No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Squashed Microbe

Episode Date: June 28, 2019

Live from Oxford, Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss lethal hippopotamus poo, ice cream-making warplanes, and how to avoid upsetting microbes. ...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from Oxford. I am sitting here with Anna Chisinski, Andrew Hunts and Murray, and James Harkin, and once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy. My fact is that hippos sometimes poo into rivers. so much that all the fish downstream die. This is such cool science.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Not if you're a fish. This is a horror story if you're a fish. It's true. So quick shout out to the scientists who did this. The team who did this was scientist Chris Dustin and Amanda Subouloski and hippos poo a lot into rivers. Basically, pooing is one of the main things that hippos do and
Starting point is 00:01:16 they do it for all sorts of purposes. Communication. Mostly to get it out of the mostly for pooing purposes. But it's technically called organic matter loading. That's what I call it. Surely it's unloading.
Starting point is 00:01:34 Depends if you're loading the river, I guess. Oh, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I don't know. No, you're right, you're right. Well, I'm not sure I am. But, so they eat a lot of grass and they eat it at night because it's cooler when they're out of the river feeding.
Starting point is 00:01:50 And in the daytime, they wallow in the river to stay cool. So this was on a river called the Mara between Kenya and Tanzania. There are 4,000 hippos living in this river and these hippos deposit 8,500 kilos of waste every day into quite a short section of river. And it turns into this huge sludge at the bottom of the river. And then in the dry season, the river shrinks and dries up a bit. But then when it rains, this massive tidal wave of hippo poo gets churned up and all of this sludge gets washed down. And it doesn't have much oxygen in it. because of all the bacteria, which have been, you know, consuming the poo. So the oxygen levels in the water plummet, all the fish die.
Starting point is 00:02:29 So it's bad news if you're a fish, but it's good news if you're something that eats fish. And don't mind a little bit of pooey after-taste. Yeah. You're definitely sending that back if you're at a restaurant. The fish looks great. It's just the hippo shit all over it. So things like stalks, fulches, crocodiles, hyenas, they eat these fish really quickly once they die off.
Starting point is 00:02:52 And actually, the researcher says, if you weren't there to see it, you wouldn't know it was happening because it happens so quickly that they come and eat all this stuff. And it's a really good way of the nutrition cycle almost happening through the ecosystem. They had to, the researchers who did this,
Starting point is 00:03:07 it was in Kenya, wasn't it? And they couldn't do it themselves. They couldn't go and analyze the poo themselves because hippos are very dangerous. They're the most dangerous of the large mammals in the world, actually, in Africa. So they kill, estimates seem to vary between 500,000 people in Africa every year,
Starting point is 00:03:21 but so the Britsuchus didn't really want to go near that so they sent in some boats and they got advice from a Maasai guide who said, disguise your boats as crocodiles and so they disguised their boats as crocodile heads which went around collecting data on their poo That's amazing Because they get along quite well hippos and crocodiles
Starting point is 00:03:39 They do But actually it's a bit of a relationship That seems a bit skewed towards the hippo In that the crocodile just needs to be a bit passive when it comes to a hippo and them interacting I've seen footage of a baby hippo using the back of a crocodile basically as a teething ring
Starting point is 00:03:57 just to... But they do sometimes eat hippo babies it's quite bold for it to be chewing on a crocodile as a ring because they do occasionally flip around and swallow a baby which I imagine doesn't happen with an actual baby's teething ring. So this is very rarely
Starting point is 00:04:11 you'd have a very strong case. Yeah. There's a few products on Amazon would one-star reviews going ate my fucking kid It's actually what brought down toys around, isn't it? But yeah, in this case it's because the children, obviously, they could take on. It's when a mother is babysitting near a crocodile
Starting point is 00:04:35 and they're watching the biting going on. So the crocodile has to just put up there. Just take it because they're like, I don't want to start anything here. I think I read that a hippo can bite a crocodile in two, which doesn't sound plausible, but they're very, very powerful drawers. They're very strong jaws, don't they? they're going to easily snap a boat into if they want to. Like, you know, not a cruise ship, but a rowbird or something.
