No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Semen Chest
Episode Date: September 3, 2021Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss the high-pitched president, inflatable shoes and likin' lichen. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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Afternoon all, you must know by now if you've been paying attention over the last couple of months
that I have for some reason committed to travelling the country with these three upcoming idiots.
We are going to all sorts of exotic places like Ipswich, Barnstaple, Pool, Redding, Peterborough, Chesterfield.
We're popping over to Dublin, we're going up to Scotland, a few locations there.
Obviously, sitting on a tour bus for months on end with Dan, James and
Andy is not how any sane person would choose to spend their time.
The only thing that's going to make it bearable is if you guys come along to,
please, No Suchthingsafish.com has all the details, get tickets, come and watch us.
There'll be an exclusive first half, which will never be available anywhere else,
and then we'll be doing a different podcast every night for the second half.
See you there.
Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you
from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting at a humongous distance from Andrew Hunter Murray,
James Harkin, and Anna Tashinsky. 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 fact number one, and that's my fact. My fact this week is that it would take people
around 10 minutes to adjust to the way Abraham Lincoln sounded before they could enjoy his speeches.
Wow.
So at the first 10 minutes of his speech is always really shit
because he knows it has to be filler.
And at the 10 minute mark, he launches into the real stuff.
What do you do? What's your job?
You know, emceeing moments.
Wait, hang on, Dan.
Abraham Lincoln's most famous speech was the Gettysburg Address,
where I believe he spoke for two minutes.
And also his most famous line is the first line of that address, isn't it?
Oh, no.
Yeah, you're right.
It's true.
Oh, I would say it was the last line.
So it's the last line.
Wasn't it a shall not perish from the earth line?
Yes.
What was the first line? Four score.
Four score. I really would have gone the four score as the big line.
Would you? I would go buy the people, too. The people for the people with the people.
You didn't understand the first minute and a half, though, did you?
That's true because I was so distracted by his weird voice.
What's his weird voice? Did he have an accent?
He did have an accent, but he also had a much higher voice than you would think.
So I guess all of us probably had an introduction to Abraham Lincoln's supposed voice through the movies and so on.
For me, it was Bill and Ted's excellent adventure.
And incredibly low.
that this weekend. Did you? Well, you would have seen her then. My niece had never seen it. She's
only nine. And so, yeah, introduced her to it. It's brilliant. So he's a fantastic movie.
Yeah. And he just talk about that. Yeah. So he comes out at the end and he does the four score.
And it's very baritone, four score. And that's what we know is Lincoln. But all of the
contemporary accounts of his speeches say that he had a tenor's voice, a much higher voice.
And as a result, there's a historian called Harold Holzer, who's written over 40 books on both
Lincoln and the Civil War.
And he found that there were all these accounts of journalists saying that for the first
10 minutes, people just really had to adjust to both the accent and the sound matched with this
tall human who was quite gangly and just putting all the things together.
It took 10 minutes before they could settle in and go, oh, okay, he's actually saying
amazing stuff.
It sounds like a really weird voice.
Because obviously no recordings.
You're going to voices, Addy.
Can you do us a little, he had a thin tenor or a falsetto voice almost as high.
pitched as a bosun's whistle.
It's all school.
Yeah, it's mad.
The New York, and all the reviews are so negative of him.
The New York Herald said he had a frequent tendency to dwindle into a shrill and unpleasant sound.
It just sounds.
Yeah.
Some people think it was useful, though, because, like, there were some famous debates he did
with a guy called Stephen A. Douglas, and he had quite a baritone voice, Stephen A. Douglas.
But they think that maybe in a big crowd, the baritone might sometimes get lost there,
and the people at the back would be able to hear the high.
pitch sounds better.
Interesting.
How interesting.
Is that like when your neighbours are having a party and you can hear the bass much more indistinctly,
but the high stuff is what really annoys you.
Yeah.
So for me it's the base.
Is that a joke?
No.
The bass is the annoying bit, right?
The base is the bit that keeps you.
Yes, you're right.
Okay, so it's like the opposite of my life with my neighbours.
Cool.
It's another brilliant analogy from Andy Marie.
The whole thing of it being, the voice being low.
the first time I think I've then heard the higher voices
when Daniel Day Lewis played him in the Spielberg movie.
It's a fantastic movie.
I mean, it's...
Still Bill and Ted.
It's no Bill and Ted.
Yeah, I read an article in the Library of Congress
and they said that his voice is closer
to that Daniel Day Lewis voice
than any other impression that anyone's ever done.
Oh, really?
They even said it was more close
than the one Andy is going to do
on the podcast in a few weeks time on that article.
It's amazing.
Oh, no.
So when Daniel Day Lewis was cast
for the movie, which was after Liam Neeson had to drop out.
He spent a year prepping.
Was Liam Neeson going to play Lincoln?
Liam Neeson was going to play Lincoln.
I don't know if I'd take a role that I was second to Liam Neeson.
Well, I think Daniel DeLuis was the original choice.
He said no to it, and then Liam Neeson got involved, and then Liam Neeson had
horrible.
I know, yeah.
Surely then, Daniel DeLois said, oh, God, fine, I will do it.
My lord.
I'm going to find whoever stole my hat and I'm going to rip their heads from their body.
Yeah, so he took on the role and he spent a year, possibly more, prepping for it, read over 100 books.
And that's when he was trying to find the voice, the voice of Lincoln.
And when he eventually found it...
Probably reading the wrong books, wasn't he?
I read an audio book.
Yeah.
When he eventually decided on what the voice was, he recorded it with a neighbor and he posted it to Stephen Spielberg in a package where he drew a skull and crossbones on it and put a black mark on it because he wanted no one but Stephen Spielberg.
to read.
To hear it was much more interesting and exciting to be tempered with.
If it was just a flag keppelof, I'd be like, yeah, fine, I'm not interested in that.
All of a sudden, there's hidden treasure there.
Exactly.
I don't know what he was thinking.
It sounds very odd filming with him because he is your classic method actor, I guess,
Nanduze Lewis, and he insisted on being Lincoln on set.
So he talked in that voice the entire time on and off set for months and months when they
were filming.
He never didn't talk in the voice.
He wouldn't allow any.
accents other than an American accent around him in case that put him off his flow.
He made everyone refer to him as Mr. President throughout filming.
I think Spielberg insisted on that as well.
Did he?
Why they were both presidents?
Yeah, it was very confusing.
Battle of the Presidents.
No, no, he said, let's buy into this, you know.
Oh, so he said that everyone had to call Day Lewis president.
I believe so, because he started coming in era-appropriate clothing as well as the director to sort
of make it.
Spilberg.
Yeah, Spielberg did that.
And Daniel Day-Lewis was not on the course.
sheet, Abraham Lincoln was on the call sheet instead.
Wow.
Yeah.
How do you dress era appropriate as a film director if you're dressing for the 1860s?
