
No.
In Great Britain Limited, it was a government simulation
where you managed the British economy.
I love it.
There's no way to win.
Did they give Liz Tras a go?
This is easy.
Yeah, you would like change little things
and then the inflation would go up or the unemployment would go down or vice versa.
And then every five years you would have an election.
And depending on how long you've done, it would say you've been kicked out or you've got another five years.
Wow.
That is so funny.
That's really good.
80s, yeah, early 80s.
Wow.
And it was government made?
No, it was just a lot of these games in the 80s, they were just made by kids in the bedroom.
Yeah, which was mad.
I went over to the home of a rider friend of,
my other friends and she was like, I want you to meet him.
He's really cool.
We went over and he just pulled out a whole archive of cassettes of games he invented.
Wow.
And that was the first time I ever learned that games could be put on an audio cassette.
It was a good time for creativity.
But just in a very shitty medium.
Much like the podcast.
Do you have any really weird games, Mel?
Do I have any weird games at one point?
Because I have quite an addictive personality when it comes.
to games. There is a very stupid game on Steam called cookie clicker. And it's literally a cookie
and you just click it and you get another cookie. But then you keep clicking and then you can
buy like a cafe that makes cookies. So you just, it's basically, I feel like it feeds the
endorphins in your brain because you just like keep clicking and then you can buy like an automatic
clicker with the cookies and then it will automatically click it for you. And then you can buy a factory
of cookies and you keep
But you have to keep clicking
But you could leave it for like an hour
Because you've run an automated system
Yeah
And then you come back and you're like
I've got four billion cookies
And you just it just feeds the endorphins in your brain
Because you're like I'm doing I'm getting better at this game
Do you say it's on Steam?
It's on Steam
It's on Steam a lot of it's steam
Steam is just
Oh dear that's so embarrassing
But just for the other people who don't know what it is
For those idiots listening at home
No just kidding
Steam is just a game library essentially
So if you're on a PC
You can download games
And almost all games
Unless they're like console exclusive
Will be on Steam
You can download
And a console
I'm taking you guys aren't gamers
I've actually got Steam
You have got Steam
Do you play?
Don't play many games on it
No really
I play Fortnite
All right
I play Fortnite against 8 year olds around the world
I'm going to lose
I tried Fortnite
And I was just too embarrassed
To continue
Because the skill cap of that game is so high
And these 14 year olds that have been playing
Since they were nine
Are just so good
That you couldn't possibly just start a game now
And be anywhere near as good as them
So it's just, you know
If I put myself in the mind of a 14 year old
Playing this game
Would it be immediately obvious which one Andy was?
Oh yeah, yeah, I think so
I'm the guy hiding in one of the buildings
Just trying to have a nice afternoon
There's a cookie
I'm trying to click on that
Yeah
He's soaring out the bed of a mirror
Trying to escape
Here's a fact about
The guy who invented video games arguably
And it's sent in by a listener
It's sent it by Grant Wynne Jones
Who sent in the fact that nuclear bombs and video games
Were created by the same guy
Yeah, that's actually a deleted scene from Oppenheimer
Yeah
Well it's not Oppenheimer
But it's a guy called William Higginbotham
Great name
who did invent the first screen-based video game.
It was called Tennis for Two.
And it was in 1958.
Sounds like Pong, right?
It's pretty pongy.
It's like 2D tennis.
There was nothing to play it on.
So you had to play it on an oscilloscope,
which is a device to measure voltage waves.
And that because there were no consoles, no screens, nothing.
And he also worked on the Manhattan Project.
And he was in charge of the team
which made the electronic triggers for the first.
nuclear bombs. So that's a fact, it stacks up. And he played the accordion as well.
And his daughter wrote a memoir about him called accordion to Willie.
Which is.
What we're talking about sort of like the founding figures of video gaming, one person who's
known as the father of the video games industry, and I believe this is the person who kind
of took it away from PC and said, the television, why are we not getting it on the television?
was an engineer and inventor
and his name was Ralph Bear.
Oh, spelled the same as Clara?
Yes.
Wow.
And it turns out that they are...
No, they're not.
I couldn't find any relation.
I was so excited when I saw the connection name, but no.
That's so funny.
Last game that I played to any regularity was Mario Kart.
Oh, yeah.
And there's a really nice economic theory
that the world should be like Mario Kart.
Okay, that all I can kind of see what you mean.
Oh really?
Yeah, if you're in the front in a game of Mario Kart,
your power-ups are less powerful.
So if you're first,
you will get like maybe a banana peel to throw behind you,
which, yeah.
But then if you're last,
you will get a power-up that's like,
turns you in a torpedo.
The giant bullet guy.
Yeah, giant bullet guy that can go to the top
or the blue shell,
which automatically wipes out the person in first.
So I guess, in the sense that it kind of evens things out
society a little more.
Exactly.
It's like reverse iron rand, basically.
Yeah.
And it's known as rubber banding.
And the idea is that anyone at the back of society gets a huge boost and it helps everyone
in society, especially as those people at the bottom tend to be like farmers or, you know,
people who are helping at the base of everything.
Right.
And apparently that would be a great way of doing it, apart from good luck finding anyone to vote for it.
That's really interesting.
It's a lovely idea.
I like that theory.
Yeah.
In 2004, someone made a device that is a game board.
and the game boy is also attached to kind of thing that goes over your mouth,
which gives you nitrous oxide and basically makes you pass out.
And this was for children.
To stop them play?
No, no, not to stop them playing.
But as in you have enough nitroside.
You do well enough of the game.
You pass out.
You stop playing the Game Boy?
No, it's not that.
Any other thoughts?
Why you might do this?
It's for children.
It's for children.
Make children pass out.
So if they're going into surgery and they need to...
Oh, my gosh.
Got it in one down.
So the idea is it's hard to give kids anesthesia
and keep them calm while you're doing it.
If you give them a game boy to play,
then they're distracted and they get the anesthesia.
That's great.
And it was designed but never.
Never used.
Never used.
Well, it's unfair on children who are not good at video.
I'm not very good at video games,
so I would still be on lying there.
Hour of later.
Surgeon's ready to go home.
It's just the tutorial.
Come on.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in
contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can all be
found on various social media accounts. I'm on Instagram on at Schreiberland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter,
M. James. At James Harkin. And Mel. At Melanie Braswell. Nice. Or you can get to our group
account on Twitter by going to at no such thing. Or you can email us at podcast at QI.
And if you want to just hear all of the episodes and find out about our secret membership club, which is called Clubbish.
You can go to no such thing as a fish.com and you can find all of our previous episodes there, as well as the doors to the secret members club.
Mel, you're on tour right now in the UK.
Yes, touring around the UK, and then I'll be touring Australia, and then I'm coming back for Edinburgh in August.
Amazing.
I'm hopping around.
So we find dates.
Melaniebracewell.com slash gigs, I think.
Yes.
Okay, that's it. We'll be back again next week and we'll see you then. Goodbye.