Starting point is 00:04:53 Just back to the organic matter loading thing. So the thing they do, which is really communicative with other hippos, is that they use their tail as a propeller, and they spray it over a very wide area. Spray their poo. They spray the poo over a wide area because their tail is going round and round and round like a propeller. Like shit hits in the fan, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:05:13 It is exactly that. That's it. Yeah, they do see it. to spray it around willy-nilly. And they use it for flirting, don't they? They're spraying. So they, both sides, both genders flirt with their feces. So the males will mark their territory with this big spray of poo,
Starting point is 00:05:29 which they can spray a couple of meters with their tail. And then the female, if she's impressed, will respond by turning around to face him with her ass, so to not face him. And then she'll do the whizzing, the poo whizzing. And it's called submissive defecation. Do you know that hippos can't get? cholera and they think that one of the reasons is because they throw their poo around so much.
Starting point is 00:05:52 So I surmise if humans start throwing their poos around. Eventually, after thousands of years, millions of deaths, you'll have humans who are covered in poo but can't get cholera. Look, no one's saying that it's going to be great to start, it's like Brexit. No one's saying that it's going to be great to start off with. But eventually. The cholera is, what, because it moves the poo far away from them? Well, because they have a lot of contact to the bacterium or whatever it is. If they could get cholera, they'd be dead. Right. So they've got some sort of immunity. Yeah. Okay. Because they do eat it as well, don't they? God, really? Do they? Babies eat their mother's feces, because they have that
Starting point is 00:06:29 unfortunate thing, which some species have, where babies are born without any functioning intestines. They don't have any live bacteria in their inside. The only way they can get that is to eat their mother's poo. So as soon as they're born, they've got to start showing down on that. We briefly mentioned hippo testicles before but I found out just a little bit more about them so I thought we should return to that wellspring So there's a great article in Discover magazine Which is headlined why it's nearly impossible to castrate a hippo
Starting point is 00:07:00 So the problem First of all you've got to get pretty close to it That's true Can't do that with a remote control crocodile-shaped boat Although you would be able to use the chores but there are a problem in some places obviously because they are a bit of a pest they're very prolific breeders as well
Starting point is 00:07:19 so they can produce 25 calves in 40 years so before you know it you've got loads of hippos so the problem with castration as a you know to spread it across loads of hippos in a pest area is that their testicles are hidden inside their bodies and there's a paper in the journal Thereogenology which names all
Starting point is 00:07:40 the difficulties in castrating hippos. Number one, the penises apparently discreet. I've used that excuse. It's just being polite. And also the testicles are not in the same place from one hippo to the next. So they can vary by up to 16 inches between different animals.
Starting point is 00:08:02 So if you cut in trying to remove the hippos testicles, they're not there. So a game of pin the testicles on the hippo could lead to it. Pretty much stick a pin anyway, you're correct. And the problem is that they can retract further during surgery, which we've said. They can retract them further into their body.
Starting point is 00:08:18 They can flee the surgeon's knife. And also, it's very hard to anesthetize a hippo. I mean, there are so many problems. Just don't do it. Don't do it. Don't castrate them. Although they are a pest, as you say. And they are particular pest, of course, in Colombia, right?
Starting point is 00:08:34 So this hippo is known for really hanging out in Africa. but Pablo Escobar in Colombia had this zoo. The Pablo Escobar, massive Colombian drug lord, obviously was shot in 1993, left behind his massive menagerie of weird animals, and they got rid of most of them, but people didn't notice at the time, I didn't think, that he had a bunch of hippos living in his lake.
