No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Rice Krispie With Feelings

Episode Date: July 28, 2017

Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss expert plastic sushi artists, the world's first bendy straws, and how fake dog noses help detect bombs. ...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:02 Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber and I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Anna Chazinski and Andrew Hunter-Murray, and once again we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy. My fact is that it takes 10 years. to learn how to make artificial sushi. To make it well.
Starting point is 00:00:49 To make it well, sorry. Any mug can just make... Anyone could get some plasticine and make some fake sushi, right? You're absolutely right. So you mean like toy sushi. Not toy sushi. As in... So in Japan, there's this amazing tradition
Starting point is 00:01:03 where basically all restaurants have their whole menu reproduced in plastic outside the restaurant to lure you in to say how good this looks. Like when people... But there's a place around the corner from us that is a restaurant and they cook one meal every day and they put it on a table outside and it's just a display meal. Oh, yes, it's a display meal. I've always wanted to take that display meal because they put a whole pizza outside.
Starting point is 00:01:24 Yeah. And you think, why doesn't someone just come along and have this? I don't get it. I'm so close. How is someone not got that one bit closer? They must be poisoned, right? And there's a glass of wine. They must be.
Starting point is 00:01:33 And there's a glass of white wine, just sitting there. We're going to take it, guys. You know who you are. Have any of you ever eaten in that restaurant? No. Oh, yes, I have. I have, though. It's great.
Starting point is 00:01:42 It's kind of just. society, isn't it? You just don't steal things? Yeah. I'm not saying it's a bad thing that people don't steal things in general. It's a trust exercise. Yeah. But it will go to waste, won't it? It's like taking something out of a bin. And we all do that. I guess. So this is kind of like the equivalent of high street shops having mannequins in the window displaying their clothes.
Starting point is 00:02:05 Apart from all the clothes are fake. Yes. And there's an actual industry devoted to making fake clothes, which no one will ever wear. Yeah, but you might make the clothes out of, say, toilet paper or something instead. Yes. Because it's cheaper and it shows them off. Or is it not cheaper? It's not cheaper. But there was an economist article all about this and then it turns out this is a massive thing. And I was in Japan about five years ago and it's true. It's basically every restaurant has this stuff outside it. And the thing is, buying these things is really expensive. As in, the sale price is about 20 times the price of the actual piece of sushi to buy a plastic piece of sushi. Yeah. But
Starting point is 00:02:43 then it lasts a lot longer is the good thing. And you're only buying one. And you're only buying one. But lots of train restaurants just hire them. So you can rent a burger for a month for a thousand yen. Because getting a whole menu done, it costs thousands of pounds, the equivalent of. I was reading that actually a lot of the companies that make these things don't do very well in business because they are so long-lasting these things.
Starting point is 00:03:04 So once you've sold it to someone, then that bit of sushi lasts 10 years. And so they keep going out of business. And so they're trying to sell them to China and to Europe now because everyone's got them in Japan. They should do what Apple do and make them break after two years. Intentional obsolescence or whatever they call it. Yes. Or like football kits, they should make new ones every year, new kind of sushi. So you always have to have the most trendy sushi outside your restaurant.
Starting point is 00:03:26 That's what I was thinking. I wonder if there's a plastic sushi chef who's innovating new meals and releasing them and they're going, God, we've got to replicate this now. Well, they don't really do that because the way they make these plastic imitations is so precise. So get this. They will send a designer. to the restaurant where the food is made, who will observe it,
Starting point is 00:03:46 take lots of photos of the food, he'll make an architect sketch, and then he goes back to the factory, and he says we have to make it precisely like this. Wow. And every individual piece is made with a mould. Okay, so he makes the mould first, and then he...
Starting point is 00:04:00 No, he visits the restaurant, sees the food, designs the mould, builds the mould, and then presses a single amazing piece. Nice. So the mould for making a bit of tuna is actually made by pushing a bit of tuna into the machine.
Starting point is 00:04:12 They use the fish, to make them old? I believe so. Wow. Surely the fish would get squashed. Yeah. That's not going to retain its shape. This is what I read. I agree. I have had sushi once. And I mean, one more time than you've had McDonald's, right? Yes. But no, it's incredibly precise. And 80% of the industry is one set of factories. It's one company, basically. And all the rest is little cottage industries and workshops and artisans around that. So why does it take 10 years to learn how be a plastic sushi chef? It's very precise
Starting point is 00:04:43 and it's a very artistic thing and to make it really good, you know, to be a master which is about as long as it takes to become a master sushi chef. There are people out there who have both spent 10 years of their life. I wonder if at a certain time at culinary school you have to decide if you're going to go into plastics or real.
Starting point is 00:04:59 There must be a time. Do you reckon it's the best ones who go into plastics or the slightly rubbish ones who don't get very good grades? The thing is they make these plastic vegetables and then they do cut them with real knives. So it's like this bizarre, proper sheffing mixed with plastic sheffing. And they've been doing it for ages, haven't they?
Starting point is 00:05:14 So I think it started in about the 1920s, and it was because they didn't have menus. And so instead of a menu, you'd have this display. Apparently that was easier. I would have thought drawing something on a menu is easier. Yeah, crazy that that came first. They were getting new foods from the West as well. So to explain what these are to your customers,
Starting point is 00:05:34 it's easier to have it on display outside. Because you can see, like on a menu, it could be any size. for example. Whereas you've had it molded. You can put something next to it for perspective. Next to every meal you could put like a little dog. And then you would know how big it was.
