No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Shooting Star

Episode Date: October 17, 2024

Live from the Gothenburg Book Festival, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss Bruce Lee, faux geese, science facts and science fiction.   Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandi...se and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:02 Hello and welcome to you live offro You know what I'm going to? Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Gothenburg. My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Anna Tosinski, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin. And once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
Starting point is 00:00:34 no particular order, here we go. Starting with fact number one, and that is Andy. My fact is that the novel Dune, one of the greatest sci-fi novels ever, was rejected 20 times before being printed by a publisher who specialized in car repair manuals. Wow. This is the book festival here in Gothenburg. One of the themes this year is space. This is about a book about space.
Starting point is 00:01:04 into consideration that we only have an hour. Can you explain what June is? It's so great. It's a sci-fi novel. It's set on the desert planet of Arachis, and it's all about the rise of a young Messiah, or is he? Paul Atreides.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Of course, there's the Harkinen family, and there are giant worms, and it's a fantastic, fantastic work of 60s sci-fi. Frank Herbert, right? Frank Herbert was the author. And it had been serialized in a magazine, but it's really long.
Starting point is 00:01:34 I mean, it's really long due. And it was way too long to be a book, according to most publishers, who've got a look at it. And no one wanted to print it, even in three volumes. They just said, no, thanks. So he got lots of rejections. And then he met a guy called Sterling E. Lania of Chilton Books. And they specialized in car repair manuals. And they had some magazines as well, like Jewelers Circular and Dry Goods Economist.
Starting point is 00:01:56 So... Is that like just a goods economist magazine, but it's very, very dry? No jokes in there at all. And they had done some sci-fi books before. It wasn't their first. Some people, some sources of mine say it's the first time they did. They had a little line in sci-fries. They'd recently kind of bought another publisher, hadn't they?
Starting point is 00:02:14 Called Greenberg publisher. And Greenberg was a sci-fi publisher. Exactly. And that had been started by a guy called Martin Greenberg, who was also the first publisher of Isaac Asimov's Foundation Trilogy. So they did have a little bit of background. They did, definitely. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:02:30 But it wasn't a success, even with that little bit of background. It's not it. Sales was so bad that Lanier was sacked a year later. So for all the publishing people who are in the room today, don't take risks, is the message. I remember when you read this book, Andy, because you did it on a no such thing as a fish tour when we went to Australia. And Andy's one of those people when he starts a book, he needs to finish it. And this book has, what, like six appendix?
Starting point is 00:02:51 Appendices. Appendices at the end. I used to be sat next to Andy on the plane, and it's a long flight to Australia, and I got zero chat from him. He was the most dull man on tour reading June. Those were the days, weren't they? They went and you didn't talk to us. I've actually started reading it this week.
Starting point is 00:03:08 Oh, yeah. And I've got 40 pages in. And I'll be honest, I am one of those people that doesn't have to finish every book. Would you say it's more or less exciting than a car repair manual? Oh, that's interesting, because I've never read a car repair manual, even though I've owned many cars. Right, yeah? Fair enough. Do you know, James, you'll hate this.
Starting point is 00:03:28 James has a big fear of mushrooms, but there is an origin source. to this whole June saga, which is that Frank Herbert loved studying fungi, and it was mushrooms that inspired him to do June. This is according to a book called Mycelium Running, the author Paul Stamett sat down with him, and he basically said, The Magic Spice, which is in the book. So that's like the drug that they're all going after that. Exactly. That's the spores of the mushroom. The bending of space and time, that's him tripping on mushrooms, psychedelia.
Starting point is 00:03:59 That's when he was off his tits. the giant worms, those are maggots digesting the mushrooms that he would have witnessed in the process of studying them. So it's basically a tribute to the mushroom. And also he made huge contributions to the world of mushrooms, didn't he, Frank Herbert? As well as writing an apparently unsuccessful book at the time, he apparently, and this is according to Paul Stannett, and who was really good mates with him from the 80s,
Starting point is 00:04:25 he said that Frank was this avid mushroom collector and he got really upset when he would have to throw away less than perfect wild chanterelles. So instead, he mixed it with water and salt and made a big slurry paste, and he spread it around the bottom of new fir trees, and then a load of chontore mushrooms grew there, and this may not sound exciting at all to anyone here, or me, but to mushroom people, to my colleges, they had no idea that mushrooms could grow at the base of young trees, so he discovered that by placing a slurry of old mushrooms at the bottom of a young tree, you could make some new mushrooms.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Wow. That does sound like an important contribution to me. Yeah, yeah, and more important than June maybe. Yeah, definitely. Maybe. Wow. 40 pages in, I would say yes. 900 pages in, I can tell you. And the other cool thing about dude, so it's set on a desert-y planet,
Starting point is 00:05:17 it's all very, very sandy, and he was inspired to write this, in part, by some real-life dunes. So you can visit. I think, in fact, they run tourist visits to really. dunes of Florence, Oregon. And they were threatening
Starting point is 00:05:31 to overrun the city in the early 20th century. He hated these sand dunes, didn't he? Well, the sand dunes were widely hated because they were encroaching on the city, they moved. And he was researching a program by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and they were fixing huge grasses
Starting point is 00:05:47 into these dunes to stabilize them. European beach grass, it's called, and it's got a very deep roots. It locks the dunes in place. And the plot of dune is about this desert planet and how it can be turned green again. I mean, really? Exactly. And over the course of the novels, slight spoiler, the planet goes from desert to Greek and
Starting point is 00:06:04 then back to desert. And guess what's happening in the desert now in Florence, Oregon? Giant worms? No. They are now trying to get rid of these grasses, which they introduced as an invasive species a hundred years ago, because they're messing up with the ecology of the region. Really? Same thing is happening all over again.
