No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Rabbit-Cabbage Hybrid

Episode Date: October 6, 2022

Live from Inverness, Dan, James, Anna, and Andrew discuss clones, cardboard, car keys and deadly parrot fever. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. J...oin Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, everybody. Just before we start the show, we wanted to really highly recommend to you a new book that's just about to come out on the market. It's called The Theory of Everything Else. And it is by an author you may have heard of. Oh, Lee Child. You're so close. Richard Osmond. You're a bit further away now, actually. You go back to the Lead Child direction. It's Dan Shriver's book, ladies and gentlemen. Yay! Dan has written a book. It's called The Theory of Everything Else. And if you listen to Fish, you already. you know what it's about. It's about all the craziest, strangest theories that people have believed
Starting point is 00:00:35 about all sorts of things around the world. You want the Titanic, it's in there. You want aliens, they're in there. You want Nicholas Wichel, the BBC's Royal Correspondent, living on the banks of Loch Ness, trying to find Nessie for several months earlier in his career. That's in there. And who doesn't want that? It's what we've always wanted. Dan's been cooking out this book for as long as I've known him. Genuinely, it's been absolutely worth the way. Every single page is a story that you absolutely won't believe. So it's about these weird ideas, people with these bizarre beliefs, but who somehow end up changing the world. It's about how these beliefs end up to have been logical. It's basically about how we should never dismiss what seems like lunacy, because sometimes
Starting point is 00:01:13 it can turn out to be genius. And it is the most incredible read. Yeah, and that is the motto actually for recording episodes of the podcast with Dan. So you already know what you're going to get. If you want to check it out, just find The Theory of Everything Else. There is also a website attached which we'll have all the additional notes and videos and updates. That's Theory of Everything Else.com.uk. Guys, this is Dan's first book. We'd love it to be a monster hit. So get yourself a copy right now.
Starting point is 00:01:38 Yes, please do. I kind of want to just read your transcript of the whole thing because all the characters, all the stories in it are incredible. So please go there, help out Dan, and read, you know, the most interesting book of your year. The Theory of Everything Else, you can pre-order it now, or it's out next week, October the 13th. Get to a bookshop and buy it.
Starting point is 00:01:57 On with the show. On with the podcast. Hello and welcome to another episode of no such thing as a fish, a weekly podcast. This week coming to you live from Inverness. My name is Dan Shriver. I'm sitting here with Anna Tashinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray and James Harkin. 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 point is 00:02:46 Starting with fact number one, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that you can catch chlamydia from dead parrots. This... Darling. What do you have to do with dead parrots? Yeah. Oh, that's a great question. Well, it's a bacterium, chlamydia.
Starting point is 00:03:08 This is actually called cytokosis, and it's kind of known as parrot fever, but it's a type of chlamydia. and the bacterium can come from the parrot to you through mouth to beak contact. Yeah, yeah, sexy stuff. Or the airborne inhalation of feather dust, feces, or respiratory secretions. Less sexy stuff.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Yes, I don't know. It can come from mouth to beak. There was, actually, I was looking in some old newspaper archives about this, and I found the 1992 cutting from the press and journal that reported on a teacher from Inverness who caught chlamydia from a dead parrot that he apparently found in his garden and...
Starting point is 00:03:50 Don't that apparently. Why are you addressing? He might have been giving it life... Mouthful of life. Yeah, yeah. Well, the article said that... He said that he didn't touch it with his hands. I don't know why you need to specify that.
Starting point is 00:04:09 And also that he didn't want to be named. Okay. Is he in? Are you in? Everyone knows him in this room, I think. Wow. Wow. So what, he, do we know if he recovered?
Starting point is 00:04:23 Yeah, he did. Oh, great. To be honest, it can be quite serious. Certainly when it first came about cytosis and became like a bit of a pandemic or an epidemic, really, in America and a few of the places. But it was in various parts of the world. This was in the 1920s.
Starting point is 00:04:39 It had a really high death rate. If you were over 35 and you caught it, It was something like 25% of people died. Yeah, it was crazy. And it was a proper panic, wasn't it? Oh, yeah. They freaked out. Yeah, and the papers, to begin with,
Starting point is 00:04:51 they said that it was found initially, sort of like the first case that was mentioned, was in Argentina, and it was on a sailor who wasn't really a sailor, he was an actor, and it was his stage parrot that gave it to him. So they traced it to that, but then it was all these cases in America where people were trying to work out
Starting point is 00:05:07 why these people were suddenly dying. But that's a good contact to have, as in if you're a stage... Yeah. Did you say he was a sailor? He was a sailor with a stage parrot on his shoulder. But he was a stage sailor. You said he was a sailor, but then you said,
Starting point is 00:05:19 but he wasn't an actual sailor, right? He was just a sailor on stage. I know. I delivered it in my head, like it was like a cool Dan Brown plot twist, but then I realised. In actual fact, it wasn't on his shoulder. In this play, it was in a cage,
Starting point is 00:05:32 but all of the people in the play had to go and stroke the parrot. So it wasn't on his shoulder. They kept going over and stroking it. Eight of the cast got sick, and two of them died after this play. Oh, do you. This was in 1930, and as a result, 90% of Argentina's pet parrots were killed.