Yes.
That's, yeah, that he just watched him and he went, sorry, we can't make a film because
film hasn't been invented.
Everyone go home.
There's one journalist who described Lincoln as a slang wanging stump speaker.
That is a great phrase, isn't it?
It's a really good phrase.
He was known for being humble, which some people cast as.
maybe not sophisticated enough in his language.
Slang wanging.
He's wanging the slang around.
Slang wang.
His accent we were saying before was kind of different as well, right?
So whenever he was supposed to say chairman, he would say cheerman.
Cheerman.
Cheerman.
And so, chairman.
What about this?
If he ever said, Winder.
Winder.
That's window.
Window, right.
Learned would be Larned.
And he would always say recum instead of assume.
That sounds really different
But equally strangely
He also had a lot of misspellings in his written work as well
And he would often spell the word inaugural wrong
Oh yeah
But we think that perhaps that gives a clue as to how he spoke as well
If he spelled it slightly differently
Maybe he spoke it that way as well
Was it radically different?
Did it start with a cue?
No, it would be inaugural
Okay.
It's kind of inaugural.
Inogaral.
And he stood so still.
This was another report of the way he spoke.
So his law partner was a man called William Herndon.
And Herndon recorded that, I don't know why he said this, but he said, you could leave a silver dollar between his feet at the start of a speech and it would still be there at the end.
I have a theory for why he did this.
So I was reading accounts of Young Lincoln.
I don't think he actually did that.
I'm just, what do you mean?
He didn't actually leave a dollar between his feet.
No, no, no.
But he stood in credit.
The point was.
analogy was to make the point.
I thought you were saying that he had done that.
I have a theory that the coin was magic.
He used to be a busker and he always put a few guys there to just get people going.
No, my theory, which probably is an established reason as opposed to a theory, is when he was young, he used to sit up late at night and he used to listen to his dad tell stories to all of his friends.
Really funny stories. Lincoln was obsessed with them.
So in the morning, he would go and he would find his friends and he would tell all the stories.
that his dad had told the night before,
and he would stand on a tree stump,
and that is where he would deliver all of his speeches.
So he didn't have much of a stage.
He had the space of a tree stump,
and that would have informed the lack of leg movement,
which then took him to presidency.
When he was doing his inaugural speech,
he was thinking, oh, oh, oh, oh,
exactly.
The Gettysburg Address was not him.
What?
Yes, it was.
Wow, okay, this is a crazier theory.
my tree stump theory.
This is, he stood so still because it was actually a robot.
No, the Gettysburg address was someone else delivered it.
So really at the event where he delivered the Gettysburg address, he was supposed to be giving
a very short closing dedication, which is why it was only two minutes long.
It was just a very quick.
Thanks for coming, guys.
Thank God these blokes gave their lives for the Civil War, etc.
If there's a carriage in the park with the license plate, blah, it's blocking the way.
You need to move your carriage.
Exactly.
The person who was supposed to give what they were calling the Gettysburg Address at the time
was this great orator and politician, pastor, who was called Edward Everett, and his was two hours long.
So that could be the one we all knew off by heart.
Wow.
Really?
So did he actually do that two-hour speech first?
He did a two-hour speech, which means it's incredible people had the energy to listen to Lincoln after that.
He did the two hours.
No wonder they loved it so much.
Yeah.
I think he was sick at the time as well, Lincoln, when he then gave the speech afterwards, and it kind of bombed.
and it kind of bombed, I guess, after a two-hour speech.
It did bomb. It got terrible reviews everywhere.
So the Times said that the inauguration of the cemetery at Gettysburg was an imposing ceremony,
only rendered ludicrous by some of the luckless sallies of that poor President Lincoln.
Ouch.
Yeah.
And in fact, there was an apology issued in 2013 by a newspaper called the Patriot News,
who gave him a really bad review at the time.
They said it was silly remarks and that maybe he was drunk and that it deserved the veil of a bleak.
And then in 2013, they recanted.
I don't know, America.
Of all the things you should be apologising for that,
it does feel quite far down the list.
When did Lincoln become president?
How do you all know?
1860?
Yeah.
So when do you think the first town was named after him?
Oh.
I would have guessed a few years after the Civil War or soon,
or maybe soon after it.
Okay, I'm going to go the opposite direction and say he was an influential lawyer,
and maybe that led to something.
So two years before he was president.
Who are you?
and what have you done with Dan Shreiber?
That is absolutely correct.
It was 1853, because he was a lawyer, some people who were setting up a new town brought him in to kind of sign the deeds.
And they said, would you mind if we named this town after you?
God, that's flattering.
So that's Lincoln, Illinois, which is still there today.
And at noon that day, he purchased two watermelons, carried them to the public square and squeezed the watermelon juice out onto the ground.
Did he use his thighs?
call back.
And he said to the people
nothing bearing
the name Lincoln
ever amounted to much
so he said that they shouldn't really
have called it after him.
Honest.
Oh, wow.
That's very cool.
Humble chap.
One thing from the time that Lincoln was president
was that the White House
was an open house at the time
which is so bizarre to think of now
obviously because there are about
two miles of security around it
but people were just walking in all the time.
You just walk into the White House
and people were free to climb in through the windows
They camped outside his office door.
They're free to do that, right?
If it's open, why'd they go through the windows?
I have no idea, actually.
But they were demanding jobs from him.
It was just, the whole thing was carnet.
He's the president of the country.
He must have had one room where it was like, do not enter.
Well, he had an office.
And a toilet.
Yeah.
They had to cut it down to two, five hour sessions a week where you could just knock on the door
and go and see him and chat to him and ask for a job.
Oh, I see.
10 hours a week of his working time was spent just being harangued by people.
And he called them his public opinion.
baths and people would just leave inventions that they thought he might like to look at.
It's insane.
And he couldn't walk from the office to his own private living quarters without being bothered along
the way by people asking for jobs.
And the White House maintenance people had to build a partition to say, no, he actually just
needs a corridor that he can walk along without being bothered all the time.
Corridor of power.
Yes.
It's mad.
I suppose it's kind of like an MP's surgery, isn't it, today?
Yeah.
But for 10 hours a week, for the quarter of your working time.
For the president of the United States.
I know. I think he does.
did more than 40 hours a week, Andy.
I'm going to say.
Maybe at the height of the war.
Yeah, you're right.
And now he bothers presidents, because isn't he constantly reported, not constantly,
but by a few, the Ghost of Lincoln, the scene in the White House.
The people of, you know, presidents have said, yeah, yeah, I saw the Ghost of Lincoln.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's him.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Anna.
My fact this week.
is that 5,000 years ago, Scots built houses by dropping huge piles of stones to the bottom of locks
and building their home on top of them.
That's amazing.
Such a weird way of doing it.
And we don't know why they did it.
These are things called Kranogs.
I mean, if you live in Scotland, it's very likely you know about them.