Starting point is 00:08:53 How could you not notice? Didn't spot him. Didn't spot him. They looked like rocks. And they've bred, and eventually everyone's attention was drawn to this in 2007. So he died in 1993. 2007, fishermen started like, you know, calling the local council
Starting point is 00:09:10 or whatever it is, and reporting... My fish tastes a bit like hippo shit. Sales have really plummeted. No, they kept calling up and reporting creatures with tiny ears and huge mouths. And they genuinely didn't know what they were, these people, and they were hippos. And so now there are about 60 of them
Starting point is 00:09:31 that are just living in this tiny area in the rivers and lakes. And apparently you'll be in this nearby town, and you'll see a hippo just wandering down the road. Cool. It's scary. It's very exciting. We're going to have to move on in a second. I've found an interesting thing.
Starting point is 00:09:46 The first pharaoh of the United Egypt was killed by a hippo. He was called, yeah, King Menez. And we only know it from a single line, as far as I can tell, by a historian called Manetho, who just simply wrote, Menez was the first king. He was snatched and killed by a hippopotamus. And nothing else. We don't know the circumstances. answers. We don't know what he was doing at the time.
Starting point is 00:10:08 What a legacy. Yeah. We do know what it's like to be swallowed by a hippo or to half swallowed. Because there was a guy a few years ago called Chris Broughton, who was on the Zambezi. And basically, he said, before he knew it, he was inside a hippo. He said, I was aware that my legs were being surrounded by water, but my top half was almost dry. I seemed to be trapped in something slimy. There was a terrible sulfurous smell like rotten eggs and a tremendous pressure against my chest. My arms were trapped, but I managed to free one
Starting point is 00:10:40 and felt around. My palm passed through the wiry bristles of the hippos snout. It was only then that I realized I was underwater, trapped up to my waist in his mouth. Wow. Isn't that amazing that we know what that's like, and then he managed to get himself, he wriggled as much as he could,
Starting point is 00:10:55 managed to get free, and there were people there who could drag him away. Wow. So his arm was going up through the hippos airwaves and out of its nose? Yeah. No, through the mouth. He had to reach further into the hippo and then back out through.
Starting point is 00:11:10 I thought he was coming up through the nose, out of the nose. He clambered his way out of the ear in the end. My God, he didn't go through the anus. He would have been propelled. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Chisinski. My fact this week is that there are monks in India who avoid going out in the rain
Starting point is 00:11:38 in case they splash through puddles and upset the microbes in them. And these are Jane monks and people who follow Janeism. So, you know, Jane's the people who basically don't believe in harming any living creature. And this goes right down to all bacteria, which basically live in everything and on everything. And so as soon as the monsoon comes, you're not allowed to leave your house if you're Jane,
Starting point is 00:11:59 because you might immediately be killing stuff, because they believe that these tiny creatures, which they called Nogoda, and they believed in hundreds, thousands of years before we even discovered micro-war. They believe that these tiny creatures existed sort of everywhere in puddles, in damp environments. And if you touch them, then they're going to get upset, even die. And so they can't go out in the rain.
Starting point is 00:12:21 And if you hurt them in any way, then you go to hell? Is that the idea? You just won't be reincarnated, I don't think, as well as you might have. It's not as hurting a human, which is a higher being, but it's still not ideal. So these guys are the ones who sweep the streets so that they don't stand on any, like, insect and stuff? Is that right? Yeah, and they wear masks, so they don't inhale them. And they don't go out at night because you men... Someone said they don't go out at night because the light's not good enough
Starting point is 00:12:49 and so you can't see what you're eating. And so you might think you're eating a piece of bread, but it could be a bunch of small insects, which... I'm no gourmand, but... I think I can tell the difference. It's incredibly hard life being a Jane. So Jane monks, you know, it's an older sister religion of Buddhism. So they're very, very, very, very keen to avoid the pleasures of the flesh, extremely keen.
Starting point is 00:13:14 So Buddhist monks shave their heads. Jane monks pluck out their hairs one by one in a deliberately painful ceremony. Buddhist monks beg for their food. Jane monks are not allowed to beg. They're not even allowed to beg. There's a hand gesture you can make, a bit like they arch their right hand over their shoulder, which I think is like this. It's kind of like the beginning of I'm a little teapot.