Starting point is 00:05:49 But that's the thing, James. Dogs vary in size, famously. I should have chosen something more standard. Well, a plastic bit of sushi. Just put that next to it. And then that will show you next to your tuna sashimi, how big your steak is. I was suggesting putting plastic sushi next to real sushi to give an impression of the size.
Starting point is 00:06:04 No, next to real Western like burgers and stuff like that. That would be a good idea, yes. Have we ever said about salmon sashimi? No? The weird thing about it is that it's just not at all Japanese and that it was brought to Japan by Norway. Oh, really? So people didn't eat salmon sashimi in Japan until the 1980s.
Starting point is 00:06:22 And then Norway had a shedload of fish that it couldn't sell and it had to offload. Really wanted to saw out its fishing industry. And they had a meeting with the Japanese and thought, well, this is a country that loves eating fish. And so they started offloading all their fish and selling it to Japan and trying to market it as sushi. And even then, so it was in about 1980. that they started eating salmon in Japan. Even then it took about 10 years before they started eating it without cooking it. Wow.
Starting point is 00:06:44 Isn't that weird? Yeah, do we know what brought the country to sort of shift the attitude? Norway just kept forcing it down their throats, I think. That is true. I think they just had loads of it to sell, didn't they? Yeah. And they just needed a new market for it. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:06:56 That is amazing. It's 1995. But I guess, even if you're used to eating raw tuna, it doesn't follow that you should eat raw salmon. So some people eat raw beef, don't they? And, you know, when you have the steak or chopped up? But if you were to give someone raw chicken or raw pork, all chopped up. All chopped up. It's not a natural thing.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Yeah, it's a mad idea, actually. I don't know, you crack a raw egg on top of that. I'd probably give it a try. Raw chicken. Yeah. Probably just for once, but... Actually, sushi isn't quite as old as you might think. Modern sushi anyway. The first kind of sushi was Nare sushi, which is from the third century BC. But that was basically just pickled fish.
Starting point is 00:07:37 so you put fish in a barrel with some rice and with some vinegar and leave it there for like a year and then when it came out it was pickled and you know it was edible but actually they would also scrape all the rice off so unlike this kind of sushi that we eat today they would deliberately get rid of all the rice and only eat the fish pat that's amazing so did the rice help pickle it it helps the fermentation yeah
Starting point is 00:08:02 because if you ferment something you need a carbohydrate to do that so we're sort of eating the package when we eat sushi and rice. Yes. Did they eventually just get tired of scraping off the rice and a couple of grains of rice stayed on and then there are a few more grains of rice and then eventually it was a massive lump of rice? I think what happened was the next one that came was Han Nare sushi and that was they didn't leave it in the barrel for nearly as long.
Starting point is 00:08:25 I think they probably got a bit bored of waiting for their sushi and so they would open the barrel a bit earlier and then they would eat the fish with the rice and my guess is and this is just to guess maybe it was a bit more sour, a bit more prickly, so that kind of took the edge off a bit. I don't know. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:42 I'm guessing as well that they were always eating sash with a bowl of rice next to them. They just hadn't combined the two as a single meal. And eventually someone dropped one bit into the other and magic happened. Yeah, I think they would have combined it, as in they would have dropped sushi on top of their bowl of rice
Starting point is 00:08:58 and eaten the two together, like we do corn flakes into a bowl and then put milk in it, but you don't sell milk and corn flakes together. They should. Why don't they? Because it goes soggy. Oh my God, it's such a bad idea.
Starting point is 00:09:13 Don't do that. What an about face in just a second or two. Quick is switcheroo I've ever heard. You'd be great on Dragon's Dead now because I'm in, I'm in, I'm in, no. While we're on milk and cereal, so I was reading an ask, this is kind of related,
Starting point is 00:09:29 it's about how food is represented. There's an amazing Guardian article about the secrets of food photographers. Because in the West, we basically do this. We basically make artificial food in order to make it look good. But we're doing it with real food. Like in advertising, you mean, and stuff. Yes, exactly like that.
Starting point is 00:09:44 So, strawberries get covered in lipstick. This is all from individual photographers. It's not like these industry standards. But everyone has their own secret box of tricks. Mexican food is sometimes spray with WD40. The milk is almost never real milk when you see a bowl of milk and cereal on a cereal packet. It can be hair cream. It can be white.
Starting point is 00:10:04 glue, that's a big thing. And then you just shove the cornflanks into the top of it to make it look delicious. That makes sense. Sometimes if you need steam, if you've got a pasta dish, you need steaming in a bowl, one photographer puts incense in there
Starting point is 00:10:19 and lets it smoke away and then just remove the incense in post-production. And one photographer said she, her method, was to microwave wet tampons and then put them behind the pasta. So they were steaming. Wow. Is steam particularly on photogenic on its own when it's naturally just hot?
Starting point is 00:10:38 Yes, yes it is. There must be. There must be a science. Well, they, I mean, this is, I mean, I think it's quite well known that they do use different things in adverts. Yeah. I didn't know any of those examples, but I think that is quite well known. John Lloyd, for people listening, he's a guy who created QI, he used to do a lot of adverts and he used to say that whenever he did a food product like a cereal or something, that in between takes, there was someone who would come and sort of move a rice crystal,
Starting point is 00:11:03 into a better spot of the bowl and like, you know, as if you were doing someone's makeup between takes. Do you remember when China hosted the Olympics and there was that girl who sung the solo but they put another more attractive girl on the TV for it? It's like that. But then it's more serious to do that
Starting point is 00:11:19 than to change a Rice Krispy, I think. I guess the Rice Krispy doesn't mind as much. No one is pretending that this is a photo of a real bowl of Rice Krispies? Yeah, they are. They are. Actually, James, I can't see any difference. Except that Rice Krispies can't be... They don't have feelings.