Starting point is 00:06:23 So it's a premonition book, basically. Kind of, yeah. You're telling me humans. introduce a new species to try and fix stuff and it actually went even more wrong than it was before. That astonishes me. It's amazing. How many copies
Starting point is 00:06:37 did you say, Andy, that sold? It's like 14 million, 20 million. It's a big, big seller, right? It's had a huge cultural impact. I was trying to find out a few things of where it's led into pop culture and so on. There's a great story that Iron Maiden, the band, they named a song, June, and it was inspired entirely by the book. But they had to ask, or they wanted to ask,
Starting point is 00:06:57 or they wanted to ask permission from Frank Herbert to say, would you give us your blessing? And they got a statement back from him, a little message that said, Frank Herbert doesn't like rock bands, particularly heavy rock bands, and especially bands like Iron Maiden. And so they had to change it to the titles out
Starting point is 00:07:16 to Tame a Land, if anyone knows that song. Can I tell you, I have made an anecdote. Me and Anna once went to a pub quiz with Bruce Dickinson from Iron Maiden, he's a lead singer. And we sat with him, through the whole quiz. We did the quiz. I think we won the quiz, in fact. And Anna was sat with Bruce the whole night and chatting to him and whatever. And the next morning I said, what did you think of Bruce? He's a nice guy, right? And Anna said, oh yeah. Have you not heard of Iron Maiden? And she said,
Starting point is 00:07:41 oh, I thought that was a made-up band. What? I thought that Iron Maiden only existed in that song that goes, listen to Iron Maiden, shirt that yeah I thought teenage dark like the song invented iron maiden it was astonishing my learn I done a pub quiz with him amazing yeah Frank Herbert had some gigs before his June breakthrough and he was a wine critic for a while was I see and he was a very very assiduous whatever he did he was very devoted I think this is why June is 19 million pages long it's because he really researches everything so it was a wine
Starting point is 00:08:20 critic he not only insisted on being trained up on knowledge of all wine he insisted on being trained to make wine himself, which actually is quite suspicious and is what I would insist on as well, probably a wine critic. But yeah, he was a wine critic, and then he was a speechwriter for a Republican senator who I tried to find, he's called Guy Corden. It was in 1955, and I did a trawl of the newspaper archives looking for Guy Corden's name being paired with worms or mushrooms or space. Nothing. Nothing. He was nothing. He was very anti-Sovia, wasn't he? Back in the day. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:57 He's part of that kind of McCarthyism where they're trying to root out all the commies. I think he was a cousin, distant cousin of Joseph McCarthy. That is, Herbert was. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Was he? Yeah, he was. You see that, I think, in some of the novels, don't you? There's kind of an anti-communist.
Starting point is 00:09:14 I believe so, yeah. So, and the movies, obviously, we've all watched the June movies. I watched the David Lynch one this week. The big one. When was that? That was like 1984. Yeah, so there's the massive ones that have been coming out in the last year or two. But in 1984, David Lynch shot a version.
Starting point is 00:09:32 And it's weird, I would say. That's so odd for David Lynch. But weirdly, it's not, it's just not quite weird enough to be David Lynch. So it's like in that uncanny valley of not being weird enough to be weird. It's really, really strange. But they filmed it in Mexico, and it was in an area where they had lots of rock. and plants and stuff like that, but they needed it to be like June where none of these things existed. So apparently they spent two months stripping all of the plants, all of the animals.
Starting point is 00:10:04 In this area, so they would look like June. Why don't it just go to Namibia or somewhere which has vast rolling sand? Probably a tax thing. So there's some very famous names in the movie, sting the musicians in it. And one other person who's in it is Patrick Stewart of Star Trek. It's so weird. Yeah, right. Honestly, like you watch it, and suddenly Captain
Starting point is 00:10:26 whatever's called comes in. But you know what's even weirder about that? This is why it's so weird. David Lynch hired Patrick Stewart, and then when Patrick Stewart showed up, he went, this is the wrong Patrick Stewart. He got the wrong guy. Patrick Stewart, Captain Picard, was never meant to be in it.
Starting point is 00:10:40 There's another actor called Patrick Stewart, and it went to the wrong person. But was he already a sci-fi... He was already doing stuff? No, I don't think so at that point. He was like a theatre guy, wasn't it? Yeah, he was a theatre guy. And so then he got on,
Starting point is 00:10:53 the set and did exactly what you did with Bruce Dickinson, which is he was introduced to Sting and had no idea who he was. He was like, what else do you do? And he's like, oh, I'm a musician. He's like, oh, that's really cool. I'll check your stuff out. That's exciting. What's it called?
Starting point is 00:11:06 He's like, with the police. And he thought, oh, that's really nice. And armed service had put together a band and you probably play fairs and stuff. Yeah. That's so good. This first film that was released, so you saw it last night, though? Yes, I did. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Was it easy to follow? to follow, hard to follow, somewhere between... It was hard to follow, I'll be honest. It's quite baffling, because they try and crowbar a big book into a sort of longish film. But that's a real squeeze. It is such a complicated film to watch, supposedly, that when the first film came out,
Starting point is 00:11:37 audiences in cinemas were given a small printed glossary of terms to help them understand what was going on. I could really have done with that, I'll be honest. I've seen an original copy of these things. The typeface is so small that in a dark cinema you would be looking for ages for the term Mouadib or whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Yeah. And by the time you look back, it would be another scene. It just seemed like a terrible idea. I think they put the lights on before and went, everyone have a quick read. Familiarize yourself with what's coming up. Memorize the glossary. Well, just get a brief idea.