I actually didn't know about them at all.
Yeah, never heard of them.
But there are about 600 of them known about so far.
They're artificial islands that were built in locks.
And they would be connected to the shore by like a little causeway.
And until quite recently, it was thought they dated back to about 800 BC.
And then they just did some radiocarbon dating of pottery that's been sunken around them.
And they found out it actually dates back to 3,600 BCs.
So before Stonehenge, before the pyramids, the Scots were just piling up stones in locks and building a house on top for no apparent reason.
It's not just piling stones, right?
Like, there's so much engineering that goes around it.
Yeah, it's so impressive.
So the word, Kranog, is Gaelic for Son of Tree or Young Tree.
and the idea is because they would cut these huge long timber piles
and they ram them into the beds of the lock
and then they would pile the stones in around them
so they had a solid wooden foundation.
So you've got like a scaffold that you can stuff full.
Yeah.
I think there are different types as well aren't there?
There are some that are just timber.
So they're just kind of wooden platforms
and then there are some that are stones.
Yeah, exactly.
And we've tried to remake them in modern times
and it's taken about three years to construct one
to be in a similar using the technology and so on.
How did they drive the piles into the bed of the wood?
the lock. They have to get meters into the bed of the lock. And, you know, that's obviously
incredibly hard to do from a floating surface. Well, I think what happens is you put some stones
near the shore. Yeah. And then you put some a little bit further away and a little bit further away
and you put like a path to the middle of the lock, or not the middle, maybe a few meters away
from the edge. And then you build it from there. So you kind of make a causeway first. And if you
look from above, you can kind of see the little causeway underneath the water. Yeah. And then how do
you get the pile to go so deep into the bed?
Oh yeah, I mean, it's all crazy.
It's, I think we'll know.
You pile up on top like a circus trick.
You just have people standing on each other.
It's the ghost of Lincoln, I think, is coming out again.
It implies stuff.
If it's the Loch Ness monster, we're...
It's aliens.
Of course it's aliens.
No, we have no idea, do we?
It's absolutely amazing.
And people lived there until the 17th century, apparently the last people were living on Kranogs.
So pretty relatively recent compared with when they were built.
I think the ones where we found the pottery,
we're not sure if people actually lived there, right?
Yeah.
So the reason that we think they might not have lived on these particular ones
is because there isn't any domestic waste around there.
You do have these pots.
There's no human remains,
so we don't think it's a funeral thing.
So we think it might be some kind of feast,
maybe some kind of right of passage, that kind of thing.
So what has happened is people have brought some pots to this island,
this fake island, done something,
thrown the pots in the water and then left.
It's a bar.
I mean, that's obviously just a bar.
It could be.
Tiki bar.
Yeah, it's a bar.
You're pissed, you toss your pot away.
You can't be asked to carry it at home.
It's the Scottish pub.
It's the first pubs.
It sounds so exciting, being the person who discovered that they were really old,
so they are 3,000 years older than we thought they were.
And it was a retired Navy diver called Chris Murray,
who first kind of discovered this, and it was 10 years ago,
and he was just going for a dive.
and he saw some pots
and then he sent them off to be analyzed
and turned out they were 5,500 years old.
But he was saying that in 2020,
he was going for a dive
and he found a 5,500 year old drinking vessel.
He just saw a little fragment sticking out of the mud.
So he took it and then he took a sip of water from it.
And you can think the last time someone did this
was over five millennia ago.
Yeah.
Isn't that so cool?
It is amazing.
Maybe people will be doing that with our old
horrible ribina cartons and plastic festival cups in 5,000 years.
What a nice thought.
What a lovely thought.
All the plastic will still be there, won't it?
Yep.
Artificial islands?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So lots of artificial islands in the world.
I didn't know about the ones in Bolivia and Peru on Lake Titicaca.
Yeah, they're amazing.
I've stayed on them.
Have you?
Wow, the floating one.
The reed islands.
The reed islands, yeah.
So, yeah, these are islands made of weeds.
woven together and they're made by indigenous people.
And it seems like they were just made by the Euro people.
And basically they got to the shores of Lake Ticaccah,
hoping to set up camp and take residence there a thousand years ago.
And they realized there were people there.
There was the Keshua people, the Aymara people there.
So they were like, well, we can't live here.
What should we do?
So they built some platforms and then just sailed out into the middle of a lake
and they still hang out there.
Yeah, it's really cool.
When I was there, they said that they went there
because there was taxes they wanted to get away with.
So it was like a literal offshore account that they went so they couldn't tax them.
But some people think it was because there was a war and they went there so that people couldn't attack them.
But yeah, they taught me how to make the reeds and stuff like that.
Oh, cool.
So you have to constantly sort of, it's like repainting a bridge, right?
Like you're constantly fixing the reeds.
So near to where the islands are, there's like loads of massive reeds and you go over there and you cut them down and then you kind of turn them into like little, not like bricks, but like little.
groups of reeds and I went on a boat to the school because they have a floating school and a
floating basketball court and stuff and I was staying with family of Uros and it was really cool
highly recommend that.
So amazing.
Have you heard of Mischief?
This is another created island and it's a new island that's been created by China and it's in
the, is it the South China Sea?
I think it is.
Probably.
It's why they do most of their island creation.
They are creating a lot of islands at the moment.
And it's causing a lot of mischief.
Yeah.
Oh, they genuinely are.
I try to work out.
Was this called mischief reef before China started creating military runways and hangers and, you know, missile bases?
It's quite an innocuous term.
There's naughty boy island.
It's silly billy.
Mischief is one of the biggest.
And you can see photos of it from, you know, 15 years ago, photos now.
And it looks like a different place.
It is a different place literally because it's been imported and installed and concreted and all over.
But there's this bizarre.
are war of attrition going on, kind of Cold War style, between China who are building these
islands, which are contested, by the way, the ownership is contested, and the US Navy. So the US
Navy keeps on sailing close to them to make the point. They do a thing called a Fonop,
which is a freedom of navigation operation. And if you have a land, I think the barrier is
12 miles, like, that's how far your border stretches into the ocean if the island is definitely
yours. I know there are different sort of definitions, but the USA pointedly sails within 12 miles
of mischief reef to make the point, these are international waters according to the international
community, so we're going to keep on doing it. And it hasn't broken into all our conflict yet.
A little bit, isn't it? Because I think Philippines want it, Japan wants it, Indonesia wants it,
Russia wants it. It's like, yeah, it's dodgy. But do you remember I was telling you guys about
in Bhutan on the border between Bhutan and China?
China has just started building villages.
Yes.
And no one noticed.
In Bhutan, they started.
In Bhutan, yeah.
Like, the Bhutanese noticed.
And they were like, well, shall we tell the Chinese not to do this anymore?
Or shall we just kind of leave it?
And they just kind of left it because there are other things that they want to have a good deal with China about.