Starting point is 00:11:34 They don't have feelings. They don't have those faces and those costumes. If you think they don't have feelings, yeah, then the advertising hasn't worked on you, I don't think. Is that what they're trying to do? Because if I thought that Rice Krispies had feelings, I probably wouldn't want to eat them. I wouldn't you? I think I would enjoy it more. As they screamed.
Starting point is 00:11:51 Yes. So on sushi, sushi obviously depends on that seaweed that wraps around it to be made. And so, do you know, basically the person who, brought sushi to Japan, who made it a viable commercial product in Japan. Was it Mr. Nari? Because that's what it's called. It wasn't Mr. Nori. It wasn't Jack O'Norri, the Irish. It wasn't that, though, very good suggestion. It was a woman, actually, who was from Lancashire. It was a woman called Kathleen Mary Drew Baker, and she was studying the Welsh equivalent of Noree, which is the Japanese seaweed that wraps around sushi.
Starting point is 00:12:27 and in 1949 she discovered that this tiny algae was actually the larva of Nouri and before that no one in Japan had known how to farm it commercially because they hadn't been able to work out how to get it to propagate successfully. So in Japan they loved it, they loved sushi,
Starting point is 00:12:42 but they couldn't sell it ever because they would eat little bits of it but they couldn't farm it. And this woman just figured out this random thing, I think she was studying at Manchester at the time, about Welsh seaweed, and they picked up on it and suddenly it revolutionized sushi,
Starting point is 00:12:54 and it meant they had a sushi industry, and they now celebrate her. So she's this woman who no one in this country has heard of and who never visited Japan is celebrated there. She's known as Mother of the Sea. There's a festival held in her honour every year in Osaka on April the 14th. And people go and they pray to her and they give offerings. What?
Starting point is 00:13:11 They sing these special songs at this thing called the Drew Monument, which is a monument to her. Sounds like it should be a monument to you, Drew. No, well, that's not my name. My name is Lightning. So I don't know why everyone's. Japanese restaurants still don't hire women sushi restaurants. I think most of them don't hire women.
Starting point is 00:13:27 This is in, we're talking in Japan. In Japan. When I went to it to that one time. When I went to it to that one was behind the counter. Why don't they're my women? Do you mean the chefs? As the chefs, yes. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:13:40 So I think there's a superstition in Japan that women's body temperature is too high or there was a really... We don't want to cook that raw fish. Simply by your touch. Good luck running your raw chicken restaurant enough because that chicken's going to be. be afraid. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Anna. My fact is that when Mount Vesuvius erupted, it created mini volcanoes in some people's heads. And look, this is a really... Okay, so first of all, it's not, when you say in their heads, you don't mean they're thinking about it and it didn't really happen. No, no, it was very much real. This is, I'm talking about
Starting point is 00:14:27 the famous eruption in, oh God, 49. 79. Thank you. That's good. Good. that I wrote that down? 1979. Yeah. Wow. It was gossed over by Thatcher's election win, but it happened. So this is the eruption of Vesuvius in 79, 80, and it's the fact that I read about this in a review of a book called Caesar's Last Breath, which has just come out. It's by someone called Sam Keene.
Starting point is 00:14:50 And it's about the history and the science of air. Yes. Sorry, I think we all pause because I think that's a familiar name. Yeah, he's written a book that we've got called The Disappearing Spoon, I believe. Yeah. That's it. He's a great author, yeah. Well, this sounds incredible, and I've ordered it.
Starting point is 00:15:06 And so he wrote about this, and he said that when Vesuvius erupted, the heat made a hole in some people's skulls. And then because of the pressure and the heat, the water in people's brain started to boil, and then all the chemicals and substances in their brain started to boil, and they turned into a gas, and then they were ejected out of the little holes in their skulls. So they had these holes in their skulls that were ejecting steam
Starting point is 00:15:29 and other chemicals. And it's really gruesome, but it was 2,000 years ago, guys, so I think we can laugh about it now. It's amazing. It's really grim. It's really grim. I know, but it's extraordinary, right? Because, like, what did it do?
Starting point is 00:15:39 The heat burnt through the air, just through the skull, boiled and created a mini volcano erupting out of the people who were being killed by the volcano. That's insane. It sounds like, you know, in a cartoon, when someone gets really mad. Yes. Yes. Yeah. And smoke comes out of their ears, usually.
Starting point is 00:15:59 But if they got really mad, maybe it would just burst out of this. It sounds like someone's microwaved a tampon and put it in their ears. But yeah, I've never heard anything remotely like that happening. It's weird. And I just love the fact that he's obviously made that. So it was all Sam Keen saying it created many volcanoes. Because it's not a real volcano because it's not magma. It's not magma, no.
Starting point is 00:16:20 And they're not large geological formations. But it did make people's heads steam. Yeah. It made them explode, didn't it? It made them explode. Okay. Sorry, because there are lots of different stages, aren't there? of the explosion.