Starting point is 00:12:08 So we've got the modern Dune movies, and then there was the David Lynch in 1984, but there was meant to be another one in 1974, which was going to be directed by a guy called Alejandro Yodorowski. And he basically, said, I want to make the full version of this. So it was going to be a 10 to 14 hour long movie. He had an extraordinary cast lined up. Everyone from Orson Wells, David Caradine, who was Kill Bill, Geraldine Chaplin. Orson Wells, he managed to convince to come onto the film by saying,
Starting point is 00:12:38 I will pay you really well, but also, I'll get your favorite gourmet chef to prepare your meals every single day. And he was like, great, I'm in. That works. But it never happened. And he had a bit of the fallout with Frank Herbert over the writing process of it. But this director believed that he didn't need to talk to Herbert because Herbert had extracted the novel initially from the collected unconscious of our world. And so it was plucked from some soup of ideas. That's a good anti-copyright argument, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:13:08 When it was all lingering in the air. It was an enormous kind of beam off of a thing and unspricing it never got made. But he hired Salvador Dali to be in it and Dali insisted on only being in this film. if he could become the highest paid Hollywood actor ever. I think he must have been doing the whole thing as a joke. So Frank Herbert agreed and said, fine, I will pay you $100,000 an hour
Starting point is 00:13:31 to add in this film I'm doing. And then he reduced Dali's scenes so that he only needed him for an hour, and he set up the rest with a robotic... It says a robot look-alike. Now, I don't... A robotic look-a-like. I don't know if that means a look-alike to Dali, who was also kind of a robotic actor,
Starting point is 00:13:47 or if they actually got a robot who looked like Dali to do the... Those days, that's just going to be a microwave of the mustache, isn't it? I need to move us on, guys. It is time for fact number two, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that the largest known star is 3,000 times wider than the sun, and is coincidentally called, whoa. Yes, so this is W. W-O-H G-64, which I am choosing to pronounce,
Starting point is 00:14:29 Whoa! And it actually gets its name because it was discovered by astronomers Bent Vestaland, Niels Ollander, and Lager-Heddin, who I think might be Swedish, actually. There's certainly this part of the world. And the first letter of each of the names is W-O-H, and that's how it gets its name. It actually, it kind of works if you mix it up, like, how? But they're like, ow! Ooh.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Yeah, this is amazing. So, yeah, and it's a massive old star. If you can imagine the sun as a tiny grain of sand, then this star is about the size of a basketball. What? No, whoa. I walk into them, don't I? And it's kind of interesting because it's much cooler than you would imagine.
Starting point is 00:15:22 I mean, it's cooler in that way. like call it as in it's not very hot, then you would expect from this kind of star. We don't really know why, and it's kind of a variance with the current theories of how stars are made. So that, for scientists, we find that really, really interesting
Starting point is 00:15:39 when something doesn't quite fit in with our rules. Yeah, right. Something else is going on that we can discover. It's one of those things, like the mushrooms at the bottom of the tree, you know, it's really, really exciting for the people who know about our stars are made. And a lot of us, it's like, okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:53 Good on you. Another point of analogy with it, if it was placed where our sun is, we would all be inside it now. It would come out, as far as Jupiter effect, would come out way, way, way, way further than the Earth at the moment. But if it's not that hot, sounds like we'll be fine. Yeah. Just a nice warm.
Starting point is 00:16:10 Yeah, exactly. I like that the instrument that we use largely to observe it is called the very large telescope. Yes. So science is great. Because we've got an extremely large telescope, haven't we? And I think there's one bigger than that. They are working on, I can't remember what it is,
Starting point is 00:16:27 it's not the Enormous Vyarge Telescope. Yeah. Oh, it's the very hungry telescope. The very large telescope intoperometer that they're using to view, whoa. It's strong enough that it would be able to make out a tennis ball that is on the opera house in Oslo from this room.
Starting point is 00:16:44 But that's how, yeah, how good they... Well, that puts it in context for me. You're kidding. I was hoping for the people of Gothenberg. that they might know where Oslo is. I couldn't even point to Oslo from here. So, yeah, that is amazing. Did you say an interferometer?
Starting point is 00:17:02 It's an interferometer, yeah. I'd never heard of that. Well, let's move up. Have you guys, do you know what, the name of the most distant planet that we have found in the far reaches of the solar system is called? No, no.
Starting point is 00:17:15 It's cool. Far out. Hang on. It's cool far out, or at least it was. It was only the record holder for two months before they found something even further, which they called far, far out. Very cool names.
Starting point is 00:17:29 Some suns, or some stars, sorry, are actually really not that hot. I get quite excited when you learn about stuff in the universe that you can sort of imagine making contact with. Like, in fact, I was saying to James earlier that there's a fact I read once that is, if you fell into a black hole that's a thousand times bigger than the sun, theoretically you would survive. Now, obviously, you wouldn't for lots of reasons,
Starting point is 00:17:51 but it wouldn't crush you theoretically. And I just like that because it's like, wow, me, a tiny human on Earth could survive that. And I was amazed to read equally that there are these things called brown dwarfs, which are, they're often called failed stars. So they're stars that they're not big enough to sustain nuclear fusion at their core. But their surface temperatures are so low. Some of them are as low as about like a mug of tea. So if you touched it, it would feel like just a hand warmer.
Starting point is 00:18:17 Really? Yeah. They can get hot, though, mugs of tea, can't they? Yeah, this is like a mug of tea when you've left it too long. Oh, really? Amalgamity when you sip in, you go, oh, bollocks, you have to chuck it away. You know those kind of failed stars, if they had a bit more mass, they would become stars, right? And the level that you have to get to to become a star, that area is called the genes instability.
Starting point is 00:18:43 Which I think sounds like something a bit rude in your trousers. Oh, got a bit of a genes instability going on. Find me. There are some stars, aren't there, which are kind of rogue, loose stars. Oh, yeah. They're hyper-dense. They're about the size of our sun, but they're many, many, many thousands of times of the mass.