Starting point is 00:13:36 And that's to show hunger, but they cannot directly ask for food. Oh, really? But then if you do that gesture, then people do sometimes give you something, don't they? Yeah, people say, oh, he's hungry, yeah. Yeah, because there is the thing, there are basically two main variants of Jainism, and one is Gagambar, and one is Fetambar, and the Degambars are the skyclad or naked janes, and they are not allowed to own any material possessions.
Starting point is 00:13:59 And this is if you really strictly adhere. So this is the monks and the nuns. So they have to be naked all the time, if they're those monks, because you're not allowed to own clothes, because they're material possession. and that causes something. You can have an iPhone though, can you? Obviously, you can have an iPhone.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Where would you keep it? It's not going to that. Could you rent a tuxedo, for example? Because then you don't own it. You don't own it, you just renting it. Oh, yeah. But how would you pay for it? Good point.
Starting point is 00:14:25 No money. I don't know if tuxedo rental existed 3,000 years ago when they sort of founded it, so maybe they've updated it. But those ones can't even own a bowl, so they have to ask for water by cupping their hands and then it all slides through their fingers before they can drink it.
Starting point is 00:14:39 I think they're allowed to drink from gauds, aren't they? Are they? I think so, yeah. I think one sect is, are the other sex? I believe so. Wow. Because the other sect, which are allowed to wear clothes, are still only allowed to wear white, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:14:53 And this thing about how they don't want to hurt any animals, if you look back in their stories of their history, there were 24 Jane Fordmakers. They were the prophets who kind of started the whole thing. And one of them was so bothered about not harming anything at all that before he was born, he floated perfectly still in his mother's womb, sending not so much as a ripple throughout the amniotic fluid to avoid harming his mother. Wow.
Starting point is 00:15:19 So thoughtful. They're the epitome of thoughtful. They're what we all should strive towards, really. So some of them wear a mask to stop inhaling insects, but there's controversy about the masks because some people say that it's a good thing to wear a mask because the breath from your mouth is hot, and if you don't wear a cloth, you might scorch microscopic beings in the... air, kind of like Godzilla. Kind of. He didn't wear clothes either.
Starting point is 00:15:44 He didn't wear clothes. So some people say that if you do wear a cloth, that might be a bad thing because your breath is moist and that might give rise to microorganisms in the cloth. And then there will be more living and dying because of you breathing, so they'll die when you handle it.
Starting point is 00:16:00 So problem. It's a tightrope, isn't it, that you've got to walk? And it's slightly tougher for women. Although I will say, I think they have much more egalitarian views than a lot of mainstream religions, and generally they're kind of great. But they do have this slight thing where if you believe in the naked Jainism, the sky-clad Jains, then women can't quite attain proper enlightenment, proper nirvana. And that is because women can't be naked because it's inconvenient for them, apparently. I don't understand why it's more inconvenient for women to be naked
Starting point is 00:16:29 than for men to be naked. Seems equally inconvenient. But also, so one, women can't be naked because it's inconvenient. And two, women can't be naked because they are intrinsically harmful. And this is actually based in the understandable belief that women's periods kill loads of creatures as they happen.