Starting point is 00:16:32 So there was, you know, part of it, people were being buried in ash, and then part of it, is this when the pyroclastic flow hit? This would be when it was at its hottest, so yes. I think it was a combination of that sudden heat and the sudden pressure. Okay.
Starting point is 00:16:45 Yeah. Yeah, crazy. And so this year, interestingly, scientists have pieced together bits of a skull that was blown up in this way. Wow. And they've got all the bits together, and they've put it through a computer system,
Starting point is 00:16:58 and they've managed to get a picture of the guy what he would have looked like. And he just looks like a Mediterranean person who lived around that time. But it's amazing that they can get all the bits of skull that have exploded from a volcano in someone's head and then see what they look like. That's incredible.
Starting point is 00:17:12 Because presumably with the explosion, it would have gone off into various places. So you'd have to be mixed matching. Yeah, jigsawing. It's like Funny Bones, that children's book. It's like the adult version of that children's book. Yeah. Do you know how they defended themselves
Starting point is 00:17:28 in the initial stages? What do you mean? In the initial stages of the eruption. Oh, yeah. So we're talking about, are we talking about rocks falling from the sky? Or are we talking about... Yeah, there had been earthquakes for a few days. And then there was a huge explosion in the mountain.
Starting point is 00:17:43 And the mushroom cloud went up something like 20,000 meters. So there were little stones rattling around onto the ground. And people tied pillows onto their heads and walked around like that. No way. Yeah. That was how they defended themselves. Do you know what that big mushroom cloud, those big plumes, are called to volcanologists.
Starting point is 00:18:02 What? They are called Plinyans. Oh, really? After Plyne. Yeah, which Pliny, though? The Elder. No, so the Elder famously died when he was so curious. The Younger? The Younger.
Starting point is 00:18:15 Yeah, there was only one of the... The Older, Older. Pliny the Younger. So he described the eruption when he was watching it as well. So it wasn't even just Pliny the Elder who was trying to describe it. Pliny the Younger was back on land going, I'm going to describe this as well.
Starting point is 00:18:30 He saw the giant plumes of smoke that were erupting around it. He called them umbrella pines and that's been lost. But as a tribute to him naming it, it's been Plinyon. No way. That's amazing. Isn't it amazing that 2,000 years later, he's still Pliny the younger. He's not graduated. But younger, it doesn't matter how old you are.
Starting point is 00:18:49 You're still younger. It doesn't mean you're young just because you're younger. That's true. But it's like Kid Rock, isn't it? He's knocking on a bit now. He should change his name to Dad Rock now, shouldn't he? Do you know what the clouds are called that form the clouds of kind of pollution that form around volcanoes? So obviously a lot of sulphur dioxide and lots of other gases come out of it
Starting point is 00:19:11 and they react with the moisture in the air and with the oxygen and the debris and they form this, if it's daylight, they form this big cloud that you can't really see through. And it's called a vogue. Vogue. A fog. What is that, volcano fog? Well, as Wikipedia says, it's a portmanteau of volcano fog and smog. So I don't know which one the other.
Starting point is 00:19:30 The O is from fog. Is the O from fog? So the G is from smog. Yeah, they call it that in Hawaii, I think. Oh, okay. Yeah, as in they'll say, oh, there's a lot of fog out there because it happens relatively regularly. Really?
Starting point is 00:19:45 Yeah, I think so. It's a bit of a foggy day. Have you got your fog lights on? They think that Pompeii had a one-way traffic system. Oh, really? Yeah, based on the wheel ruts and the arrangement of it. I just think it's amazing that you can, know that there was a one-way traffic system
Starting point is 00:20:02 2,000 years ago. So I've been to Pompeii. I went last year. Have you been to Pompeii, James? I went to a sushi restaurant once. I don't like to go on about it. If you've not been to Pompeii and you are listening to this podcast right now,
Starting point is 00:20:17 definitely go. It is genuinely the most exciting archaeological thing I've ever seen in my life. It feels like time travel because everything is still there, including the people, which is mad. You just walk around and there's this body of a person who was there on the day that it happened. You don't see that anywhere else. So it's pretty amazing. The day that we went, I went with my wife Fonela and she was really ill. So she took a lot of
Starting point is 00:20:41 lem sip and she had a lot of coffee and it was boiling hot and she started hallucinating. Here's another tip. If you want to hallucinate, you can't afford LSD. Lem sip and coffee and heat. That's what you need to do. And it was crazy because it was all these dead bodies around obviously. And so she was going nuts over it. You don't see the actual body cell, do you? You do. Yeah. They're in there in The pottery section. Plaster casts of the bodies, I think. They are. So what's happened is the people get buried, okay, and then they rot away, and then there's a
Starting point is 00:21:09 hole where the body used to be, and then the way that they get them is they pour kind of concrete or something into it, and then they pull it out as a cast of a person. Oh, I thought that that was them. You should have really read some of the information plaques while you're in Pompey, Dan. I tell you were off your nut on LEMTA, weren't you? I tell you what, I did read an information plaque. I was stuck on it for ages, and then I realized Pompey doesn't have. have information plaques. And what I was reading was three different translations for how to use
Starting point is 00:21:33 a recycling bin. That was... So there are really few house-led objects left behind. And it's partly because people had 18 hours between eruption and the arrival of the huge hot cloud. So most people had left and taking whatever they could carry with them. But also the reason there's nothing there is that people returned, as soon as it was all over, dug down into the ruins and nicked what they could. Right. And some of them fell in and died.