Starting point is 00:05:50 Rough. What? Yeah, really rough. And this was, the rumor always was that the Argentinians brought it over. It was the classic, you know, like the Chinese disease. It was, as, you know, Donald Trump was referred to the Chinese disease. That wasn't me doing that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:06 He said that quite a long time ago now, so that just came across as you. You've got to be careful with these references, don't you? make sure they're up to date. So on the East Coast, there were all these rumors that had come from Argentina, and in fact, the outbreak began, they think, in December 1929, and it was a man in Maryland who bought a parrot as a present for his wife. And not only that, he stored it with his daughter and son-in-law before he gave it to his wife, you know, can I hide this parrot with you? Anyway, three of them got seriously ill, not the guy who brought the parrot actually, just the other three. And this guy, Dr. Martin, went and visited them. And he said, I had to have
Starting point is 00:06:42 the weirdest case today, these three people are sick. And she asked him about it a bit, and he eventually said, yeah, weirdly, the only other person who was sick in the room was their pet parrot, who I think is about to die. And his wife said, do you know what, that's so weird,
Starting point is 00:06:56 because I was just reading the sort of gossip pages of my magazine. And apparently there's this parrot sickness in Argentina. And it was that conversation. She'd been, happened to read this obscure article, and her husband went, that sounds like nonsense, but whatever, we'll chase it up. And it was that parrot sickness.
Starting point is 00:07:12 that catered all off. She says it was an affair with Katie Price. He says it was chlamydia from a dead parrot. It's called, hello, hello. Very good. They always talk in the end. That was a hugely significant parrot fever outbreak because the doctor who'd been working on it
Starting point is 00:07:31 was a guy called Charles Armstrong. He fell really ill after treating the patients who'd got it, the guy who bought it, Mr. Martin. He was almost going to die, the doctor, Charles Armstrong, another doctor injected him with the blood of a patient who had survived parrot fever, not doing any of the tests about
Starting point is 00:07:49 I think the blood type or anything like that was a very primitive procedure but he lived Charles Ransstrong, the doctor, lived and that entire incident led to the founding of America's National Institute of Health. So it's a big result
Starting point is 00:08:03 from one parrot fever outbreak. I should also say, actually, just going back to the original facts, which is that you can catch you from dead parrots and this came from a study at the University of Adelaide and the University of the Sunshine Coast, which sounds quite amazing, by Annalise Chaber et al.
Starting point is 00:08:21 And they've described sometimes when people have been dissecting parrots and then got pneumonia a little bit later, and then they checked their bodies and found that they actually caught it from the parrots when they were dead already. So most of these people were talking about, they were catching it from quite a sickly parrot, but these people have been catching it from an actual dead parrot.
Starting point is 00:08:41 and the guy from Inveness as well. I remember every dead parrot I've ever kissed, I have to say. So I'd know, because it was known as Old Maids pneumonia because parrots were all the rage then. People used to go door to door selling parrots to sad women whose husbands had died. Again, this was the stereotype. That's what Donald Trump would have called them.
Starting point is 00:09:01 That's not what I'm calling them. And the rumor was that they'd all been snogging their parrots because they were so sad and lonely and widowed. And so that's why it was called Old Maids Neumonement. It said they were all getting chlamydia from them. And it's not, you're just breathing in the air around the parrot, okay? Well, 63% of the people who got the cytokosis at the time of the big outbreak were women. They did own parrots much more often, but we don't know that they were sticking their tongues down their throats.
Starting point is 00:09:28 This was devastating for parrots. The panic really hit, and everyone took it seriously. So there were stories about how in the US Navy the admirals were ordering anyone who had a parrot on board just to let them off. Why have you got a parrot on a serious navy vessel? They're at sea. It's not... Who doesn't bring a parrot to sea? It's not a pirate ship.
Starting point is 00:09:50 Where do you think pirates get their parrots? Pirates have parrots. Sailors don't have parrots. That should be how you can tell the difference between a pirate. You're right. A normal law-abiding sailor. Very good point. Yeah, you check the leg.
Starting point is 00:10:01 You check the pieces of eight, and then you check the parrot. Can't you kind of damage your eyes as well, can it? You check for... Eye patches. Eye patches. Eye patches. Exactly. Okay. So what are you saying?
Starting point is 00:10:12 It was devastating for parrots because they could no longer accompany sailors on their journeys? No, it was a sort of mass death of parrots who were just thrown out to sea was more the angle. I wasn't thinking the poor sailors and their pirate credentials.
Starting point is 00:10:25 Those poor parrots, which can fly, they'll be fine. They can't fly 100 miles back to land. Do you know, you can get chlamydia from house flies. Really? Yeah. What do you have to do with them?
Starting point is 00:10:40 Well, annoyingly, I don't know if you guys saw you one of the same, but I dropped my notes just before we came out here, and it's on the next page, and I can't find the reason for it. That is the worst excuse in eight years of podcasting we've had for why you can't back up one of your outlandish plays. Look, it's of experiments. You drop your notes. Oh, yeah, and then the dog ran off with the paper.
Starting point is 00:11:02 No, I swear to God. I'd be trying to find it. No, absolutely. It might be backstage. I've got a line that says with guinea pig inclusion, conjunctivitis as an animal model, jokes about wives, it seems, have always been fair game. So that's the next page.
Starting point is 00:11:15 So, yeah. But apparently you can get chlamydia from houseflies. That's a rumor going around. Good to know. Careful what you do with those blue bottles. Do you want to hear another parrot thing? Oh, yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:11:27 Are you guys familiar with a guy called Noel Fitzpatrick? Noll Fitzpatrick? He's on a show called Supervet. Anyway, he has a book, which is sort of memoirs of a vetting career. and there was a time where he had to operate on a para but the problem was he couldn't anesthetize it the anaesthetic wasn't suitable
Starting point is 00:11:43 it might have died if you tried to put it under so he had to just hold it on the x-ray machine I'm quoting him directly here he kept looking up at me and asking what are you doing what are you doing I kept trying to keep him quiet and maybe a few choice phrases escape from my big Irish mouth in the process
Starting point is 00:12:01 we completed the radiographs gave the medication and as I was handing him back to the dear sweet elderly lady who was his companion, he jumped on the lady's arm, craved his neck, and shouted merrily, shut the fuck up! Shut the fuck up! I can't tell you how scared I am that that's going to be my daughter's first word.