Starting point is 00:16:49 So as... And I don't know what... I think maybe it's a sort of... I've never seen that body farm advert. Well, that was the idea. Menstruation was basically the death of thousands and thousands of these tiny organisms and so you couldn't quite achieve Nirvana as a woman,
Starting point is 00:17:06 but you could come still quite close. I've got a tangential fact about Jainism, and it's actually to do with a lot of Eastern religions, so we may have mentioned before that swastika's quite big in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, and they're big in Jainism. And I found out, in the course of researching this, I didn't know this, in the year 2013, and in fact a few years since then,
Starting point is 00:17:25 there was a day called Learn to Love the Swastika, which was aiming to rehabilitate the swastika, because it seems to be working. I've seen a lot more of it these days. It's going really well. But to raise awareness of the symbol and its history as a peaceful symbol, tattoo artists around the world
Starting point is 00:17:47 offered people free swastika tattoos. This is true. This happened. There were lots of articles about it, and there was a report from Le Journal International, which said this, when a BB journalist questioned one of the tattooists about the probability that neo-Nazis might take advantage of the event,
Starting point is 00:18:02 the latter answered that even if that was the case these people will leave with a symbol of love on their body you've just got to let some things go don't you I think you've got to leave the swastika behind there was a guy in America I read about years ago who went through World War II and he lived in I believe it was Ohio in America whose name was Adolf Hitler and he refused to change his name
Starting point is 00:18:26 he ended up becoming famous for people going people interviewing him saying why have you not changed your name from Adolf Hitler, and his response was, I'm not going to let one guy ruin the good name of Adolf Hitler. Just on microbes, sorry, I know it was a distraction, just on microbes,
Starting point is 00:18:47 I was looking up lots of stuff about microbes because of the puddles and microbes in them. Did you know that Oregon has an official state microbe? No, I didn't know that. No, it's shockingly. It's baker's yeast. Because it's very important to craft brewers and craft bakers, if they exist. But lots of states have discussed having a state microbe.
Starting point is 00:19:11 And I think so far Oregon's the only one which said... Well, they've got the best one, haven't they? They've got a good one. There are the good ones. So Wisconsin proposed, in its parliament, Lactoccus lactose lactose, which is very crucial for cheese production, because you get a lot of cheese in Wisconsin, but that didn't get through.
Starting point is 00:19:26 Hawaii suggested a bacterium, which was found on a native shrub, but then there was a rival camp who wanted a different state microbe and was a huge argument in the Hawaiian Parliament about some people said no we want this one which lives in a symbiotic relationship with a squid and all the people who wanted the shrub ones said yeah well the shrub lives in Hawaii it's native to Hawaii and the squid lives everywhere the squid one is vibrio fish scary isn't it I love that microbe they should definitely have gone without my group
Starting point is 00:19:51 oh no I like the other one actually oh here we go again right let's take this outside the one on the bush and they got in such a massive row that they scrapped the whole thing Do we think America hasn't got its priorities straight? Feels like they've got bigger fish to fry. We're going to have to move on very shortly. Can I just talk about how you couldn't kill a microbe if you really want to? Yes.
Starting point is 00:20:11 Because they're a pain in the ass, and antibiotics are struggling, and so people have been really looking into how else we can kill microbes, and they're quite hard to squash. So actually, this is something that James probably have got wrong, because they're so small, obviously. They're like a thousandth of a millimeter that you can't. They'll get into a crevice before you can probably squash them. So there's a scientist called Elena Ivanovna, and she works in Australia,
Starting point is 00:20:33 and she's worked really, really hard to create surfaces so smooth that bacteria will just slide off them without being able to hold on. But some of them can still cling on, so that's failed. And she was really panicking about, I don't know how to kill these microbes. They're still clinging to my slidy surfaces. And so she wrote to another scientist and asked if he had any ideas, and he said, try the cicada wing. And what on earth?
Starting point is 00:20:56 But she got a cicada wing, so you know, cicadas. they took a wing off, and it turns out that if you put a bacterium onto the wing of a cicada, it gets punctured all over, spills all its guts out, little bacteria guts, and it leads to a quick death,
Starting point is 00:21:11 and gecko's skin is even better. It's really, really, it is hard to kill them, and it's really hard to kill them by stamping. You can do it if you really put a huge amount of pressure on. You can't kill a bag. No, you can. If you press food, there's a process called pascalization, and if you press food with 87,000 pounds per square inch,
Starting point is 00:21:28 Right. You just make all the bacteria go pop. I'm not coming to your restaurant. We serve extremely flat food and extremely competitive prices. How heavy is that? Sorry? 87,000 pounds?