Starting point is 00:19:05 And they're just barreling loose through space. Wow. As in they're not in a proper system. Oh, that's amazing. Rebels. They are. Like her in Street Fighter, like one of those Ryu balls. What?
Starting point is 00:19:17 You know. I don't. I didn't, again, I've said it before and I said again, I don't think it needed that layer of really nice analogy on top. I just like to paint pictures, Andy. But it is, it's just like those. It's a random loose fireball just barreling through. There's never been one, I think, there's entered our cellar system or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Okay. But if one does come this way, we're knackered. Oh, yes. Yeah, yeah. Well, what's quite sweet about stars, aside from these sort of Clint Eastwood Loner stars, they're basically all, or 80, I think, estimated 85. percent of them come in pairs. And I actually find it amazing. If you're looking at the sky and you see a star, it's probably
Starting point is 00:19:57 two stars. And if you look for a really powerful telescope, you'll see two. So yeah, 85% of stars, binary stars, not our son. It's one of our sons on the special ones, which is on its own, I think. And mostly, I think, their primary star and then companion, which is like a smaller guy rotating around it. And the only way we know how big any stars are, like the only way we know how big this largest known woe star is, is because they're in. pairs and so you take the Barry Centre, which is...
Starting point is 00:20:25 The Barry Centre? Yeah, yeah, it's not an EastEnders thing. It's like... We performed at the Barry Centre. It's in South Wales, isn't it? Yeah, all stars rotate around South Wales. The Barry Centre is the centre around which the two stars in the binary system rotates. And so you measure their distance from that and you watch them rotating and you hopefully watch one eclipse the other from Earth and you see kind of how long one takes to cross the other.
Starting point is 00:20:50 and that's how we know how big they are. So solitary stars, the only way we know how big a star that's on its own is, is that we compare its brightness to the brightness of these binary stars whose size we know. And we say, okay, well, we guess it's about that size. Oh, interesting. Except the sun, so we're really close to the sun, so we can measure that with a tame measure. So it is amazing thinking of just how different everything else is to hear. Okay.
Starting point is 00:21:16 Because here we have conference centres and we have book festivals and we have wine glasses and we have tables and I'm just pointing at things I've got June. We've got June. I don't know if that's a good thing or about there. But get this, 99.9% of all matter that we have observed in space is not solid or liquid or gas. It's plasma. Because that's what the state of matter that stars are in.
Starting point is 00:21:37 There's loose ions, electrons and it's kind of suit. So our sun is plasma. There's a bit of plasma on Earth, lightning bolts and neon signs. Oh yeah. That's it. And those two things. 99.9% of the universe is plasma. On TV's plasma as well.
Starting point is 00:21:57 Yes. I think it's the same stuff. I think it might be the same. Is it the same? That's a good point. I don't know. You know shooting stars are multi-coloured. When you see a shooting star, but you need to look really hard, which is hard to do because obviously they appear and they just appear quickly.
Starting point is 00:22:15 But it's because when... So there are obviously a meteor flying through the Earth's atmosphere and they're burning up in the atmosphere. But because the meteors are made of lots of different elements, as they burn, they kind of react with the gases around them. And they create like magnesium oxide or whatever or, you know, all the different oxides which burn with different colors. So if you look closely, you'll see bright blue, they're bright purple. Like fireworks, I guess. They are a very quick firework.
Starting point is 00:22:39 Yeah. But some animals, you know, who see, like pigeons, see in more frames a second than we do, don't they? So they probably, when they see a shooting star, it's probably like fireworks. I'm not actually convinced that shooting stars exist, to be honest. Have you never seen one? Well, no, because my wife always sees them and goes, there's one, and I turn around that it's not there.
Starting point is 00:22:58 I think the only logical thing is that they don't exist and everyone's having me on. Yeah. Huge craft of... Oh. Sorry. I've got some really exciting space news from the last couple of weeks.
Starting point is 00:23:12 Oh, yeah. So there is a spacecraft that is going around the moons of Jupiter because it's looking for life in our solar system and good news we have found life in the solar system this probe has managed to find life
Starting point is 00:23:27 we haven't and it hasn't are you breaking the news of yeah like they just the 20th they were flying by and they pointed their telescope at a planet called Earth uh oh they found that yes indeed
Starting point is 00:23:43 Earth is habitable that's so funny But obviously it is important because it shows that it's working. Yeah. Right? You know, if they posted Earth and he says this is what is noticeable. I'm sorry. That is playing on easy mode. I've got a neighbour who's got a really interesting space story.
Starting point is 00:24:01 So he's an artist and he did this really beautiful piece. That's our solar system. And so I have a print of it in my son's room as well, Will's room. And a guy in America who's one of the co-hosts of Radio Lab, one of the massive podcasts, he had it on his wall in his son's room. And he kept looking at it, and Venus had a moon called Zuzvi, Z-O-O-Z-V-E. But he was like, well, he knew science. He knows that Venus doesn't have a moon.
Starting point is 00:24:28 So what the hell was going on there? He started looking into it more and more, and he got in touch with Alex, who is the illustrator, Alex Foster, and Alex said, I just found it on some little slip of paper, right? It turns out, for a very brief moment, a quasi-moon had been discovered going around Venus in 2002 and was given the name 2-002-V-E. But Alex misread it as Zuzvi and put it on this thing.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Now, there are certain rules about when a quasi-moon can be named. There's a planetary naming system that goes on. One thing is you have to have had a paper or a book written about it. So between 2002 and this being drawn and then this discovery by this radio lab guy, a paper had been written.