Starting point is 00:22:03 So some of the bodies are those of looters whose tunnels collapsed. Wow. Do you know that there's a German prince who made a replica of Vesuvius in, so this is in the 18th century. It was in 1794 and there was this guy called Prince Leopold the third Friedrich Franz. And he took... Sounds German. It's the most German name you could have.
Starting point is 00:22:25 And Prince Leopold went travelling around Europe and he... visited Vesuvius and thought, well, that's very impressive, this volcano they've got. I'm going to build one when I get back home. And he got back home and he built something that he called the Stone Island of Verlitz in the countryside near Berlin and it was a five
Starting point is 00:22:43 story high kind of brick and stone building that he covered in all these boulders so it looked like a volcano. And then he built a cone at the peak of it and he put three fireplaces inside this like hollowed out comb. And then he made this crater and he
Starting point is 00:22:59 filled it with water and he erected some red lamps and then when he set the fires and tipped out the water the red lamps illuminated the water so it looked like lava running down his fake mountain and him and his mates used to get together with some booze of an evening and then they used to light the fires and set off a volcano and watch Vesuvius erupt. Wow. That was quite cool. I got one last thing which is from Pompeii it's just to give a bit of insight into the type of people that live there because it's hard to kind of picture their day-to-day activities. They discovered in the ruins, graffiti that's just remained on walls of various places. So they've translated a bunch of them that they could still manage to make out the full sentences of. One reads, if you're
Starting point is 00:23:39 going to fight, get out. And that's written on the side of a tavern wall that they had. Another reads, I don't care about your pregnancy, Sylve Villa. I despise it. That's a private message. I don't know how, because it would have been on a wall. That's a PM. That's a female. Wall, I am amazed you haven't fallen into ruins since you bear the teeth. skribblings of so many writers and that was found at four different walls there. That's funny. That's
Starting point is 00:24:05 like you get where people write on toilet walls, isn't it? They write stuff like that. Well, the final one is a bit of a toilet wall. It's Mertus. You suck well and that was found at a brothel. Well, good. You kept yourself busy while you were there Dan. I can't believe Phinella let you have a pen. Okay, it is time for fact.
Starting point is 00:24:33 and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that the first Bendy Straws were used by people in hospital. And why? Well, I mean, it's more convenient way to drink a drink, I guess, but why just in hospital? You've just answered your own question, Anna. It's that, isn't it? It is. So I just kind of like this, because I associate Bendy Straws more with fun times and parties and stuff.
Starting point is 00:24:59 But the guy who invented them, the first place that he managed to sell them, was to, a hospital and like you say it's so that people who are kind of lying down or not quite vertical can drink more easily because before that they would always drink out of glass straws glass oh wow yeah that and that it comes with a risk yeah but you're in a hospital so that's true can't think of a better place to eat the straw doesn't matter yeah it only comes with a risk to the extent that drinking out of a glass glass comes with a risk I think it also comes with a risk You just probably ever drink out of beakers, don't you? Yeah, I have tippy cups.
Starting point is 00:25:36 I don't know what tippy cups. Is that one of those things that a kid has with two handles on either side and they kind of suck? Yeah, it's got two handles and it's got a little spout. And also, it's amazing because you can sort it upside down and none of it falls out even through the little spout. It's like suckling on a breast. That's why my kitchen cabinet is full of them, James. So I've been reading about the plastic straw apocalypse. So that's kind of why I wanted to talk about straw.
Starting point is 00:26:00 because we should all stop bloody using them. Right. And our grandchildren won't have heard of them ever, will they? What's happened? What's happened? They made a plastic mate. So is sushi. So, sushi.
Starting point is 00:26:11 But plastic can damage the environment. And the thing with straw is, usually if you're in a bar or whatever, you get a straw, you kind of throw it away. It's mixed in with all the detritus and glass and whatever. And it's really hard to kind of try and take it out so you can recycle it. So no one recycles it. Oh, okay. So the problem is they're not being recycled.
Starting point is 00:26:30 And what do you do? You have it for like, what, 30 seconds? I know how long does it take you to drink a gin and tonic? But you have it only for like 10 minutes or whatever. You do me when I straw pedo them. So 80% of the time it takes about a second, yeah. And sometimes they give you two straws. Yeah. So that's completely pointless.
Starting point is 00:26:49 Yeah. Do you want to stat, Dan? Yeah. And can I just also just quickly say, I do know that plastic is bad for the planet. I know. It was more I was trying to work out why. And that makes sense because we do. I always throw straws just into anywhere.
Starting point is 00:27:00 pigeons you're always buying packets of straws and chucking them about yeah um stats please andy Americans use 500 million straws a day
Starting point is 00:27:12 wow they're only about 300 million Americans so some people are having a couple of straws more than one each it's more than one each and the total number used a day there was an article about this which gave an amazing you know comparison
Starting point is 00:27:23 it would fill 125 yellow American school buses each day full of straws That's more than a mile long queue of American yellow school buses and there's no children in them. They're all full of straws. Each day, each day.