Starting point is 00:21:43 It's a lot. It's more than all four of us put together. Okay. It's a lot more. Yeah, buy some margin. But it depends how we arrange it, right? So if I was wearing one stiletto shoe and you all climbed on my shoulders,
Starting point is 00:21:56 then I think that that might be enough, concentration of weight. If we were all hippos. And that, yeah. But it's not a good idea to do it. So science ABC, they looked into it, and they said, stomping around your house in a bid to sanitise or sterilize your floor is a bad idea. Honestly, you don't want your family to see you and think you've lost your mind.
Starting point is 00:22:19 Okay, we need to move on to our next fact. It is time for fact number three, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that during the Second World War, while American pilots were flying over enemy territory, not only were they shooting at that enemy, but they were also often making ice cream at the same time. How were they doing it? It wasn't, they weren't just churning it while they were.
Starting point is 00:22:42 No, exactly. So this was a big thing during World War II that I'd never read about before. Ice cream was massive for the troops. It was to help them with calories and sustenance, and it was a food that got banned by most other countries. Britain, for example, banned ice cream during the war. Yeah, as a sustenance.
Starting point is 00:22:58 As a rationing thing, basically, because it's sugar and we don't need to use all that sugar. Yeah, exactly. They suggested a carrot on a stick as an alternative. That didn't go down... What a stick?
Starting point is 00:23:08 The carrot is the stick. What's the point of shoving a stick up a carrot? Just so it looks like an ice cream. I'm just saying that carrots can be used as a stick because carrots don't melt in the same way that magnums do. Yeah. You would have been court-martialed at this point, mate. Just stick with the program.
Starting point is 00:23:25 It's a waste of sticks. Surely we need sticks for the war effort. Do you know, weaponry had come on quite a lot farther than that by the Second World War? All in the Stick Battalion, follow me! So what this was is that they were constantly making ice cream in very creative ways during the war. And one of the things that they discovered is that you could take a sort of drum, put all the ingredients inside of it, and attach it to the back of a plane. So as you flew over, you were reaching about 30,000 feet up.
Starting point is 00:23:57 the air. Very cold up there. So you had the coldness to make it freeze, but also the vibration of the engine, the machine gun going, were churning all the ice cream product around. So by the time that you'd sort of, you know, down some enemy planes and landed back on your aircraft in the ocean, you could go and have a big scoop of ice cream off the back of your airplanes. That's so cool. There was a guy called Jay Hunter Reinberg, who was one of the first people, maybe the first person to do this. And the first time he put the ice cream too close to his engines, so it couldn't get cold enough. And so it's a bit like goopy.
Starting point is 00:24:29 They still ate it, of course. But then the second time, he flew 33,000 feet over Palau. And so he went high, high, high enough. So it was really, really cold. And the good advantage of that is number one, it meant that the ice cream froze. But number two,
Starting point is 00:24:44 it meant that none of the Japanese aircraft could shoot him because he was so high. And so they just kept shooting at him and the bullets couldn't reach him. So he was just like watching it all going on below him. Wow. Wow. Wow. Yeah, I kind of didn't realize
Starting point is 00:24:57 how easy ice cream is to make. I haven't tried it. I have just read about it still, so maybe it's not... Yeah, at the moment, it sounds like you need a plane. Imagine if you got your pilot's license just for that.
Starting point is 00:25:10 But you can... I was reading a... Like, there was a thing in the New Yorker by someone who said, she went to a friend's house and the friend said, for dinner, and the friend said, great, who's for ice cream for pudding?