Starting point is 00:25:11 So officially, it can now be named and it has been officially named Zuzvi. So the picture is now accurate. I remember finding a pill outside my house which I thought must have been some drug dealer had dropped it or something and it was called Z-O-M-G, like O-M-G but with a Z at the start and I put a picture of it on the internet and said,
Starting point is 00:25:33 does anyone know what drug this is? And apparently it just was 20 milligrams of paracetamol. You bringing up the police. I found a drugs nest. It's called boots, and they have all sorts of stuff. It is time for fact number three, and that is Anna. My fact this week is that in 18th century Japan, you could eat vegetarian goose.
Starting point is 00:26:05 Hmm. Wow. And do you mean that the goose itself is not eating meat or? No, an actual vegetarian option. In restaurants in 18th century Japan, this is... just then being way ahead of their time. I came across this in a book from 1790 called Recipes from the Soy Garden, or I think it's finally been reproduced in English,
Starting point is 00:26:27 and it's been titled Recipes from the Garden of Paradise or something, and it's by a guy called Yuan Mei, who was China's most famous poet, so you'd expect him to be writing recipe books. And he had a recipe in there for mock roast goose, and he said the way you made it was you wrap yam in, tofu skin. And that was it. And I couldn't find many more details on how to do it. But I imagine you get a load of yams. You kind of sculpt it into the shape of goose. And then you wrap it in.
Starting point is 00:26:57 What's actually this thing called Yuba, which is a really interesting ingredient. But it's the skin you get on the top of soy milk. So, you know, if you have normal dairy milk, then you have that delicious skin on the top of it. Soy milk, same thing. They would peel it off very carefully hang it up and then allow more and more skin to form. And that's a really crucial ingredient of its own and you'd wrap the yam in that. And actually they'd make some stuff just from that uber, didn't they? They made vegetarian stuff because when it comes out, it's really sort of like plasticini and you can mould it into any shape you want.
Starting point is 00:27:29 And so you could shape it into any meat you wanted. So there were dishes like butter's chicken, budders fish, budders duck, molded pig's head, molded ham, and they were all made out of this uber that was just put into different shapes. It's very cool. I didn't realize that it was virtually. invented the idea of this fake meat as a transition to get you to just being a vegetarian. It was like weaning you off the real deal. So you would slowly get the sensation that you were
Starting point is 00:27:56 eating this thing still, but it wasn't what it was. And then eventually be like, well, yeah, don't really fancy meat anymore. And then you go straight to the veggie stuff. I think you are a full vegetarian if you're eating yam in the shape of a goose. I think that's fine. You don't need to go any further. That's true. Yes. But sometimes you need the psychological reasoning to go, oh, I guess like today, you have an impossible burger or something, it's like a transition to... Yeah, because you still kind of want the taste of meat, but you... Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:23 I know, but I think you're there. I really do. It's okay. Keep eating the yami goose. But I do. I've just stuck on the fake meats now, which I'm really... They're really not. They're sort of fascinating as well as pretty good, a lot of them.
Starting point is 00:28:36 Anyway, one of the things... Sorry, I've completely lost my train of thought. Can I just quickly just add to that? I'll get back. We're just got to sit in silence. Okay, sure. No, sure. No, I'll do it.
Starting point is 00:28:46 No, no, no, I believe in you. No, the pressure's on. I think if you had a bit more protein in your diet, you wouldn't have this problem. So all I was going to say was that it's almost all the way through history. So tofu was invented at about 200 BC, was when it started being invented. It's almost all, either religious reasons
Starting point is 00:29:03 or times of extreme economic hardship where there just isn't any meat to go around. And those are the two huge factors until recently when it's been more of a climatic thing. Right. But in the 1990s, Cuba had a big economic crisis. And they made a thing that was steak, but it was made from breaded and fried grapefruit rind. And it was, I mean, they had a lot of stuff.
Starting point is 00:29:25 Wow, an even less delicious part of a grapefruit, which already is quite disgusting. There was soy piccadillo, which I found described in the Havana Times, as the worst ground meat-like substance that any human beings ever tasted in the 20th century. Wow. So it is, yeah, doesn't always. always work. In the Oxford Companion to Food, which I think we've all dipped into from time to time, and in England is probably the Bible of facts about food. When you go into the fake meat section, they say that bread people is part of this whole thing. And bread people is basically a human made out of bread.
Starting point is 00:30:03 I guess it's a bit like a gingerbread man. Yeah. Right. So is it a mythical sort of like... No, it's just like, it's literally just like a loaf of bread, but it's in the shape of a person. And they say... And they used to bake bread like this, I'm saying. Well, they say, and they also come back you to food, that it is almost universal through all cultures of history. But they've always had a bread person in their culture. And they say that they are a form of guilt-free cannibalism.
Starting point is 00:30:28 Oh, that's what I was wondering, is that the transition away from eating human? It says the taboo of eating fellow humans is almost universal. And so we have to eat bread instead. Wow. I don't know what the celiac gluten-free people do. They probably keep doing the cannibalism. You've got to. I did read that in the second World War,
Starting point is 00:30:52 people were encouraged to eat meat substitute, and brown bread was advertised as a meat substitute, because I think it had slightly more protein, I think, than white bread. So it was all over the newspapers and stuff. You know, hey, rather than eating a steak, try a loaf of brown bread. Yeah. One of the founders of alternative meat, as it gets called,
Starting point is 00:31:11 or sort of artificial meat or cultural meat was a guy called Willem Van Eelan and he was Dutch and he had his experience in the Second World War his formative experience because he was in a prisoner of war camp a Japanese one and food was incredibly short and he
Starting point is 00:31:27 was very lucky to live and not starve and a few years after the war he went to medical school in 1948 and he found that researchers there they were trying to grow some cells in a tank they weren't trying to grow it for meat they were trying to grow it as a skin graft thing if you'd be burned you know, to graft on your skin.