Starting point is 00:12:28 Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Anna. My fact this week is that the head of the AA keeps his car keys in the microwave, and I've just realized that I should specify which of the AA's. I mean this fact. Is it because he's constantly shit-faced?
Starting point is 00:12:49 It's a safety thing in both instances. And then he's just too pissed to open it. No, because the head of the AA wouldn't be drunk. But this is the head of the Automobile Association. It's a guy called Edmund King. And he's very safety conscious,
Starting point is 00:13:05 verging on paranoid, I would say. He did an interview recently with The Telegraph where he says he's got one of these car keys that remotely unlocks your car. A fob. A fob? A fob. And he keeps it in a Faraday cage, so in this leather bag with a wire mesh lining in a red metal box,
Starting point is 00:13:21 so a cage that can't let through any electromagnetic field. And after he's got it in that Faraday cage, he puts it inside a microwave, and he's put the microwave right at the back of the house as far away from the car as possible. And so every time he wants to drive somewhere, it's a real hassle for him. Hasn't he had it? Either he or his wife had their car name.
Starting point is 00:13:40 It was his wife. Yeah. I didn't realize, if you have one of the keyless keys, basically, you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, a keyless fob, yeah. Yeah, yeah. You're sort of something like 50 times likely
Starting point is 00:13:51 to have your car stolen because it's easier to hack the thing. Do you not think you would wait until like lunchtime when he's making a baked potato or something in the microwave and just steal his car? Exactly, yeah. So it's an amplifier and transmitter thing.
Starting point is 00:14:04 This is how they get your car. So most people, if they have this key fob, they might leave it near the front door just sitting in on a console, table or something like that. And two criminals will be involved. One will go next to the door and they'll have an amplifier while the other stands next to the door with a transmitter. I can't remember which we're at. One person next to the house door near the key. One person next to the car door. They amplify the signal. It comes to the car door. They can open it and steal it.
Starting point is 00:14:27 But that happens a lot, as you were saying. Take a wheel into the house. That's what I would advise. The steering wheel are one of the actual wheels. Just so I take both. I pop the steering wheel into one of the main wheels. And then I go. Actually, his wife's key was in a Faraday cage when her car got stolen. I know. What the hell? Which I don't really know how they've done it. The problem with this is, it's not the criminals, it's not the cars, it's not the microwaves, okay?
Starting point is 00:14:53 It's the keyless bloody fobs. Why do they exist? It's the maddest system ever. My mom has it. And it's like, what is the point in this? If you can't get up the energy or the wherewithal to insert some keys into your ignition. It's pretty cool, though. Whenever I walk past my car, it just opens, even if I don't want to go in it.
Starting point is 00:15:09 It's awful. It's cool. Can you turn that off? You can automatically unlock. You can disable it. And he wants to make you aware that if you want to disable it, you can disable it. I was reading a website that said, you know, the advantages of it, why you should get a keyless fob.
Starting point is 00:15:22 And the only bullet point is it allows you to start your car without being in the vehicle. That's true. Also, it does the coolest, I don't drive and I don't have this fob key, so I don't know. It would be insane for you to start with a key and work your way up to having a car. I got the key. It's just for those parties where you chuck them in the bar. Oh, God. It's not actually a car that goes with that.
Starting point is 00:15:47 I just got the key. But here's... She'll be incredibly disappointing. Getting onto your unicycle. She's already drawn the short stroll. So, when you have one of these fobs, if you're at a certain distance and you try to open it, the signal's too far for it to work, right?
Starting point is 00:16:08 Okay. Yes. It's got a distance. so they can go. So if you were standing at a distance, let's say just far away enough where it couldn't work, you can still stand at that same spot and make it work by using one simple trick. And that is holding the key to your head. Who here knows that by round of chairs. Right. What does it do? So the idea is that our head is full of fluids, right? We have a lot of water in our heads. Some more than others. And water is a great conductor. So when you hold it to your head,
Starting point is 00:16:40 the signals that are being passed through are using that water to amplify the signal and you can open it from that spot you're standing at. It's like wearing metal boots in a lightning storm if you want to get struck. Yes. I think. Wait, say it again.
Starting point is 00:16:52 It's like wearing something that conducts well in a lightning storm if you want to get hit by lightning, right? It's sort of attracting the signal. Like a giant spike on your head or something. Exactly. You're holding a ladder. The officers from Sheffield's Southeast Neighborhood policing team came up with a way
Starting point is 00:17:06 of stopping people from doing this key fob trick. and their idea is to buy a second car that doesn't have keyless entry and use it to block in the other one. That's good. Oh, that's wonderful. That's great. Very clever.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Very clever. Okay, here's a quiz. Oh, great. Okay, answer the question as quickly as you can, right? Just complete the sentence. That's the quiz. Yeah. If you switch off all the lights along the street,
Starting point is 00:17:34 the number of thefts from people's cars increases. Right. it halves. This is so weird. If you turn off all the lights... Because they can't find your car? Well, they know the cars are there.
Starting point is 00:17:47 So there have been trials done into this. Like turning off streetlights after midnight and it turned out that the thefts... Not thefts of cars, thefts from cars, right? So people breaking in, stealing the stuff. The thefts went from 12 per street per month to six per street per month. How long?