But then the international community are like, well, last time we looked here, there weren't three villages at an airport.
You know.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
I thought it was called Mystery Filings because of a.
ship.
Oh really?
Called my mischief.
My Wobby.
Yeah, I think it's in dedication to a ship that used to pass and that.
I could be wrong about that.
Jimet's mischief.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a potty cruise ship, wasn't it?
It's a swingers cruise.
Here's an island that I'd never heard of.
Dejima.
This was created in Nagasaki Bay in the 17th century in Japan.
And during the Edo period, Japan wanted to be a closed country.
So it didn't want anyone else to come in.
The only people that were allowed to go anywhere near Japan,
were Chinese, Korean and Dutch,
and they were allowed to do that for trading reasons.
Dutch is a bit of a wild card.
Feels like a Dutch got a weird free pass
that the rest of Europe didn't?
Okay, whatever, I'm not offended.
But basically, if you were a member of the Dutch East India Company
and you were trading and you were like taking some silk there
or some spices or whatever,
you would go to this created island called Dejima
and you would kind of live on there
but you weren't allowed onto the main island.
And there was like a bridge there with guards
which would stop you from going over.
It's really, really cool.
There's an amazing book, David Mitchell book, set on Dejima,
because it was very famous Japan's policy was they didn't want any Western culture
coming in and invading them,
which is why they really tried to block them out,
and then, you know, wars happened and we got involved and forced them out of it.
But yeah, it's so brilliant.
What was the book?
The Thousand Autumn of Jacob de Zoet.
And yeah, so it's about this Dutch guy who goes over and stays there.
But, yeah, completely fake.
Yeah, and while you're on there, like, the local kids would kind of,
Oh, look, there's a Dutch person.
Isn't that strange kind of thing?
And also, you were required to tell the Japanese
about anything that had happened in the world
while you were away.
Really?
You're a human newspaper for the news
of three years ago when you last left to the Western world.
I find that really cool
because at one point, Dejima was the only independent
bit of the Netherlands.
So at one point, the Netherlands was an artificial island.
So this is when the Netherlands was annexed by Napoleon,
I think in the Napoleonic.
wars and like lots of Dutch territory was taken elsewhere.
And so that was where they lived.
And I think they succeeded there because they're so used to living on basically
artificial reclaimed land, right?
The Netherlands is sort of, mostly an artificial island in itself.
About 60% of the land in the Netherlands is just there because they've drained away the water
and they've built it up.
It's amazing.
Yeah.
It's incredible.
Most of the population lives on land that shouldn't naturally be there.
Yeah.
There's an entire province called Leveropol.
which is the 12th province of the Netherlands and it's new.
It's just a new.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, because polder is what they're called.
It's a polder, the reclaimed land, isn't it?
It would make you nervous, I think.
That is incredible.
Yeah.
I found a really cool new artificial island, which, and I'm so annoyed, I have not looked up
the pronunciations, but I imagine you guys will know it.
Here we go.
It's a bridge which connects Copenhagen to Malmo and it's the Orosond bridge.
Urisond, yeah.
Uruzond.
So, have you been there?
Yeah.
Okay, apparently you've been to every artificial island.
So the Uderson Bridge, if you're passing it, you go in the bridge.
And that's what the TV show, the bridge is based on.
Exactly, yes, yeah.
And it goes down underneath, doesn't it?
As opposed to being a bridge that connects Copenhagen to Malmo, it goes bridge-like,
and then suddenly it becomes a tunnel and you go underneath.
And that tunnel bit has become an artificial island, which is called Pepeholm.
And Pepeholm is called that because there is an actual island next to it called Saltholm.
Nice.
Yeah.
So that's the...
They don't mention that in the bridge.
It's a really great TV show.
It's so exciting.
Saganade Lanski Malma.
It's really like cool and sexy and Scandy.
And they don't ever say that.
If they just had one character
who just gave bits of trivia about the area,
that would be way that.
Maybe it would have been a successful show.
Exactly.
So yeah, so it's become this artificial island.
So how does a tunnel become an island?
There's a stretch of water between the two.
Between Malma and...
Popper.
Right, right.
So you have a bridge.
over some of it.
Yeah.
Then there's an island at the end of the bridge.
And that island then contains the portal to a tunnel.
Yes.
The tunnel runs under the rest of the water.
Right.
So the boats can still go past, but you can have a bridge.
I see.
I see.
Very clever.
And so what's happened is this small, very concrete-looking island has become a place where new species have migrated to and set up shop.
And so you're only really allowed.
What are they selling?
It's like a penguin going to want to a fish?
Any fish? Any fish?
So supposedly, I mean, this is, I don't know if this is definitely still the case in 2021,
but for the last few years, it's been the case that you can only go there once a year.
And it's only biologists who are allowed to go there.
And what they found on it is amazing.
There's 12 species of bird that are living there.
There were 20 species of spider, one really rare one, which they think might have migrated there via a train.
So it sort of hopped off while it was on the train.
There's a couple of rabbits there that they think some people in a car must have just let out
and let them be on their own.
There's 345 species of beetle.
There's 421 species of butterfly.
Which vehicle did these all leave out of it?
The beetles came in a yellow submarine.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the only known species of marine lichen was discovered
by a person named Ivan Lamb.
Their work often acknowledged the help of a Miss Elkie McKenzie, but that turned out to be one
in the same person as Lam later transitioned and took that name.
It's very cool. Isn't that cool?
So Ivan Lamb was basically thanking her future self.
Exactly. Elkie McKenzie. Yeah. Or teasing.
It's a trailer. A trailer.
Yeah. Yeah. So I read an obituary of Elki McKenzie written by Vernon Ahmadian,
but I'd actually first come across Elki McKenzie in a blog by Jason.
store the website by Sabrina Imbler and in that blog there was an amazing thing that said that
McKenzie had spent her whole life preparing this monograph of a particular type of lichen
only for her never to be able to quite make it because sometimes her specimens got blown away
once she fell down an elevator shaft did she fall down an elevator shaft or did the lichen fall
down it's really hard to tell but that was like what really piqued my interest about this
person it's like what an amazing life um
But yeah, a really cool person who kind of dedicated her life to Lycan.
She worked in the Natural History Museum in London as an assistant to Annie Lorraine Smith in the 1930s.
And it's just so interesting that at the time, Annie Lorraine Smith was a huge character in the lichen world.
And she'd written a book which became the sort of seminal textbook for the time about lichen.
Yet she was not officially hired by the Natural History Museum because they didn't hire women at the time.
So she had to have, her page.
packet was outsourced to somewhere else that could fund it because that was the only way that
they could do it because they didn't have women on the payroll. Wow. It's weird they're reading
about the history of lichenologists because there do seem to be a lot of women in there. Like in
the 19th century, a lot of the people I was coming across were women, which is kind of exciting.