Starting point is 00:27:39 It's a complete waste of buses. That's a waste of getting. Yeah, I think all the effort you have to go to you to make the buses to keep the straws in. Exactly. Now are those kids getting into school? Yeah, exactly. We can't carry on like this. I mean, the thing is, if we recycled them,
Starting point is 00:27:51 maybe it wouldn't be so bad, but no one ever does. And they're just completely pointless. Although I said this to you the other day, Anna, and you said you quite like a straw with a gin and ton of it. I need straws, and I need straws, and I always are. ask for them if they don't give them to me in my gin and tonic. Otherwise, the ice gets in the way of the liquid
Starting point is 00:28:04 and so I push it too hard towards my mouth and the liquid goes all down my front. So I do actually need straws, but I'm not averse to like glass or mess or something. Would you be happy to have your own personal straw which you carried around with you? I'd love that. I could get my initial engraved on it or something. Yeah. I think that's a good idea. I think we'll all have our own personal straw
Starting point is 00:28:20 in the future. I think that's a really good call. Yeah, you could kind of have it hanging off your belt. Like people used to have with a knife. Yeah. No one used to have a knife draw. You just have a knife, which you hung by your side. For dinner? For dinner? Or like Croc Dundee style?
Starting point is 00:28:33 For dinner. Right. You know the one that you're carrying around? Would it be metal or would it be made of plastic? It'll be a metal one. Otherwise, you can't really engrave in plastic. You're right. And then you can use it for an emergency tracheotomy.
Starting point is 00:28:46 Because everyone will always have one. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Perfect. So in other plastic news, plastic recycling news, so the bad thing about a lot of plastics is they end up in the ocean, right? We should say, and they choke various animals. I think you were saying that straws specifically go up turtles and noses, don't they?
Starting point is 00:29:02 Well, when Dan's around, they do, yeah, when he can't find any pigeons. It was, that does happen, and a couple of years ago, there was a video of one being extricated from a turtle's nose, and that was kind of the impetus that started this whole kind of, we need to stop having straws. Yeah, turtles. If you're in a bar, by the way, not if you're in a bar, but if you run a bar, get rid of your straws. And if you're listening to this podcast in a bar, A, talk to someone.
Starting point is 00:29:29 But more importantly, throw away your straw. Actually, all bar one are banning them, aren't they? Yes, good for them. Yeah. So I think you won't be able to get plastic straws in all bar one very shortly because of this very reason. So are they going to have no replacement? Yeah, people are just expected to drink stuff straight from the glass, which I agree is a travesty. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:48 What are your feelings on crazy straws? Oh, are they the funny, windy ones you get for birthday presents when your kid? Yeah. Yeah, love them. Yeah. Well, because you don't usually throw those away. Those are keepers. No, you'd be mad to throw them out those way.
Starting point is 00:30:01 They're solid. They're hard plastic. I was reading about crazy straws online. Because they believe deeply that it's more than just a straw, that it's a philosophy. What? Yeah. I was read an interview by the guy who invented the crazy straw glasses. You know, the one where you...
Starting point is 00:30:17 Oh, yeah. Yeah. Classic. He said that we say it's a metaphor for life. Take extra time to go on a winding country road as opposed to the highway. That's how he sees the crazy. straw industry. It's not only are you buying something more long term, but you are experiencing the drink in a more philosophical fashion. It's taking the scenic route. Yeah, it's the Buddha of
Starting point is 00:30:41 straws. It reminds me a bit of, you know, that magazine that you get on the delayed gratification. Yes. Which you get the news like three months later. Yeah. It's a bit like that because you're drinking your Coca-Cola or whatever. Yeah. And there's a few seconds when it's not quite got to your mouth yet. Yeah, that's true. That you can kind of imagine what you're going to taste. Yes, it's that we did it as a quote on QI in the very early episode. Stephen Frye quotes from James Bond saying the best martini of the day was the one just before the first one. It's the anticipation. Yeah, it's the taste just before.
Starting point is 00:31:13 By the way, mentioning delayed gratification. Andy got his latest copy the other day. Can you quickly mention this? Yeah, yeah, yeah. It came with a letter saying, we're really sorry. You probably have noticed this issue of delayed gratification has got to you a bit late. none of the news is from before I think March you'd think the letter would be apologised if it came early
Starting point is 00:31:34 so do you know Dan how probably not what's the longest length of straw that you could drink out of if I put a say a can of beer on the floor yeah and I gave you as long a straw as you wanted but you had to suck from the top of it what is the tallest it could be? I'm going to say two floors.
Starting point is 00:32:00 That's a lot. Two floors. So how many metres are you saying? So that door is two metres. Oh, okay. I'll say 16 meters. The floors I'm talking about have a very high ceiling. Oh yeah, because you live in Versailles, don't you? Any guys, do you think it's less or more than 16 meters?
Starting point is 00:32:24 Or maybe there's an infinite amount. I think it's going to be less than that So I guess you need to have enough To be making a vacuum in the straw That the water fills up to fill So it's just how long can I breathe in I think I can breathe in long enough To suck in three metres worth of air towards me
Starting point is 00:32:39 Up No, but the difference is with a straw You can pause, you can take breaks As in, if I was sucking on a straw I could put my thumb over the straw And it will hang there That's not going to lose it I can then re-suck
Starting point is 00:32:52 Yeah but once you've got all the air out of the straw, surely there's no, you can't remove more if there's a complete vacuum in the straw, right? So Andy is well on the root here. Okay. If you had a perfect vacuum sucking up, that's the best sucking you can do. You can't do any better than that.