Starting point is 00:18:02 Well, the thing is that it's really hard to see in the dark. And if you... If you're wagging around the torch after midnight, that's quite conspicuous. It makes thieves feel a bit self-conscious. And they will, they just sort of gravitate away towards other nearby streets which do have streetlights. Embarrassed. They're embarrassed. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:24 But then other nearby streets got more thefts during this trial period. So it is a, like, you're just pushing the problem elsewhere. Okay. Yeah, but that works. Is that weird? Yeah, that is weird. Great quiz. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:18:37 Do you know, there's another way of protecting. your car. The super rich do this in Singapore. So Andy, you said before, why not take a wheel inside? What they do in Singapore, and this is for people who live in high-rise buildings, they take the whole car inside. So there's, and this is for the super rich, because the super rich, they've got lots of perks
Starting point is 00:18:55 and ways that they can hide their cars. When you're rich, you've got a few perks. One of these perks is that there are now buildings in Singapore whereby you go into an underground garage and you park your car there and it goes on a slab. The slab goes into an elevator, and it's a special elevator that goes up to the floor of your building. So you might be 40 floors up, goes up there,
Starting point is 00:19:15 and then you have a glass partition between your house lounge room and then this extra garage room that hangs up there in the sky with you. The car on the slab gets put on there, and you can just see your car in your lounge room, and no one can get to it because it's 40 floors up. Yeah. That's like Batman-style level. It's reverse Batman because he lives underground.
Starting point is 00:19:36 In a cave. Upside-down Batman. But you could all... also remove your own kitchen and living room and instead and knock down your front wall and make that a nice place to hide your car if you want to emulate these people. Just another way to keep your car safe. Did you guys read about the car thief a couple of weeks ago who hit the news? It was in Rochdale for the clue. He stole a car and then he did that really stupid thing of going to a petrol station and then driving off without paying for petrol, just don't draw attention to yourself. So the police
Starting point is 00:20:05 looking for him, he stole a Mitsubishi SUV, and they found the house where they thought he was, they searched the house, and one of the police officers noticed a large teddy bear breathing, and turned it upside down, and he was inside
Starting point is 00:20:21 the bear. It's the weirdest thing, because the police, it was Manchester Police, and they tweeted a picture of the bear. It's got a little hole in its bum, not big enough for even a baby, I would have thought. I don't know how he was getting in there. It's extraordinary. Yeah, he must have really sort of wriggled in among the stuffing.
Starting point is 00:20:41 Very, yeah. How long do you think you'd try and keep it up for once they say, there's someone in that bear, isn't there? You just pretend to be one of those talking bears. That's what the movie Ted was. That was actually a man in there. The first ever vehicle alarm immobilizer system for a car. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Was invented in 1921. And because of the time, there wasn't really, that technology didn't exist. so it was just a freelance effort by an army captain who lived in Victoria in London and his motorbike kept being nicked and he was quite annoyed about it. His initial innovation was he would take out almost all the fuel so that if it was nicked it could go about a mile
Starting point is 00:21:19 and then he just searched a mile radius and he got the car back, the motorbike back. That's quite a good idea. But he thought he didn't want even that to happen again so he attached a grenade to the motorbike and connected the pin to a nearby road meaning that if anyone ever drove off on the motorbike, it would set off the grenade. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:21:41 Unfortunately for him, the wind just blew the bike over one day. The explosion destroyed his bike and destroyed his car and destroyed a lot of the flat downstairs from him. And he had to pay for that. There's one really advanced thing is a new Toyota patent. Basically, when you walk into your car or you walk into a car, the car can tell what your phone is, But if it's in your pocket, it can kind of detect your phone, and then it will release a fragrance of your choosing.
Starting point is 00:22:12 So if you're like, well, I really like the smell of freshly mowed lawn, then whenever you get in the car, it'll know you're there, and it will give you that. Wait, has this car got, like, just a big bank of every cent possibly? At the moment, it's a patent, so they might not have all of them. But, like, presumably... But you can mix it. It's like printer ink, isn't it? Yeah, yeah. You could just combine, you know, like mown grass, plush.
Starting point is 00:22:36 Or you could just buy all of the scents that you want. Oh, yeah, just get a big thing of, like, toner for steak or whatever. Yeah. On your cartes would smell like a steak. But you might do, right? Yeah. So if Andy walks in the car, it smells a steak. If I walk in, it smells a fresh little.
Starting point is 00:22:53 What if we both get in the same car, though? And then it's like a freshly moan steak. That's going to be a weird clash. Like a cow in a field. Oh, yeah, perfect. Everyone's favorite smell. Kelty Fields. Anyway, the idea of this
Starting point is 00:23:06 and one of the things that's genuinely in this patent is if someone gets in the car with a different phone, so they realize that it's someone who shouldn't be there, then it can give tear gas instead of perfume. Oh! That's incredible. When you borrow your husband's phone for the day,
Starting point is 00:23:22 that's a horrible journey. Oh, my God. So there's another thing with the key fobs, there's a Volvo, whereby it can tell you, it's got a sensor that can tell you if there's a heartbeat in the car. So it can alert you to intruders. No, that's horrible.
Starting point is 00:23:36 If there's someone hiding in your car. If there's like a huge teddy bear that's just appeared to your left inside. I think possibly there's two reasons for it. One is that if you closed the car door, you're in a rush and you've left your child in there, or your dog or something, and you know how you forget leaving your child in a car?
Starting point is 00:23:52 Just check in the car. So I'm not allowed to drive. I've lost six kids. But it's been used for intruders. as well. It can just say there's a hard thing. That's quite clever. I've got another very weird law that was passed car-based. Yeah. It was in 1928, Ministry of Transport passed an order.