It was like a secret area that women knew that they were going to be led into almost, but not quite.
And I did get excited that Carol Dodge, who was Elkie McKenzie's main rival, was also a woman,
but it's not a woman.
But it's kind of sad Carol Dodge,
the Carol Dodge story,
because Elke didn't like Dodge.
So what Elke found that was really revolutionary
in the lichen world was endemic Antarctic species, right?
And she never got the chance to publish her Antarctic discoveries
for various reasons.
And she didn't like Dodge because she thought Dodge's taxonomy was kind of reckless
and Dodge was just identifying things all over the shop.
You know, you pick up a bit of like and you go,
yeah, yeah, I bet that's a new one.
Come on, write it down.
And now Dodge's record.
called of Antarctic Lichen is the kind of authority because McKenzie for various reasons, one of which
was that she said in, I can't remember what year she transitioned, was the, I think it was the late
70s maybe, but she said, I am a woman, so I'm going to have the surgery. And she basically
was made to take early retirement. Yeah, that's the implication, isn't it? They sort of tried to rewrite
the history in the moment, didn't they, by saying, oh, it's just for reasons, but it was quite
obvious that's why. Yeah. Post-McKenzie's retirement, she got into woodwork.
Post obviously felt like a bit of a wind-down, and I think she had some mental health problems
that she admitted to. She'd been quite depressed, and so she quit the whole Lichen game and
decided to get really into making Siemens' chests. So, you know, where else you're going to
keep your Siemens? James Seaman chests are a completely different thing to Siemens' chests.
no
wait
then what have I been
keeping mine in
oh my god
that's why they didn't invite
you back on the boat
oh no
there's a treasure map
out there
one day when it's
found it's going to be
hugely disappointing
she's the pool of semen
X marks the spunk more like
wow that was too far
was it too far yeah
maybe she didn't make
receptacles for seaman
just to make that very clear
she just made receptacles
for seaman's gear
You know, it's like a suitcase.
The only notable thing really about them is that they're like a chest,
but they have sides that tilt inwards,
because if you're on a rocky boat, you don't want them to tip over.
Very clever.
Very clever.
And they have very intricate knots in the handles called Beckett.
And this is what Elke got particularly into is making these knots.
Just on lichen.
Lichen are incredible.
I didn't really know what they were.
God, me neither.
No.
Why have we never talked about them before?
And what they are is they're two things.
there are two species living in the same house.
It's mad.
Or rather, it's one species living in a house built by another one.
So it's a fungus and normally an algae teeming up.
Sometimes it's an algae.
Sometimes it's a cyanobacteria.
Sometimes there are two algae.
It gets a bit complicated.
But basically, the basic thing is it's a fungus which builds a structure and the algae
lives in it and photosyntheses sunlight which produces sugar, which the fungus then eats.
So the fungus is providing the home and the algae is bringing in the food.
And so what's the lichen?
It's the collective name.
That whole thing is the lichen.
Yeah, exactly.
These two things that are working together, as you say, in symbiosis.
The word symbiosis was coined by a guy called Heinrich Anton de Barri.
And he was talking about lichens when he coined that term.
Although Vernon, Mattian, who wrote the obituary of Elki, he doesn't think they're in symbiosis.
He thinks that actually the fungus is a controlling parasite of the,
algae or cyanobacteria.
It's very interesting. What's just stealing food off it?
He's basically, he's saying that, yeah, exactly, that the algae has no choice in the matter.
And it could perfectly happily live without a roof over its head.
There's no evidence that they need this building that the fungi makes for them and the fungi is getting a free ride.
But it's very controversial.
It's a big old debate.
And it's like everyone knows couples like that where you think, should they be together?
Isn't one of them fine without the other one?
Is it controlling paracetism?
No, you can only judge these things from the inside.
Unless you are an algae or a fungi, you cannot comment.
So does the fungi absolutely need the algae then?
Yes.
Because it gets energy from the algae.
So the fungi can't do what most fungi do, which is eat decomposed matter,
which is how fungi normally survive,
but they've now evolved to just eat the food that's made for them by photosynthesis.
So they would starve.
And the argument is that the algae is getting some protection in return,
but a lot of people think that actually doesn't need that protection.
Right.
Yeah.
It's controversial.
Well, I've got actually something even more controversial to blow this even wider open,
which is that they now think it's not, a lichen is not two organisms, it's three.
Three?
Yeah.
And this is a massive discovery in the world of lichen.
So this is that there have been a bunch of mysteries about it.
So one was that there were different lichen, which at a DNA level are exactly the same when they studied them,
but that have different effects, like some will kill you when you eat them and some are perfectly edible.
They're like, how is this possible?
They look like they're the same thing.
And they also had this problem where scientists can't recreate lichen in a lab,
which you should be able to because you should be able to get the fungus
and the bacteria or the algae, shove them together, create it.
Doesn't work.
And now they found a way of looking at them closer
and they've realized they all have inside them a different fungus,
which is more like a yeast.
So right deep within their cells, single cells of this other fungus.
So is this every known lichen.
we're talking about.
It seems like it might be the definition of lichen is this third thing.
It's a new order of fungus that just does this.
So it's an extra fungus which is carried within the fungus that then takes to the...
Exactly.
It's very hard to blow this shit wide open because a lot of it is just learning about the original shit in the first place.
And I just blow some more shit right open.
Please.
So you know there's a lot of species of lichen that they thought were just a single species.
There's one in particular which is called Dichtionema.
glabratum, and they thought it was just one species, and it turns out that it's at least
126 different species of lichens. This one lichon that you'd never heard of. I know. It's actually
126 lichens that you'd never heard of. It's amazing. That's incredible. Which lazy intern did
the first count of that? Well, the problem is that when you take lichen from the natural setting,
if you see that in the, in the countryside, it might be lots of different colors, it might be lots
different shapes and stuff like that. As soon as you take it into the lap, it loses all of its
colour, it becomes like a boring grey-brown sludge. And they kind of all look the same at that point.
And so loads of people were finding this stuff and bringing it back and they couldn't tell the
difference. And it's only when they look at the genes that they can now tell the difference
between the different species. I'll tell you what, if anyone's thinking of becoming a lichenologist,
and I imagine after this chat, you're going to be applying.
Yeah. Best place to do it, New Zealand, in my mind. Really? 10% of the world's
lichen is found in New Zealand and as of 2019 they had fewer than five lichenologists.
Did they?
You would have an absolute playground there if you wanted to go and do that.
And wasn't that the place that they had the sexy pavement lichen?
It was, exactly.
Was it in one of our books?
We mentioned it in Book of the Year 2019.
It was that New Zealanders, I believe, were told by the government to stop licking lichen on
the ground because it was acting like Viagra.
But who was who was licking lichen off the ground?
I don't think.
I think they were taking it off the ground and they were ingested.
it in a different way, maybe in a tea or something.