Starting point is 00:33:08 Okay. And to get, if you're on Earth, so you have to pull it up against the atmospheric pressure, the highest is about 10 metres. If you had a vacuum, a perfect one. So obviously humans couldn't do any more than that. Ten meters is cool. That's still high enough that I could be on the second floor of a
Starting point is 00:33:25 building and get someone to deliver a drink to my door and pour my straw out. If you live in Versailles, of yours. But the reason that that's kind of interesting or kind of important is because if you're trying to, if you've got a mine and you want to suck the water out of the mine so people can go down and dig for rocks or whatever, you can only suck it up to 10 metres. So anything lower than that, you need to do some pushing as well as sucking, which means you need an engine, which is why in the Industrial Revolution you had all these people who
Starting point is 00:33:52 were inventing engines like water and Newcomen and people like that. that because they needed to get this stuff up there without. Wow, so no matter how wide the straw, 10 metres is the limit. That is really interesting. Wow. Yeah. And so you think, here's the next question that you were just about to ask, Dan, how do trees suck up water from the roots to the top of trees? I was just thinking about, I was because I was saying a asylum in a plant must work like this.
Starting point is 00:34:17 Oh, can we work it out? Is it possible to be worked down? No. Well, it's in this kind of thing. It's always the same answer. The but that did it. It's capillary action. Oh. So if you get a really, really, really thin straw kind of thing, then there's another force that kind of sucks it up there.
Starting point is 00:34:36 And there's also the cohesion of water, which means water molecules kind of pull on each other because they have surface tension. Oh, yes, because they're hydrofluic. That is amazing. So if the straw is thin enough, it can be longer than 10 metres, is what we're saying. If it's super, super thin.
Starting point is 00:34:50 So like one of those tiny ones that you do get in a bar? It's already hard to suck liquid out of those tiny ones. Which is why they give you two. Yes. I always thought they were just for show, like, or for staring, which is why I think they should get bloody rid of them. I'm very excited that we might launch an anti-strawl revolution. Big straw is going to come after us.
Starting point is 00:35:09 But the big straw can't be more than 10 metres. What we need to do is go on to the third floor of a building. Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that bomb detectors in America work six. times better when they are fitted with a fake dog nose on the end. This is such a silly fact. But it's real. I know, I know.
Starting point is 00:35:38 It's astonishing, isn't it? Yeah, so they basically tested this out in America. They 3D printed out the nostril of a dog, and they stuck it on to the end of a bomb detector, and they use the methods by which bomb detecting dogs use when they're sniffing for bombs. So a usual bomb detector will sort of take in a bunch of it. there and it'll analyze it. Dogs do quick sniffs. So they did that with this fake nose as well. They did these quick sniffs. And as a result, they found that it produced results that were 16 times better by having the weird nasal structure of a dog on the end of their bomb detectors.
Starting point is 00:36:15 Yeah, because dogs, I didn't quite realize this about how dogs sniff and how they take in air, that they exhale in a completely different place to where they inhale, don't they? So that... What? What? Yeah. So they could probably play really long notes. a trumpet. Oh yes. Or a didgerie do.
Starting point is 00:36:31 Yeah. They'd be amazing at didgeridoo's. The way dogs breathe is that they inhale through their nostrils on the front of their nose. But if you look at any dog's nose, you would have seen if you've got a dog, they've got these slits down the side of their nose. And that's where they exhale. So if you looked at a picture of a dog now.
Starting point is 00:36:48 What? What? They've got like a guilt. I'm actually just going to show you. No way. Just super quickly. You would have seen it on every dog. I've never seen a dog that much.
Starting point is 00:36:55 All dogs have different noses, though. They've all got this same nose. Like a pug has a different nose to a side view. They've all got dog noses though, haven't they? Do they? None of them have like a human nose. I'm going to look for a variety of dog noses. Okay, okay.
Starting point is 00:37:12 Right, so here you go, Dan. Yeah, yeah. Look at that. All dog noses have this here and then that slip there. Yes, yeah. Okay, Anna is not lying. We can confirm. I'm not lying.
Starting point is 00:37:22 All dog noses have this slit and they've got this thing called an ALAR fold or an Allah fold in their nose and they inhale air and then they pull the fold down. so the air can't come back out the way it went in and they exhale it out of the slit and that makes their sense of smell much better because it kind of stops the air from being exhaled down the same channel that they're trying to breathe in more sense so it stops it all getting mixed up together and it means they can smell all the incoming air more intensely and in a more concentrated way so that explains why this bomb detector kind of stuff works right because it means that they're just passing loads and loads of air over it rather bringing the same stuff in and blowing it out again i've never that is the most surprising thing i've learned today i know i was really surprised i didn't ever think about that or even notice that slit in a dog's nose. A secret slit that we've not noticed, yeah. Secret slit. I was reading in Australia, they have dogs that sniff out koalas. So there's like, for example, there's one dog who in 2014, I think it was, called Maya, was trained specifically to cover a 480 hectare bit of land in order to map out where all the koalas were. However, she was not trained to smell out koalas themselves. She was trained to smell out their feces. So she was, she was trained to smell out
Starting point is 00:38:27 their feces. So she would not disrupt the koalas and get into, I guess, any fights or scare them or whatever. She was just looking for the poohs. So her nostrils were trained specifically just for the feces as opposed to the koala. This year, there's another dog in Australia that's been put into the same kind of role. And he is a dog called bear. And so bear is also sniffing out koalas. Who calls a dog bear?
Starting point is 00:38:50 Yeah, I know. That's confusing. One that's looking for bears as well. Oh, yeah, and he's looking for bears. Yeah, it's very confusing. Yeah. I've got a dog called Panda. Do you object to that?