Starting point is 00:24:11 It made it illegal to lock your car if it was parked in public. It made it illegal? Okay. Illegal. What? Is that so, because I know that in, is it in Manitoba or somewhere, that you're not supposed to lock your cars in case there's like a polar bear and someone can hide in the car? Bingo. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:29 No, it's, well, what it is is because there was so much. much traffic that was stopping people getting around because cars were taking off and cities weren't adaptive for them. So it would be easier for the police to just move your car on if it was getting in people's way. So it was illegal to lock your car in public. Oh. So it wasn't the bear thing? It was similar to the bear thing. Like it's... Because you made it sound like James had given the right on. I did. I think I said the word... I was counting my points. I said the word bingo at one point. It's not exactly, it's not a slam dunk bingo. But it's other people might need to use your car or move it around.
Starting point is 00:25:00 Anyway, great quiz, Andy. Can't believe I didn't get the university challenge. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that scientists have successfully made a human hamster hybrid. They call it a humster. So talk to us about your interpretation of the world successfully. Scientists have successfully made the hybrid. Yeah, good, cool. Okay.
Starting point is 00:25:35 So this is called the hamster test, and it is a scientific way of testing male infertility. So this came about because scientists, there's a lot of ethical questions and issues that you have when you're trying to test for infertility by using a human sperm and a human egg. So we needed alternatives for that, and fortunately... And this is the test of sperm is fertile, right?
Starting point is 00:25:55 Yes, it's testing if male sperm is fertile, and this goes for IVF and all that sort of stuff. And so using a female... egg is not allowed. There's a lot of ethical questions with that. And so what happens is that they need another way of doing it. And fortunately, our mammalian reproduction makeup means that there are few animals that we can do that with. So one of the things that they do it with is hamster eggs. And when they use the hamster eggs, what they do is they inject the sperm into it, but sometimes the sperm penetrates the hamster egg. And when it penetrates, a hybrid embryo is created.
Starting point is 00:26:28 a single cell embryo is created, and that's what scientists call the humster. So when you say it's like a hybrid of a human in a hamster, it's not like a tiny human that can keep stuff in its cheeks on a massive hamster. I actually wrote to a bunch of scientists to ask if maybe one day humsters will rule the earth. And a lot of them got back to me and said no. Well, actually, there was one NHS doctor who's doing amazing, like, really cutting-edge stuff on trying to cure cancer, and he was like, give me five minutes.
Starting point is 00:27:02 And he went off to find out, and he thinks that there is a way that you could eventually manufacture it to accommodate the cell. Because the problem is, is that it just, it will die after a few days, or it will split into two cells or something. That's not necessarily a problem. It's good to split. You need it to split to two cells. We're not single-cell, are we? No. The key is, it needs to split, but they kill it before it splits, because that's bad. But the point is, we sometimes kill it before seeing if it can split into two, but the belief is it can split into two. So they quickly go,
Starting point is 00:27:31 before it splits into three. That's my theory. But the reality is that it couldn't live. It just couldn't live. This doesn't happen whenever we have a sperm test, does it? They don't go to the hamster lab. This is one way of doing it. I think there are other ways of checking.
Starting point is 00:27:49 Oh, thank God. And I think it's not necessarily because the ethical things of using a human egg entirely. It's largely because human eggs are few and far between. because you can easily get a donor egg from a hamster because you don't as often ask their permission. Whereas it's quite hard. But yeah, it is also ethically easier because it's a hamster.
Starting point is 00:28:05 Well, no, but also there's a lot of question about when life begins and that is one of the issues. If what happens here that happens with a hamster, which is also, that's slightly an ethical debate because I say, I've been asking scientists, so is that for just a second while it's alive? Is that a hamster? Is that a real thing?
Starting point is 00:28:21 And they've all refused to answer because it's a dodgy question, but it's also exciting that we could one day have humsters. because we don't have... I'm not going to wait for the version of Jurassic Park. Well, did you see there was a script that was leaked where Jurassic Park 4 was meant to be human dinosaur hybrids? Oh, I didn't see that.
Starting point is 00:28:40 Well, you missed out because it was conceptual art and it looks awesome. It's like a man with dino legs running around and that's what it was meant to be. I think technically Andy might be a humster. Yeah. We always put him in that wheel in the dressing room. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:28:56 And the amount of shit you can get in your cheeks is insane. The reason being, if you look in the Oxford English dictionary for the word humster, it does exist. There's one citation from 1670, and it's a person who expresses their approval by humming. Hmm. So if you ever do that, which you do do sometimes, you do that, yeah. You're a hamster. Okay. Oh, imagine if that's what a scientist created.
Starting point is 00:29:21 How disappointed would we be? Wow. Andy. What I've had really interesting about this process of creating the humpster is that sperm need to be incubated for 20 hours before they're introduced formally to the egg. It's like a society ball. Yeah, they go to the dance, they've got little dance cards. But yeah, they're incubated before they are introduced.
Starting point is 00:29:46 And this is because I didn't realize that inside a woman's body, when a sperm is introduced the conventional way, they have to capacitate for about 10 hours, which is the opposite of incapacitate, really. It takes them about 10 hours to get ready to fertilise. So they don't zoom in and they're all set. They zoom in and then they, well, it's a process called capacitation. Well, they just kind of hovered near the egg or what? I think so.