Mix messages because the word lichen comes from the Greek to lick.
So, you know, there you go.
I'm liking this.
Yeah.
So they were getting an erection when they had this lichen, right?
Yeah, exactly.
So why were they not allowed to do it?
I think it was.
I can't actually remember.
Do you remember?
I think it was.
Who's going around stopping people having perfectly healthy erections based on snuffing pavement
scraping, scrapings?
Maybe if you get the wrong lichen, then maybe your dick falls off or something.
You know, because they are hard to tell apart.
So it's probably that's true.
I do remember how it was.
What was it?
It was that basically you would get lots of heavy metals leaching into it on the, on the
pavements and stuff.
You might get dog poo in it.
You might get dog we in it.
It's hard to regulate.
It's hard to regulate.
There was high levels of lead they found.
They were found cadmium in it.
They found mercury.
They found arsenic.
And the US Food and Drugs Administration bought one lot online and found that it was actually
20% grass clippings and 80% ground up Viagra.
I would say be a lycanologist in Britain
because the British Lycan Society, as far as I can tell, are super on it
They have an amazing website
And they just have a fabulous time
They've got about 650 members
A lot of competition there though, isn't there?
Like them were saying only five lichen experts in New Zealand
Fewer then
That's true
Why they just didn't name the number
Yeah, that's what the article said
Surely you could just say three
If that's what it was
Actually in Britain
It's useful to become a line
lichenologist because I was going through the list of the presidents of this society, specifically
the women, and every single woman that I could find that had a Wikipedia article attached
to their name, they've all got OBEs.
So I don't know what's going on in the lichen world that the government is recognizing
their work towards the country, but they're all, they've all got titles.
Wow.
Yeah, so that's a quick way to an OBE, become a lichenologist.
Wow.
Maybe there's some secret.
They're not telling us.
It doesn't feel like a quick way to become an OBE.
Sorry, I think it takes years and years of craft.
It's not like become an OBE with this one weird trick.
I actually am not sure it does take that long.
Stop denigrating the workers of the British Lichen Society.
Their serious science do.
Again, please don't write in.
It's the OBEE committee that we're talking about.
Oh, what, they just see Lichen and they just waggle it through.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, no, I'm saying it doesn't take long to become a lichenologist.
It takes a week.
Okay, yeah, this is what Anna is saying.
That's my point.
This is because I was reading about Kerry Knudson or Kerry Knudson,
who's California's only professional lichenologist.
He's a really fun guy.
And he's published...
Fewer than two, I believe.
California lichenologists.
He's published over 200 papers on them.
And he pretty much took up being a lichenogynologist after he retired.
And now he's...
He maybe knows more about Lichen than anyone else in the world, claims the Atlantic.
He was a construction worker for most of his life.
So he ran away from home at 16 to join an anarchist commune.
Wait a minute, wait a minute.
He was a construction worker.
Sorry.
So before he was construction worker.
He built a lot of very wonky buildings along anarchic lines.
Yeah.
No, he ran away at 16 before being a construction worker, took lots of acid, wrote lots of poetry,
got into quite magic, was a big fan of a friend of the podcast, Alistair Crowley.
And then he went off poetry because he didn't like modernism direction it was going in,
so worked in construction, got some blood clots in his legs, had to retire prematurely in his 50s.
And he said to his daughter, I'm going to go back behind the house and I'm going to study whatever I find there.
and he found lichen there
and so now he's the world leading
lichenologist
and he named one after Obama
that's his contribution to the lichen world
I read about that one yeah
that's a big deal
2009 huge deal
you can age structures based on how fast lichen
moves across it that's a fun thing to do
leconometry
they're incredibly slow growing some of them
and I really like this
the oldest lichens in the world are found in the Arctic
and there are a species called Rizocard
Rizocarpum Geographicum, and they've been aged at 8,600 years, some of them.
And they're still alive.
Yeah, which I think would make them the oldest living organism on the planet.
What?
They also use them for detecting pollution levels, don't they?
So if you're in a very polluted area, if a certain type of lichen is introduced,
and it doesn't grow, that means that the pollution levels are too high.
And if you can bring them down, and then the lichen starts growing there,
that shows you that you're at the right level.
So it's a really interesting bar for...
That's why, because there's always some dickhead on our country walk that you're going on,
when trees are covered in, like,
and there's always someone who goes.
That's a good sign, actually.
That's because that means it's really clean air.
But isn't that true?
Yes, it is.
Well, it's just annoying.
They keep reminding me about it.
I get it, okay.
The tree looks a bit dirty, though.
I wouldn't like to be in your club.
This is a stressful country walking club.
Hey, can I please get listeners to solve a crisis that I had this weekend,
which is sort of like and related maybe.
I was in the children's.
I was staying in this little bit of woodland,
and we found a tree that,
was covered in ivy and then the ivy looked like basically a dump truck had dumped a load of mud on it
like every single ivy leaf was covered in red soyly mud and we realized we traced it looking closely at the tree
back to these sort of large dinner plate size what looked like fungi bright white kind of beautiful fungi
growing straight out of the tree and in their dinner plate which was like a bowl there were mountains of this red
soil stuff and i'm going to put i am going to get a picture on the podcast twitter feed somehow some
engagement.
Some old DECCree.
And someone needs to tell me what it is.
Some names of lichen, and you can tell me why they're called this.
Okay.
So dog lichen.
Why is it called dog lichen?
Looks like a dog.
No, it doesn't.
Likin's going to look like a dog.
It grows in the shape of Scooby-Doo.
It catches balls in his mouth.
No, not that.
If dogs pee on it, it eats it up and makes it stronger.
than the other
dogs
it grows towards
the dog star
serious
these are all amazing
it's uh
it's hairy like a dog
like if you were walking
in the forest
it'd be like that's a dog
but that's the same
as it looks like a dog
that's just see
see first answer
yeah okay I see
mix it with half a pint
of warm milk
and it can cure
a dog
rabies
rabies
correct
named by Linnaeus
in 1753
dog lichen
just in case
anyone's listening who does happen to have been by rabid dog we should probably say it definitely
doesn't cure rabies no go and go and get that is the half pound of milk that does all the work
I'm genuinely glad you guys added that because in my head that was how you cure it
british soldier like them okay for wounds on british soldiers you would you would put it
and it would sort of nope I'm going to stick with my previous one looks like a British soldier
does no one want to shag it you know how it was like the Americans came over and stole all the
ladies maybe because no one wants to shag the British and they would
was right. It looks like a British soldier.
Thank you very much.
It has a red cap, which looks a bit like the red hats worn by British soldiers during the American Revolutionary War.
And rock tripe, lichen.
Oh, tripe.
Tripe is innards and things, isn't it?
Oh, is it one that lives inside a rock?
Because there are, like, what are they called?
They're like endolithic or something, like, and that live literally inside rocks, which is incredible.