Starting point is 00:38:59 I do. Yeah, okay. I mean, you're sat right here, so it's hard to say it to your face. It's a stupid name. He went for it. You actually didn't even feel like you found it that hard. Yeah, but you can't just say that all dogs should be called dog. No.
Starting point is 00:39:19 I don't think I was saying that. The way of inventing, that's why we have names is to differentiate things. James isn't saying we call it. Dog's dog. I think there's a bit of a straw man argument going on here. I'm just saying that you should give it a name, which is not another animal. But do you object to them being given human names like Fred? Because I do object to that.
Starting point is 00:39:41 I think it's lying about the fact that this is a dog. It's not lying. I think it is a lie. First of all, the secret slit, and now it turns like you're not even accused of. I think there should be an approved list of dog names called Rover and Fide. though, and that's more or less it. Yeah. I think you should be able to pick from a list of ten dog names.
Starting point is 00:40:03 I haven't got them all worked out. You don't need that many, do you? No. So humans need lots of names because you go into lots of different social situations where you need to know someone's name. Most dogs are with their owner the whole time. I know, but if you're in a park and you go, Rover and the entire park were the dogs.
Starting point is 00:40:19 It would only be a maximum of one in ten of the dogs in the park. That's not how probability works. There wouldn't be a maximum of one. He's going to take the doctor and the path is called Rover. All right, all right. It would be a maximum of all of them, obviously, but the odds to it being all of them very slim. There is a chance of it being none of them, of course.
Starting point is 00:40:38 But that relies on your dog having left the park and there being no other dogs in the park called Rover, which is also a possibility. So anyway. What the hell are we talking about? Bear has this ability, right? So check out the slits on Bear. He can.
Starting point is 00:40:57 sniff out not only a koala so he's been trained not to sniff out the feces he's been trained to sniff out the hair of a koala bear but the malted hair of a koala bear and fresh malted hair so he's specifically going
Starting point is 00:41:13 for hair that is not attached to a koala just so he still yeah isn't that amazing I'm not I didn't know that hair smelled different when it wasn't attached to you than when it was attached to you what this might be is another thing that dogs are really good at doing is separating smell. So they've got like a smell filing system in their noses. So what they might be doing is
Starting point is 00:41:32 smelling that there's hair, but without the smell of the like flesh of a koala. Ah yes. Yeah, yeah. Because they've got this mucus in their nose. And the reason that their nose is the wet, what it helps them do is like file away the smells into different parts of their nose. So certain molecules travel through the mucus faster than others. So it knows that the first molecule that gets to it, the bit that actually smells is likely to be poo, whereas the second molecule that gets through is likely to be beef. And if a molecule takes ages, you know, it might be grass or something. So if you have pooey beef, it knows that it's pooey beef because it's gone through both of them.
Starting point is 00:42:03 Precisely. Whereas if it only gets the first smell that hits, it's just poo. It's like an and-or decision gate in a kind of a computer, right? Yeah. So you're saying that it can get the hair and then gets a live koala. Yeah. But if it only gets one of those two, it knows that it's just the hair or just the shaved koala. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:24 That's clever. Did you know that Bloodhounds, who are having a. amazing sense of smell, smell with their ears. No, stop it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:33 My dog has no nose. How does he smell with his ears? That's how the joke should be told. It's not a joke, but it's the truth. This is actually
Starting point is 00:42:45 a bit of a stretch. This is the old Tushitsky special. Says something ridiculous and then backtracks immediately. Well, what they do is they've got these
Starting point is 00:42:56 really long ears blood towns and you'll notice that their ears a place further down their heads than most dogs and they also have really really droopy jowls and really lots of wrinkles and what these all do is they trap sense and their ears are supposed to drag along the ground so their ears scoop up lots of smells and then they get flicked and carried in the wrinkles of their skin because they're so flabby and up to their nose so there is there to drag along the ground and pick up smells for them i think that's not far off is it that's so close yeah but how long does it take for them to smell something then i guess Sometimes it would take a while and then you've lost where it was.
Starting point is 00:43:28 You've lost where it was, yeah. Yeah. I have one thing about bomb disposal. Yeah. It's just a headline from a local newspaper. This is the Bristol Post. This is within the last month. And the headline is,
Starting point is 00:43:39 Bomb Disposal Squad called to Western Super Mab Beach only to find a really big plate. There was a bloke who found something metal on the beach. He started digging it up and it was huge. And he thought, oh God, okay, this might be something really serious. And so he reburied it, phoned the bomb disposal squad. arrived. That's a plate. Who's taking such a huge plate to the beach?
Starting point is 00:44:02 It's like a platter for sandwiches, maybe. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it would look like the top of a mine. Completely, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's not a crazy decision to make. But with hindsight, it turns out, to have been funny. Okay, that is it. That's all of our facts.
Starting point is 00:44:22 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, James, at Eggshapes, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M, and Jizinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep, where you can go to our group account, which is at QI podcast, or you can go to our website. No such thing as a fish.com. We have links to the tickets for our upcoming tour up there. You can get a link to the book that we're releasing in November
Starting point is 00:44:51 called Book of the Year, and you can also get our new mug. But the big thing that we hope you join us for is next Monday, Facebook Live. We will be. dissecting this episode, talking about all the facts that we didn't manage to get in. And please, if you were thinking of anything you wanted to add to this episode, bring it to the Facebook live and put it in the comment bar and we will talk about it. So that's Mondays. Go to our Facebook page to see the exact time. We'll see you there and see you again next week with another episode. Goodbye.

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