Starting point is 00:30:09 They hang around near the egg and they sort of like put a suit on and they get themselves all beefed up and ready to fertilize before doing it. Another part of it, which is quite interesting, is to get the eggs from the hamster in the first place. And one way that they do that is that they, treat the hamster with pregnant horse serum. And you put some pregnant horse serum into the hamster
Starting point is 00:30:31 and that will simultaneously make them produce about 40 eggs. Wow. So it's like a human hamster hybrid but then there's also a bit of horse in there as well. Do you ever just think science doesn't do itself any favours? I feel a bit ecky about this. So this is a kind of cross-bred
Starting point is 00:30:49 species. I mean, not one that's viable, but just been reading about hybrids and, you know, crosses between species. It's been going since 2,500 BC, the crossing of species with each other, specifically by humans. So this was a thing that was found in Syria. It was a burial complex, and they found about 25 skeletons, and they weren't horses. They were kind of nearly horses, but they weren't quite. And they were a cross between a domestic donkey and a wild ass, okay?
Starting point is 00:31:15 So quite similar, very similar species, but not identical. And they were these mysterious creatures called Kungas, which we don't have anymore. but they were highly prized. They were calmer than wild asses, but they were faster than donkeys. So they were useful for battles, and they were used as royal vehicles. They were used as dowries in marriages.
Starting point is 00:31:37 And cungas just were a thing. Four and a half thousand years ago. And a huge thing, right? They're all over paintings and artworks in Mesopotamia. They were a big deal. The other thing about it is they're hard to make because they're infertile, so you create them and then they're sterile.
Starting point is 00:31:51 So if you want a second cunger, you need to go out into the woods, and chase down one of these very fast, very strong wild asses again and then somehow make it mate with a donkey? I mean, that's difficult at the best of times. Have you heard of the country singer? American country singer, she's called Taylor Mool, and she, this is really interesting,
Starting point is 00:32:10 she has a chunk of skin on her body, which is a different colour to the rest of her. It was way darker. She didn't know why for years. She was told that it was a birthmarked by doctors, seemed like the obvious explanation. Anyway, she found out she is her own twin sister. Okay.
Starting point is 00:32:25 So in the womb she was going to be twins, but the egg, which would have become her sister, fused with her egg, you know, while both of them were right at the tiny, tiny embryo stage. So that darker skin is from her sister's DNA. She's got two sets of DNA in her body, basically. But she has two immune systems, two bloodstreams I wrote down. I'm not exactly clear on that.
Starting point is 00:32:46 But she has a, yeah, I don't know, just move on past it. But she has, she also has lots of allergies because her body thinks that her sister's DNA is foreign DNA inside her body. But the weird thing is, remember I said her name at the start, Taylor Mule? Taylor Mule. A mule is a hybridized...
Starting point is 00:33:06 How did she not know? The clue was there. She was tailored. Yeah. You can have human pig hybrids. And these exist. And the hope with these is that they'll be able to grow human like organs inside pigs
Starting point is 00:33:34 and then we'll be able to take them out of the pigs and put us into us. And you'll be able to have that kind of thing. Have they got a fun name? What are they called? Well, see if you can guess. Oh, okay. So part human, part pig, anyone? Poo man.
Starting point is 00:33:48 Poo man? A Poo man? Poo man. A Puman? A Puman. Puman. A Puman. Puman. Puman.
Starting point is 00:33:55 I don't know. Oh, yeah, any suggestions? A hug? A hug? Like a human hug. Yeah? No, the answer is a frankenswine. Ah!
Starting point is 00:34:07 Lovely. Very strong. Hey, do you want to have a quick guess of, if I name a thing, you name the things that went into it? Oh, yeah, let's do that. A swoose. A swan and a goose. Swoon and a goose. Bingo.
Starting point is 00:34:20 Baluga whale and a gnawool. A gau. A gul and a beluga. Exactly. So Anna's got one point, James has got one point. I've only got two. Sorry, Dan. Great quiz, Andy. Oh, wait, I've got one more.
Starting point is 00:34:32 Yes. A rabid. It's a rabbit and a cabbage. No, it's a radish and a cabbage. Sorry. The only animal that eats its own is. It is time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andy.
Starting point is 00:35:01 My fact is that cardboard is so valuable on the black market that it is nicknamed beige gold. Strap in, we're going to do 15 minutes on cardboard. Yeah. 20 if you're unlucky. Bage gold. So cardboard is incredibly valuable at the moment.
Starting point is 00:35:21 Incredibly valuable. Incredibly valuable. Okay. Prices were 70 pounds per ton. give or take recently. Not very much. A ton of cardboard's a lot. £70 pounds is not very much. But when coronavirus started, the price shot up of cardboard. It doubled because there was so much more demand. Lots of people were stuck at home. Lots of people were doing online shopping. And the price just absolutely rocketed.
Starting point is 00:35:44 And as a result of the price being very high, demand being massive, there have been cardboard heists. There have been cardboard... Wow. There's a cardboard mafia who were in operation in Europe. There's a whole cardboard crime. network. Wow. Whose job is to steal car. When you think you've cornered as the police, the cardboard mafia and you get up close to them, does it turn out it's just a cutout of them? They've made their getaway minutes ago. That would be great. I did some maths. Oh yeah. And for one kilogram of gold, if you wanted to have enough cardboard to be worth the same amount as one kilogram of gold,
Starting point is 00:36:20 it would have to weigh about as much as the Statue of Liberty. Okay. Okay. So value. Gold smuggling. Gold smuggling is still more valuable. You know, if you want to set up a crime syndicate, drugs are still the way to go. But if you're a small timer, cardboard is the way. So there was a thing in Madrid in 2018 to 19. This is even pre-COVID. Half the cardboard that people were putting out for recycling was stolen. But I would say, is that a problem? If you're putting out cardboard to be recycled as someone else is stealing it rather than the normal recycling people. Well, who should... To me personally, the job is. being done, right? Well, that's true. But it's in the hands of the gangs, then, I guess, who are going to... They control the cardboard trade now, you know? And they'll corner the market.