It is outside a rock, but underneath a rock in a cave.
Yeah, neither correct, but great answers.
That's really good.
Grows in a kind of string.
Andy.
It looks like tripe.
It looks like tri.
Thank you.
Two out of three.
It also was gathered by George Washington's troops, supposedly, and boiled into soup at Valley Forge during the winter of 1777.
So that's, they ate it like tripe, but also it looks a bit like tripe.
That's a pretty bad winter as well when you're having to persuade yourself that what you're eating is tripe.
It's even worse than tripe.
There is a lichen called rock gnome lichen as well
And this is endangered
And no one's allowed to know where it is
Because the US Fish and Wildlife Service said
They had an option to label its location as critical habitat
This is just, it's only found in like Georgia
And the Carolinas and Tennessee in the mountains
And if you label something as critical habitat
That means people know where it is
You publish it
And then you get these lichen collectors
Who are overenthusiastic who go and nick it
So they kept it super secret
and sweetly the person who was in charge of guarding its location
was a National Park Service botanist called Janet Rock
Oh, lovely, that's cool.
And where is it in Georgia and...
I'm not giving you any further details, James.
I'm just thinking I could do with an OBE quite soon.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andy.
My fact is that eBay employs staff whose job includes sniffing trainers.
Wow.
Yeah, the shoe per seattle.
perverts of eBay and they are...
For legal reasons, not?
No, they're absolutely not perverts.
This is part of their job.
I don't need to make it any clearer.
These people are not perverts.
They're not getting a kick out of it.
Also, I've got a sick thrill.
This is because eBay sells a lot of shoes,
which I didn't know, because I'm not a sneaker head,
is what they get called.
People who collect and trade and, you know, buy and sell
and sometimes make a living, selling shoes to each other
and collecting them.
Sounds like they're just people who wear them.
on the wrong bit of their body.
But...
Could be the same.
And so there are so many fake shoes on the market now,
which are obviously not worth nearly as much as the real deal.
You mean fake brands?
The shoes, you could get your shoe onto your foot, right?
It's not like you put your foot in it.
You're like, oh, that's an algae.
It's not made of blancs.
And it turns out every damn time.
No, they're real shoes, but they're not really made by Nike or whoever.
So eBay has got ex-exam.
experts in trainer provenance whose job is to put shoes through their paces.
Nice.
Thank you.
To assess whether they're real or fake.
And any shoes that are worth over 150 quid that are bought on eBay, because they have to have some kind of lower floor in it.
They can't check all of them.
Yeah.
Any shoes worth over 150 quid go through this center, sneaker authentication center, and the seller doesn't get the money until the shoes have been authenticated.
And then they get forwarded to the buyers.
And the smelling is part of that because there are so many different ways you can tell whether a trainer is authentic or not.
There's the stitching, there's the glue, and the glue has a smell.
And all these other methods.
It's something like 52 elements they've identified in the process.
Yeah, so it's, as you say, it's the glue, it's the quality of ink on the inside of the tongue.
There's the variations of color.
There's the smell check as well.
Well, eBay going on the road with this.
It's very exciting.
They're doing nationwide.
What do you mean?
Like touring.
I wouldn't watch that show.
Yeah.
Come to our show.
Come to our show instead.
Can you want to see the Antiques Road Show?
It's basically that.
Okay.
Well, I mean, basically they have a nice.
ice cream van. I've slightly hyped up the nationwide tour a limit of it, but the ice cream van is
touring the country and if you bring your sneakers along worth over 100 quid, then they will authenticate
them. Or not, they will bust this shit wide open on your foot. Will they fill one of my sneakers
up with Mr. Whippy and put a flake in it? No, they won't. They're really doing a few dates as well
on this tour. I think because ice cream vans can't go on the motorway and I presume they're going
to have to take B-roads all the way around. There was an amazing article on this ismoney.com.uk
written by Grace Godson.
And she actually smelled the shoes and said that she could definitely tell the difference, the journalist.
Yeah, she said that the ones that are fake just kind of smell really chemically, a bit like nail varnish.
But the real ones smell more like tennis balls, according to her.
But she also said that if you want to work in these warehouses, then you have to pass an entrance test, which involves a blind test,
whether can you tell a sneaker is real or fake just by smelling it?
So you have to pass that test to get the job.
So weird.
Imagine them.
So they are blindfolded.
Yeah.
It's pretty weird, isn't it?
That's cool.
It is cool.
It's amazing.
It must be so hard, though, because a lot of these sneakers, most of them are manufactured
in China and Chinese factories.
The real ones.
The real ones, but also the fake ones.
And the fake ones in the article I read say that they're often attached literally to the
real factory.
So you've got the sort of fake factory that's using 90% of the,
the materials anyway. So 90% of it is as close to the thing that you would have. It's just the
actual manufacturing and stitching together process where, yeah. It's so mad. They're also employing
trainers to test watches within the next couple of months. Human trainers. Human trainers. Human trainers.
Human trainers test the watches. At the center center. I think the watches were first,
actually. Oh, were they? Oh, I think maybe they're upgrading. I read that they were looking for a new
tranche of watch trainers in August this year. I didn't realize that eBay gets almost all of its
profits now from three items. What are the three? Trainers, luxury watches, trading cards.
Oh, really? Apparently, the third category that has authentication from June 2021 is handbags.
Is it? Maybe they're trying to branch out into a fourth direction. Wow. As in you can get everything else
on eBay. It's just that their shares are mostly going down. People aren't buying other stuff on them.
on it anymore.
Interesting.
But those three things.
And the thing is with the authentication is you as a buyer
buyer don't pay for it and the seller doesn't pay for it either.
eBay pays for it.
And you think, well,
what's the point of that?
But actually,
the sales of luxury items like watches and sneakers and probably soon handbags
has gone up massively since people have known that they're going to get the real deal.
Has it?
Interesting.
The growth in sneakers is gone up by triple digits year on year for the last couple of years.
Yeah.
Apparently they sell a pair every nine seconds.
When companies make trainers and sneakers, especially in the last 10, 15 years, they often make them mostly in sizes 8, 9 and 10 because they're the most popular sizes for men, and men are the people who bought most of these trainers.
But these days, more women are wanting these trainers.
And so the smaller sizes are rarer.
And so if you're a counterfeiter, you're more likely to go for the smaller sizes because actually, you know, there's less on the market for them.
So you're more likely to find that women.
trainers are fake than the men's trainers.
But does it matter to sneaker heads?
A lot of these shoes are never worn.
That's the thing I find so weird and bizarre.
I think you still buy them in your size usually.
Why do you say never worn?
Are there really many people who are buying loads of sneakers that they don't intend to wear?
Collectors have hundreds of pairs.
It's mad.
And a lot of them,
they can't afford to wear themselves because they don't want to wear out a $10,000
pair of sneakers.
They keep them because they have that value.