Starting point is 00:31:43 And his first thought, because of his formative experiences in the war, were, I wonder if we could eat that. You know, he had just been so hungry for such a long time and had really sort of imprinted itself on his consciousness. And that set him on the path of developing cultured meat. Wow, you'd be nervous around him, I think, whatever, you know. And he exposed body parts, cover up. It's almost like in a cartoon where he turns around and looks at you
Starting point is 00:32:05 and you've turned into a rose chicken. It was a bit like that for him, yeah. That's incredible. Apparently peanut butter was invented largely as a substitute for people who found really hard to eat meat. Oh really? George Washington's cover. Yeah, I think it might have been a Kellogg version of peanut butter. So, like, there was quite a few peanut butter innovations going on at the time.
Starting point is 00:32:26 He said, Kellogg certainly, like, promoted nut meat, yeah. Yeah, nut meat. I actually have a slight problem with subs. You're okay, Huggy. You hardly touch your nut meat. None of the stuff is substitute meat. though. It's annoying me so much. In China, ancient China and Japan, they were just eating tofu and soy because they ate tofu and soy as well. And this is when you read it in the 19th
Starting point is 00:32:50 century when it was just coming to Britain and to Europe and like all of these Chinese Japanese recipes were coming over. They were actually really positive. Across the media, they were like, wow, this soy stuff can be made into a thing that is a little bit like meat. But because it didn't have the connotation of, oh, we're going to take away your meat and make you eat soy, then no one was negative about it. It's really. interesting to see. But yeah, there was fake sausages. I think the first reference to a fake sausage came in 1851. And it was described as being by a Grahamite, which I didn't know what that was. Do you know
Starting point is 00:33:25 what Grahamite? It's a religious thing? Yes. And do you know what we get from Grahamites today? Graham's crackers? Yeah, I didn't. I never knew this. Really? Which is actually a thing I only know from Friends episodes because I think they're in a Yeah, I'm not convinced I know what one is. No. Yeah, they don't exist. They're like shooting stars. It's all a prank. He was a big old veggie anyway, and he invented sort of bread.
Starting point is 00:33:48 He thought that bread had been tortured the way we made it, because we ground it so hard. So he said that we should make bread, but leave the flour much rougher and coars. So that's what Graham's crackers are made of. Okay. So impossible foods, impossible burgers and stuff, they are tested on animals. Really? They're fed to animals to see if they like them. So they have this thing.
Starting point is 00:34:09 called heem in it, which is a vegetable-based liquid that looks a little bit like blood. And so you put it in your fake burgers, and then when you cut into it, it looks like there's blood in your burgers, and that's what people want. But the USDA... Because people are normal. Yeah, no, no, like, sure, I love them. I think delicious. But the USDA said that even though they appear to be safe, they needed to be tested properly before they can go into the burgers. And they could have done it without testing on animals, but it would have taken years and years and years. And so they tested just on, I think just on one animal, actually. Or certainly just one or two. The guy who was in charge of it, Patrick O. Brown, has basically
Starting point is 00:34:50 come out and said, yeah, look, we had to do it, really. And like, it was just a one-off. And we think that overall, holistically, it's better that we did that one small thing, because overall it's a good thing. Yeah. You know, Tofurky? Yeah. Is I'm familiar with Tofurkey? No. A tofu turkey? It's vegetarian turkey.
Starting point is 00:35:09 It's quite American, isn't it? It is. It was a big thing in the 90s. Well, the guy who invented it, Seth Tibbert, was so broke when he invented Tofurkey that he was living in a tree house. And it wasn't even, he was renting a tree house rather than, really. I've actually stayed in a couple of Airbnb tree houses and they are not cheap. I've got to say. Oh, well.
Starting point is 00:35:32 He was actually, he was renting the trees. who rented three trees and built the treehouse in between them. Oh, you can't do that. What do you mean? You can't rent a tree and then build property on... Well, he had asked for permission to do it. Oh, okay. You left that bit out.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Sorry. There's a way. Guys, I will have to move us on to our final fact in a second. So, yeah, if you've got anything. Guess what, the first meat that NASA experimented with growing so that potentially astronauts could culture their own sort of cell cultured meat in space was, guess what the first meat they tried? Oh, well, steak.
Starting point is 00:36:07 Goldfish. Goldfish? Goldfish? Come off here. Yep, they took some goldfish steaks and they tried to... Goldfish steaks? If I order a steak and that comes, I'm sending it back.
Starting point is 00:36:25 Yeah, they were just trying to grow the goldfish fossil in there. How was it? It must have been like, because they do grow quite big golfish, don't I? It's not like, of those little ones you get in the fair. I don't think so, no. But I think, anyway, it wasn't it just...
Starting point is 00:36:38 I don't think anyone... It even got to being tasted. Yeah, right. Can I quickly tell you, do you know why soy sauce is called soy sauce? Because it has soy in it? And it's saucy? Dan is actually right about the sauce bit.
Starting point is 00:36:52 No, soy beans are named after soy sauce. Come off it. No. How did that... How does that work? How did they get... Who found the first soy sauce? Oh my God, that's a time loop there.
Starting point is 00:37:04 You grow soy sauce and you separate it into beans. Yeah, we just got soy, which again, it was came over from Japan. It was about 1,300s. It was called shoyu, the sauce that they made from beans, which they didn't call shoyu beans. They called it something different. And so we, for a couple of hundred years, called it, and all across your variations of soy sauce.
Starting point is 00:37:28 No one knew what it was made of, so everyone tried to make substitutes out of. The first ketchup was an attempt to make soy sauce. And they tried to... Fish and mushrooms and all that stuff. Exactly. Yeah, a lot of mushroom are tense. And then they realized, oh, they use this weird bean. Let's call it the soybean.