Starting point is 00:25:20 And everyone was like, yeah, great. And so the friend went away and she came back and she had one zip-block bag and then another much larger zip-block bag and basically she filled the small Ziploc bag with vanilla extract and sugar and then she closed that and then
Starting point is 00:25:34 inside the larger one she filled that with ice and salt and salt is the crucial ingredient for making ice cream isn't it? And then she shook the bag about a bit, got tired, passed it around the table so it's quite a fun past the parcel kind of dinner party experience and by the time it got back round her that's ice cream. But it's because ice and salt
Starting point is 00:25:51 makes an endothermic reaction so it sucks all the heat out of your Ziploc bag with vanilla in it. This doesn't sound like a great party, I have to say. So just other things that during World War II they used ice cream for, the US Navy, so in order to get ice cream to a lot of people, they had a lot of the Navy ships that were out and about. There was one specific ship, which they spent a million dollars converting at the time, which was effectively an ocean ice cream factory.
Starting point is 00:26:22 And it just, that's all it did. It created ice cream. It could do 10 gallons every seven minutes, and it would just go to various different Navy ships and deliver them ice cream. Wow. I was just looking at that amount that it could do. It's the equivalent of doing one Ben and Jerry's tub every five seconds.
Starting point is 00:26:39 Wow. Did it need to only be in extremely rough seas all the time to churn it up? No, because you've got the engine kind of going around, the propellers and stuff like that, I think. Oh, so it was still powered by the engine. And also, the enemy could always hear it coming because of the chimes in the back. It was a flawed system, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:57 But there's reports, apparently, of these boats, these ships that when they were attacked by the Japanese, if a torpedo hit it, there were a few accounts of sailors before they were abandoning ship and jumping overboard, running to the bit of the ship that had the ice cream, scooping as much as they could into their helmets, eating that, and then jumping off.
Starting point is 00:27:15 So just a quick, you know, bowl of ice cream before... That was in the USS Lexington, which had a lot of ice cream on board, wasn't it? Yes, yeah. This is, I should just very quickly say, I've gotten a lot of this information from the Atlantic online. The ocean. I speak to oceans. Just on, you mentioned chimes just now, James.
Starting point is 00:27:35 So there used to be, I didn't know this, in the UK, I believe, 250,000 ice cream vans. And as I say that, that sounds insane. Today there are a few of them 2,500. And one of the main threats to them is, can you guess? The sun. Yes, yes. I kind of I guess Yeah
Starting point is 00:27:54 Children growing up Yeah But more come to replace them That doesn't make sense Yeah exactly yeah Is it the health code people Yeah all of these are really good answers But there's one thing
Starting point is 00:28:06 That's you haven't mentioned yet Double glazing Because you can't hear the chimes If you're double glazed Yes in 2017 The head of the trade body The Ice Cream Association By the way awesome
Starting point is 00:28:19 said that new homes are so energy efficient. They've got double, sometimes even triple glazing, and children might not hear a van right outside their house when it's playing a chimes. So they launched an app for smartphones called Van Toot, which alerts you on your phone with an electronic jingle if there's an ice cream van nearby.
Starting point is 00:28:38 That's really cool. That's so cool. In the 1980s in Glasgow, there was an ice cream war between two gangs who were selling drugs and stolen goods from ice cream vans. Ooh. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:52 So it was really a drugs war. No, James said it was done from ice cream vans. Well, it was quite serious, actually, but it was all in the news and everyone was having to go at the Strathclyde Police because they weren't solving all these crimes. And the local newspapers called the police
Starting point is 00:29:08 the serious chimes squad. Oh. They should have called for Magnum P.I. Oh. Right, wrong. So you know that the jingle, the jingle used to be, before it was playing music, it used to be a man shouting hokey-pokey, because it's really cool. That is the Italian for Ocepoque, so it's a bastardization of that,
Starting point is 00:29:35 and Ocepoque means, oh, how small. I have heard that a few times as well. Because about a tenth of Italian immigrants in the 1890s were selling ice cream. weren't they? Yeah, I think about 10% well, about 10% were vendors and they were basically all ice cream vendors
Starting point is 00:29:52 and so that came about but in the 19th century so the ice cream wars is not the first time it's been associated with vice because in the 19th century ice cream parlors became a very big thing
Starting point is 00:30:03 this is especially in America and it was because women basically weren't really allowed to go to places on their own unless they were chaperoned and this started becoming more and more of a thing as a century progressed
Starting point is 00:30:13 so you'd turn up to a restaurant and they'd be like where is your chaperone and then they'd kick you out and so they sort of came up with ice cream parlours which became a place that women were allowed to hang out by themselves and they were called parlours to kind of mimic the homie, cosy, cosy life that we ladies desire and but they of course turned into hotbeds of vice immediately
Starting point is 00:30:37 so there was all this disapproval because it was thought that without formal chaperones women were just turning up and keeping awful company and like going out with really bad men and there were rumors about ice cream drugged with passion exciting vanilla and lots of, there was one journalist who wrote, I think in the New York Times that he went into an ice cream parlor
Starting point is 00:30:57 and he saw a man and woman deep in conversation who were evidently man and wife, though not each others. It's amazing that vanilla was so, because that's the shittest of all the flavors these days, isn't it? Very raunchy back then. Yeah, I'll have a hornetto, please.