If they wore them, they'd become really grubby and they'd lose their value.
But there can't be that many people that do that.
That's what's what's funding eBay.
and it's top.
I'm serious.
It's a billion dollar industry.
In the future, Dan, in 200 years,
people will say,
did you know people used to wear these decorations on their feet?
But yeah, it is, that is true.
And the other advantage of doing the women's shoes, for instance,
is because you need less materials to make them, of course,
so the markup is bigger.
I always buy shoes three sizes too big,
so I can circumvent the possibility that they're fake.
They do get,
there are sometimes seizures of counterfeit sneakers at customers
at customs and ports and things like that.
So in 2019 there was a Chinese guy called Qing Fu Zheng,
who was arrested for allegedly importing 22 shipping containers of fake trainers
into the USA disguised as napkins, not disguised, labeled as napkins,
which would have been worth $472 million.
It's just an insane amount of money that you can make.
And he had this complicated system set up to get them in and then get them distributed.
That's why they make you take your shoes off at security.
right? To test they're real.
Yeah. You just look back,
the security people are huffing away at them,
giving them a good sniff.
Anna was talking about buying
shoes that were too big and then putting
loads of socks in there so that they fit.
I didn't, I haven't actually come up with that workaround.
I just buy shoes that are too big,
but thank God you've solved my blister problem.
Well, the reason that I made that solution in my head
is because I was reading about a guy called Jim Thorpe,
who was the first Native American to win a gold medal
at the Olympics. And he was in the
decathlon. So after the first day, he was miles ahead. But then someone stole his shoes. Okay. So he didn't
know what to do for the second day because they were his only pair of shoes. So he looked around and he found
like in the garbage like a couple of odd shoes and he wore them. But one of them was massively
too big. So he had to wear loads of pairs of socks. And that foot. So there are pictures of him
in odd shoes with one foot with loads of socks on. And in the second day, he won
pretty much all the events and won the gold in the decaf one in the 1912 Olympics and on the same day
he also won I think it was the long jump or the high jump and the 110 meters hurdles and the
1,500 meters wearing odd shoes.
Wow.
Isn't that amazing?
Why doesn't everyone do that now?
It's clearly an advantage.
Yes, be right?
But also it sounds like he could have tried a bit harder just to get a pair of shoes right.
Like if the Jamaicans were able to borrow a bobsled, surely.
Guys, I only found out recently that shoes
You used to be able to inflate them yourself
Sorry?
Because now I have to go to a shop to inflate them
What's what you're talking about?
All your shoes blow up shoes
Okay, I'm glad you don't remember this James
Because this is during the sneaker walls
Of the 1990s, you all remember
The Nike versus Reebok
And this
Yeah, yeah, the pump.
No, sorry, not with you on this.
Wasn't Air Jordans.
But they had the air pump as well, didn't they?
Did Air Jordans have the pumps?
Look, I was not allowed to wear any cool shoes
during the 90s.
Can someone explain this?
So they used to be on the tongue.
So eventually the pair of brogues.
Thank you.
You inflated them from the tongue.
And this was an innovation by Reebok.
Their tongue.
Their...
Have you seen the movie Men in Tights, Robin Hood Men in Tides?
I have not.
I wasn't allowed to watch that.
But this apparently clinched it for Reebok for a while.
Nike's always been the big guy.
Rebox's always been the underdog.
And they had these self-ex.
self-inflate shoes.
So no one bought them
because they thought
that's really weird.
And then there was just
one slam dunk championship.
Basketball seems to be
more about the shoes
than it is about the basketball.
You rarely get a team
in barefoot winning the NBA.
Not since the 1912 Olympics.
So this guy, D. Brown,
did this move.
Before he did his amazing slam dunk
and won the competition
where he just bent down
and he pumped up his shoes
with the tongue
and then he slammed dunked it.
And then after that
the crowd went insane
and then it became his thing
every time he went to take a shot.
He would pump up his shoes and then deflate them afterwards.
No, no, not in a match.
He wouldn't dribble the ball.
Not midmatch.
Bend down pump, yeah.
When you're doing like a dunk from standing position.
You know the lingo, Dan.
You know what I'm trying to say.
Well, and I don't know we should just say for Andy.
I don't know the pump actually did anything.
As in your shoe functioned, it wasn't like a deflated shoe that you pumped air into.
It just was this sort of...
But this basketballer who pumped the tongue, that did that have an effect, did it?
I mean, I don't know.
They always refused to say.
It suggested it had ankle support
and they were always asked
Does it give you a bit more bounce
To make it pumpy
And they always said we're refusing to say
If that gave me more bounce
I never noticed it
You didn't know
You didn't know
It's just a cool thing to do
It wasn't like having a pergo stick
Suddenly attached
Yeah, they weren't moon shoes
There was a story this year
About a lady who has made
2,500 pounds
By selling old crisp packets
From the 1980s
Oh yeah
But they had released figures
On how many of these
Ostensibly not very glamorous
items have been sold over a three month period this year.
350 crisp packets, 206 wine corks, 225 empty jam jars, 37 toilet roll tubes, but it's hard
to make a million from them because they on average go for 2p each.
That's a cheap telescope though if you want to make.
That's true.
That's true.
I think people must be buying crisp packets to do the blow it up and bang it thing, which I love
doing, but I don't eat enough crisps to do that as often as I'd want to.
I would have thought it was set dressing for a TV show.
1980s. It's weird where our brains go because I was thinking you would buy it and hopefully
there's a few little crumbs of crisps left in the car and you can lick your finger and get them out.
We've all got good reasons. I mean, that's true. You won't be able to taste the 80s again,
will you? No. That's the slogan for your firm. At a trade on these things. You can taste the 2010s
by buying the pre-sugar tax drinks that are available on eBay. I genuinely thought about buying one of these
for my brother who I've never seen him so furious as when Lukazade
halved the sugar content in their drinks.
It hasn't been the same.
It doesn't taste the same.
So in 2018, the sugar in iron brew halved.
There was lots of rules over the last few years saying, you know, you've got to reduce
your sugar.
And you can buy a Lukazade pre-2011 for £145.
Okay.
That's quite a lot, isn't it?
But imagine how good that's going to taste now after all these years.
I'm with your brother, actually.
I think modern pop is disgusting.
Really? Can you taste the difference?
Oh yeah. Really?
I don't think it.
Well, ironically, you listen to a lot of modern pop, which I find disgusting.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said
over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Schreiberland, Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
James.
At James Harkin.
And Anna.
You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yep.
Or you can go to our group.
account, which is at No Such Thing, or you can go to our website, no such thing as a fish.com.
All of our previous episodes are up there.
Also, do check out the upcoming tour dates.
We are back on the road as of October the 5th, going around the UK and Ireland.
Come along.
It's going to be an awesome night, and we want to geek out with you all.
Okay, we'll see you again next week with another episode.
Goodbye.