Starting point is 00:37:41 And that's why it's like that. It's time for a final fact of show, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that after Bruce Lee died, Chinese movie studios tried to exploit the gap he left by immediately releasing films starring Bruce Lai, Lee Bruce, and Brut Lee. This is called Bruceploitation Where after he sadly passed away
Starting point is 00:38:15 Very prematurely The Chinese studios went America wants Bruce Lee movies So he did Enter the Dragon Quickly, let's get re-enter the dragon into production They like the name Bruce and Lee quickly Let's just find other people and name them that In very similar ways Bruce Lai is now starring in Bruce Lee versus Superman
Starting point is 00:38:33 Which is a movie by the way From this period Okay, so they didn't find people with these names. They found people and then gave them these names. Yeah, they changed. I think that's an easier way of doing it, to be fair. Yeah, because if you find Lee Bruce or whatever, and he's like an out-of-work accountant,
Starting point is 00:38:50 then it's going to be harder to get him in shape, isn't it? I don't know if there's two Patrick Stewart's, you're going to get... Dan, I'm presuming you're a big Bruce Lee fan. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Because you grew up in Hong Kong and you, yeah, yeah, yeah. Have you seen the game of death? Yeah, this was the movie he was making. like he died halfway through making.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Exactly. And they had a problem because they had 40 minutes of Bruce Lee footage and you're not allowed to make a film that's 40 minutes long. So they just hired body doubles, they put them in sunglasses, they filmed them at a distance or in silhouette or they used some footage of Bruce Lee's actual funeral.
Starting point is 00:39:30 Bit weird. Also completely ruins the point of the film I'd guess if you think, oh well there he is, he's dead. But anyway and they just sort of fact in the thing. And they just sort of factored up into a Bruce Lee movie. And it was five years after his death that they released this. Well, that's the thing. I mean, if you look at the list of movies, like that was called Game of Death, they then released New Game of Death. Like, Bruce Lee, the star of all stars,
Starting point is 00:39:50 Bruce Lee's secret. Bruce Lee in New Guinea. Like, just like... It's so weird that there was this massive demand, because I haven't, I really didn't know anything about Bruce Lee and didn't know how fascinated I'd be by him. He is an amazing character. But I also didn't realize he was not big really
Starting point is 00:40:06 at all until he died in America. So he was massive in Hong Kong. He'd done, I think it was his fourth American film Enter the Dragon. And that was really the film that made him really big and everyone loved him. And he died a couple of weeks before the premiere, three weeks before the premiere, very, very young, very sadly in his early 30s. And yeah, hadn't been big at all before then. And then was this huge deal. But the New York Times obituary when he died, three weeks before that big film came out, said his films were successful in New York despite unanimously disapproving reviews. And the film fist of fury makes the worst Italian
Starting point is 00:40:39 Western look like the most solemn and noble achievements of the early Soviet cinema. Wow, that's in his obituary. Yeah, yeah, and that's it. It was nothing good. Wow. It said he had begun to win audiences in Latin America. The end.
Starting point is 00:40:57 Wow. So weird. Because he's, I mean, he's big all over the world now, right? Yeah. I think. Because I was in Mostar in Bosnia, and there's a statue of him there in the middle of Mostar, which I and the reason that there's a statue there is because it was just after the
Starting point is 00:41:11 Balkan War they had the Croatians the Bosnians the Serbians everyone's everyone's everyone was kung fu fighting yes I'm very sorry to trivialise what was an appalling conflict and it was a little bit frightening
Starting point is 00:41:32 yes but they needed the statue of someone and they couldn't decide who to get a statue of and Bruce Lee was the only one that everyone agreed they liked. Wow. Really? And it's still there in the middle of the park just outside of town. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:41:45 I'd heard of the statue. I had no idea that was the reason for it. Someone stole it right? It was there when I was there. Right. I think at one point it got stolen. They didn't see who it was as fast as lightning, but it was stolen. And apparently during that fight where they put it up as a bit of peace,
Starting point is 00:42:01 the way they faced it was towards one of the, like, you know, the sides. So, the staff. actually a Bruce in his fighting stance to them was offensive because they were like, you're suggesting Bruce is on your team now. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I heard that as well. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:15 But again, contain multitudes, Bruce Lee. So he wrote a lot of poetry, which was published. Former Hong Kong Chacha champion. That's the champion of the Chacha dance, right? Sorry, I didn't just... He was stuttering. Temporary localized stutter, yeah. And his wife was Swedish,
Starting point is 00:42:34 American. Hey! Yep. In fact. And that was... The white do he cheated on to Shagg, the mistress, whose house he was found dead in. Yay! Who was a good friend of my mum and dad?
Starting point is 00:42:46 Betty Ting, the woman whose house he died in knows your mom and dad. The woman who there were conspiracy theories all over the world that she was somehow responsible for his death. My parents started those conspiracy theories. Sally runs in the family. Wow.
Starting point is 00:43:02 A lot of his films, when they were filming the fight scenes, the extras in End to the Dragon many of them were actually in local gangs or triad gangs in Hong Kong so quite frequently they would keep fighting after the director yelled cut cut
Starting point is 00:43:18 yes I have been yeah because that's the thing with Bruce Lee right he was in gangs in Hong Kong is that right? He had to yeah so yeah tell the story down well when he was young he got in a fight he picked a wrong fight with a gang leader
Starting point is 00:43:32 and that's the reason he ended up going over to a because he was fleeing death basically. He had to get away. That's right. And then he, you know, he was a great martial artist, but he did lots of different martial arts. But he always said that the reason he was so good at it is because his right leg is one inch shorter than his left leg,
Starting point is 00:43:48 which apparently helped his kicking. Did he? And he was also near-sighted, so he liked to do close combat because then he could see the person he was hitting. Well, apparently on set one day, they were in an area where, locals were very unhappy that they were filming there and he was talking to the director and they were standing on a sort of hilltop and they started getting surrounded by the locals and they knew that something bad was about to happen
Starting point is 00:44:16 and apparently what Bruce did was he jumped into the air and he pulled a perfect horizontal plank basically in the air okay so like the way he jumped it looked like he was levitating and then he came back down on his legs and apparently everyone was like, wow, Bruce! And then they didn't beat them up. At least that's just sorry my parents have been family. He was supposed to be drafted by the US Army. In fact, he was drafted.