Starting point is 00:37:08 I don't know what they'll do with it. Well, they're making money out of it, basically. They would travel around the city, basically before the cardboard recycling truck, and they would just go to every stop. They learned the routes. They had dozens of people involved. Because they do sound like do-gooders.
Starting point is 00:37:22 They sound like... No, I've made them sound wrong. They're hardcore criminal. Yeah, but if someone drives around collecting my rubbish, I don't care who does it. I know you don't care, but it's a big problem. They're getting bullied in prison, is all I'm saying. They're following me.
Starting point is 00:37:39 It's what are you in for voluntary recycling? So why don't the garbage men... Start half an hour early. They start early enough already, don't they? What's your answer is? Just the garbage men have to start earlier. That's not the way to deal with crime, is for the victims to adapt.
Starting point is 00:37:54 You have to have hard, tough, rough justice. for these crooks. Yeah? Madrid, the city of Madrid, where this was happening, they would export it to Southeast Asia for pulping, so they're stealing other people's cardboard.
Starting point is 00:38:06 I feel like there's not enough anger in the room about this. I just kind of feel like there might be other problems. Madrid deliberately introduced dumpsters with tiny holes for cardboard so that the gangs couldn't climb in and get the cardboard out.
Starting point is 00:38:22 They don't need to climb in. They got there half an hour before the actual fucking truck got there. What are you talking about? I'm just saying it's so... Wow. So did the price go up
Starting point is 00:38:31 because there was a shortage because we were all ordering loads of stuff and hoarding cardboard basically? And then Amazon bought a load of the available cardboard. So for a while at the start of COVID people couldn't get eggs. That was because not there were enough eggs going around but there weren't the cardboard containers
Starting point is 00:38:47 for the eggs. And you can't just drop eggs on people's doorstep like those. Eggs are the worst thing to buy loose. So that was why you couldn't get eggs for ages. But I don't remember there being an egg shortage during that. There was. That was a huge extra. I didn't remember that. I was saying, egg and loo roll were the two big ones.
Starting point is 00:39:04 Really? Hells yeah. I was in the countryside and the farmhouse next to us used to put freshly laid chicken eggs out every morning, six of them, and I used to go about 7 a.m. already gone. Have you tried going a bit earlier? What was he putting the eggs out for? Sorry, for you. But, you know, well, in the countryside
Starting point is 00:39:23 people always put eggs if they've got chickens outside and say, hey, drop a pound in, take four eggs, whatever. All gone. But speaking of eggs, Easter eggs, used to be made of cardboard. What? In very disappointing times for children at Easter before they were made of chocolate.
Starting point is 00:39:39 And they were actually really beautiful. So in the 19th century, they would have beautiful scenes kind of drawn on them, so shortly after the kind of invention of cardboard, and then they'd be covered in satin, and they'd still be in two halves, and you get your sweets inside. But, yeah, the egg itself,
Starting point is 00:39:55 don't eat it. You know what the first thing point in a cardboard box was. Oh, great. Good question, that, isn't it? Can we work it out? No. I would say not in a thousand years. Another car...
Starting point is 00:40:09 A smaller cardboard box. Oh, great, I'd say no. Okay. Something small. Was it... Fly. Animals, yeah. Oh, I know.
Starting point is 00:40:15 A moth. It was a moth. No. Yes, it was. Wow. There's a new tactic here. Just insist on right. Very close.
Starting point is 00:40:25 It was a silkworm. Oh, cool. They were invented apparently in Valerius in Provence. Silkworms? Carbop boxes. Because there was a guy who was making silk and he was bringing the silkworms over from China and his silkworms kept dying.
Starting point is 00:40:44 And so he went to a local wig maker and asked him if there was anything that he could do and this wig maker made these kind of cardboard boxes with holes in which he invented. And this is according to the cardboard box museum in France. It sounds amazing. Yeah. It does sound really interesting. It says it's the historical capital
Starting point is 00:41:03 of French cardboard. It's quite a lot of qualifications. I don't think there are any other cardboard museums. So, just on the invention of cardboard, did you guys come across Malcolm Thornhill in your research? Malcolm? No. Okay, there's this fact all over the internet, right? And it's that cardboard was invented in 1817
Starting point is 00:41:21 when Sir Malcolm Thornhill started using thick sheets of paper to make boxes. And they weren't like modern cardboard, they were just single sheets of cardboard, so they weren't corrugated and, you know, firm and great, like, modern cardboard boxes. And if that is true, that means that theoretically Jane Austen could have used a cardboard box. Because that was the year she died, 1817. That's huge.
Starting point is 00:41:39 That's huge. The only problem is, it is definitely not true. It's all over the internet. It's on Wikipedia. It's been taken off the internet and put into books. As a result of which... What was your evidence that it's not true? There's no evidence of Malcolm Thornhill,
Starting point is 00:41:55 real. There's just no... You search from Malcolm Thornhill in 19th century sources. There's nothing. But the problem is, now that it's been taken off Wikipedia, where it was with no evidence, there wasn't in Deasaurus and put in a book, it's now been sourced on Wikipedia to the books, which say that Malcolm Thornell Hill invented it in 1817.
Starting point is 00:42:12 It's a thing called cytogenesis on Wikipedia, which is where something is this awful circular loop. No, there's no way of getting rid of it. You're exploding this very little known myth. That's my thing now. Don't go home tonight and tell each other, Malcolm Thornthill invented cardboard in 1817.
Starting point is 00:42:28 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. If there's one thing you don't say to each other after the show tonight, don't say that. I said don't say that even if it was true, to be honest, as a conversation starter over dinner. I got a good one question quiz. Well, it's been a real quiz episode tonight, hasn't it? So here we go, yeah, so it's one quiz question, fingers on buzzers. This is a kind of cardboard.
Starting point is 00:42:46 What is it used for? It's called a zarf. Scarves. Buzz. Oh, I didn't buzz. Ah. Putting scarves in? Putting scarves in.
Starting point is 00:42:55 No, yeah, no. I was going to say scar for zebras. Zebrae, zebra, scarf. Oh, we're going back into hybris. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's not that, is it? It's absolutely that. That's amazing that you guys just jammed some crazy fucking idea.
Starting point is 00:43:08 No, it's obviously not that. What is it? A zarf is, and everyone's used zarfs, but you just didn't know what it was called. You know when you go to a coffee shop and you get a coffee, and it's a bit too hot, and they put a little sleeve of cardboard over it, that's a zarf.
Starting point is 00:43:24 It's a scarf for a cup A zarf That's brilliant And where's that come from Just made up by someone Yeah I mean it's been Zarfs have been used Apparently so there's an amazing writer
Starting point is 00:43:36 Who is called What's his name again I've read so many of his books Is it on the next page Is it on the book? I think his name's AJ Jacobs He wrote the book where he read the entire Encyclopedia and
Starting point is 00:43:47 He did this book where he went around thanking people Who had any way played a part In making a cup of coffee that you would drink. So he went around the world going, thank you for this and thank. And one of the people he went to thank was,
Starting point is 00:43:59 were makers of Zarfs, which was this item. But he says that they were used as far back as ancient China. Just they were... Well, they were different material. They weren't necessarily thick. Malcolm Thornhill hadn't even been born yet.
Starting point is 00:44:13 I think they would have been like a marble or something, but you would put it around a hot drink and it would be a holder. I don't know. You think they were making coffee holders out of marble? I don't know. It just wasn't cardboard. Thornehill dinners. That's amazing. How many Starbucks do you think you'd have to go into and ask,
Starting point is 00:44:28 because I have a zarf around my coffee? For one of them to know what the fuck you were talking about. Cardboard was inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame in 2005. Ah, the cardboard box. The cardboard box. Obviously, the idea of being, if you get a present, the cardboard box is often more interesting to a kid than the actual toy itself. And it's such a fun, I love how lateral they think when they induct the toys into the Hall of Fame. So last year's toys that went in, one of the things I'll get inducted as one of the great toys was sand. They're running low on toys, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:45:03 I think a stick was one of the first. Yeah, stick was ones put in. But yeah, so last year was sand, risk, an American girl dolls. Is it so that when you give your kids presents at Christmas, you can say, well, I got you something from the Hall of Fame? It's award-winning. Do you want to hear one more cardboard crime? Yeah, sure.
Starting point is 00:45:21 You can use cardboard to smuggle. cocaine. Okay. Now, I know what you're thinking. Sure, you can. Just put the cocaine in the box. Or, what's the point of smuggling cocaine when cardboard's so fucking expensive? Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:45:36 In 2020, Spanish police, also Spain, like the Madrid Carboard smuggling ring. The Spanish police, they smashed a gang who had put cocaine into cardboard boxes to smuggle it. Now, they hadn't just put cocaine into the boxes, they put it
Starting point is 00:45:52 into the box. the cardboard box was partly made of cocaine. They had liquefied the cocaine and then kind of impregnated it into the cardboard boxes. But then the problem was they put actual cocaine inside the cocaine cardboard box. That's really clever. And then once you get the box to the other end,
Starting point is 00:46:10 you just extract it chemically, cocaine. Perfect. A fun toy for the kid, a fun toy for the parent. That's not sand. Guys, we're going to have to wrap up really soon. Do you remember the anti-sex beds, speaking of cardboard? I certainly, I think I've got one by mistake. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:46:34 I was just possessed by a comedian from the 17th for a second there. What was that? The ghost of Les Dawson has blessed me with his presence. We're honored to have him here. Yeah, the anti-sex beds were in the. Tokyo Olympics. Yeah. Les.
Starting point is 00:46:56 You're right, Dan? That's the weirdest thing I've seen. He's the weirdest thing I've seen. He was possessed. He looked... Sorry. I was so... And then it was a really good joke.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Come on, Dan. We're so near the end. Tell us. Tell us. Tokyo Olympics, they had anti-sex beds, and they weren't actually anti-sex beds. They were just made of cardboard. And the idea of anti-sex was that it was so flimsy you couldn't have sex in them.
Starting point is 00:47:38 But the rumour was that the reason they had them at the Olympics was to discourage the athletes from having sex because it damages your game. But they were fine for sex anyway, so it wouldn't have discouraged it. They were good for sex. So why is Andy not getting any? My head! Why my own?
Starting point is 00:47:53 There are so many reasons. 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 have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter.
Starting point is 00:48:17 James. At James Harkin. Yep, and Chazinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep, where you can go to our group account, which is at No Such Thing or our website. No Such Thing is a Facebook. All of our previous episodes are there.
Starting point is 00:48:31 You can check them out. There's also a link very excitingly to our new club, clubfish. So do check it out. Thank you so much, everyone, for being here tonight. We will be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Thank you so much Inverness.
Starting point is 00:48:44 That was awesome. We will be back again for the rest of you. We'll catch you later. Goodbye!

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