Starting point is 00:44:48 But he didn't see any service because he failed a medical. Apparently he had bad eyesight, as I said. He had a sinus disorder and he only had one testicle. Oh, yeah. So it's quite interesting because that means I couldn't get in the US Army because I also have bad sinuses. But you have three testicles, which would make you a super soldier, yeah. Was it that one had not descended?
Starting point is 00:45:13 Yeah, it's just not descended. Yeah, yeah. I read that put as so it was impossible to kick Bruce Lee in the testicles. It was pretty cool. That's true. You could kick him in the testicle, which I should imagine. It's just as bad. So there's a book called The Tower of Bruce Lee,
Starting point is 00:45:27 which I was reading about by an article called David Miller. And he reckons that Bruce Lee actually really in his life, he only had a few proper fights. You know, obviously it's mostly screen and training and all of this. And he says, I just wanted to quote this. I really like this slang. He was an absolutely remarkable man, but he wasn't the Jesus of martial arts,
Starting point is 00:45:43 and that's the way he's often presented these days. Could he have stuck his fingers in your eyes more quickly than anyone else on the planet? Maybe so. But what you have to remember is that is exactly what he would have done. That's real fighting. He would have stuck his fingers in your eyes, kicked you in the leg, and got the hell out of there.
Starting point is 00:46:01 Right. That's apparently the... Well, apparently he was so quick. What he could do is if you laid your palm out and you had a pound coin on there, he could grab it out of your hand before you closed your hand. And then when you opened your hand, he had replaced the pound with a penny. Okay. As you were opening it, you were like, what?
Starting point is 00:46:20 So imagine like you were Bruce and I was go. So go! And I closed my hand. And I'm like, ha ha. You didn't get it. And then I opened it. And I see you've changed. You were so quick. You took it and you put a new coin in place of my coin.
Starting point is 00:46:30 Oh, I suppose as you picked up the pound. you've put a penny in. Yeah, I could do that. I could do that. He just set some weird targets for himself. He was like the original Guinness World Record Breaker and then break them. And he did want to kind of
Starting point is 00:46:46 hone himself into this perfect human specimen which weirdly people thought might be why he died. There was a thought that he just had eradicated from his body all extraneous anything and that sort of killed him somehow. Yeah, it's not really...
Starting point is 00:47:00 one of your parents think of that one? That's not the story at the Shriver dinner table, I can tell you that. I buy this. I buy this. So, right, because there are lots of theories. One is that he died of a swelling of the brain, which I think is what was the official finding from the inquiry. Yeah, I think the brain definitely did swell, but it was as to why? Well, is it because he was so, so, so fit? He got rid of all fat, so there was no subcutaneous fat on his body at all.
Starting point is 00:47:23 That could be a problem. So this was his routine when he died, right? He drank liquidized steak and cow's blood every morning. Then he ran seven miles. Wait, wait. Goldfish steak. Then he would run seven miles with his Great Dane dog,
Starting point is 00:47:40 some of it backwards, some of it up the side of trees. Checked out, yeah. And he was just too fit. Also, there's another theory that he didn't have any sweat glands. He didn't have any sweat glands because he'd had them,
Starting point is 00:47:51 and this is the idea that he died of heat, like overheating, because he'd had his armpit glands removed out of vanity and let us be a lesson to the vein that he thought that sweating made him look bad on screen.
Starting point is 00:48:02 Right. And then I found this most plausible theory about his death because he'd had a brain swelling a few weeks early. Well, no one knows, really, no one knows what killed him. But almost all your sweat comes out of the rest of you. Yes, I think he would just probably overheated anyway. It was a very hot day. And he had this habit of whenever he was getting excited
Starting point is 00:48:18 talking about a project of like doing, acting out the whole film. So the person who was with him said he'd literally acted out the martial arts of an entire film that he was planning to do. Can you emergency get rid of the heat? Like, can you just drool a lot? Like, is there to get that? Yeah, just the liquid out of you? Pop in a cold bath, maybe. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:48:35 But it's a shame because we never got to find out whether he achieved one thing he wanted to do, which was he... Well, first of all, he was experimenting with electro-shocking himself. So in his sleep, he ran electricity through his muscles to fine-tune his reflexes. And he said that by the end of the year, he was going to be able to drive his fingers
Starting point is 00:48:52 right up to the middle knuckle through pine planks. Wow. And we never will know if he could do that with just one finger through a plank of wood. It's a shame that didn't comfort. through the coffin lid. I need to wrap us up, guys. We've got to the end of our show.
Starting point is 00:49:12 Thank you so much, everyone, for listening to our dorky facts. I hope you enjoyed it. If you want to get in touch with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can all be found on our social media accounts. I'm on at Schreiberland, James.
Starting point is 00:49:25 My Instagram is No Such Thing as James Harkin. Andy. Andrew Hunter, I'm on Twitter. Yep, or if you want to get to us as a group, where do we go? You can go to At No Such Thing on Twitter or at No Such Thing as a Fish on Instagram or email podcast at QI.com.
Starting point is 00:49:38 Yeah, and yeah, check out our website. If anyone wants to come to a live show like this, we are doing more dates around the UK and we're going to Australia and New Zealand. But for now, Gothenburg Book Festival. Thank you so much. That was awesome. What a treat.
Starting point is 00:49:52 Absolutely awesome. We'll be back again. We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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