Starting point is 00:31:16 Nice. You could say? Yeah. You could. You could. We're going to have to move on shortly. Before Cornets, they used to sell ice cream in penny licks. And this was in London.
Starting point is 00:31:29 They used to sell them in little glass. They're like glasses, but they're a little bit bigger. And they're almost like Sunday, what you put Sundays in. What they would do is they would give you your penny liquor, put ice cream in it, and then you would return it to them, and then they'd give it a quick wipe, and then put some more ice cream for the next person today. do it. Sometimes not even a wipe, right? That was bad for the bacteria.
Starting point is 00:31:50 And that is why ice cream cones kind of became quite popular, wasn't it? Yeah, because they were banned in 1899 because they were causing the spread of tuberculosis. Right. That's bad. And then the cone came about, and it was a huge deal. So this was at the 1904 World's Fair
Starting point is 00:32:06 that the ice cream cone was invented. So there were instances of it appearing kind of in a few cookbooks in the 19th century, but it was suddenly made popular at the World's Fair. And it was this huge thing the 1904 World's Fair so if any of you
Starting point is 00:32:18 have ever seen Meet Me in St. Louis and I don't know why the song is pronounced like that but it was about the World's Fair that was in St. Louis
Starting point is 00:32:24 and it was a huge deal so they had sort of like bears made of prunes at the World's Fair and they had just what everyone's always what's it
Starting point is 00:32:34 what's the point of the bear made of prunes everyone loves a prune yeah true a bear's an exotic thing there you go I think they did actual snarling
Starting point is 00:32:43 they had a massive landscape sculptured entirely from butter. They were showing the new refrigeration technology. So they had a milk made milking a cow, but all of it was made of butter. And they had Roosevelt on a horse, Teddy Roosevelt, the president at the time, on a horse. What was he made of? Peaches. It's all butter. It's all butter. But anyway, sorry, they made the ice cream cone there because there was ice cream on display, and no one had thought of eating it like on the hoof, and then they realized people wanted to try it.
Starting point is 00:33:10 And so a nearby waffle vendor curled his waffle round into a cone shape and said, try this, and hence the cone was invented. But there's this great historian who's really looked into this, and she's found seven different people who claimed to have invented it at that one fair. There was a Syrian guy, a Lebanese guy, a Turkish guy, someone from Ohio, all saying they'd done it. But that's there was born the ice cream cone.
Starting point is 00:33:36 Well, it's a simple history of the ice cream. Do you know that it's better to eat ice cream by licking it than with a spoon? is a theory and the reason is that the flavour in ice cream is released when the fat content comes out of it and that comes when it warms up and because your tongue is warmer than a spoon
Starting point is 00:33:56 and it's got a larger surface area it's better to put it on there and then it kind of melts and you get the flavour whereas if you do it with a spoon then it's still cold when it goes in your mouth and you don't get all the flavour because you swallow it before you can. Just a tip? It's a top tip. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:11 There's a guy who can tell the difference between 12% and 11.5% butterfat in ice cream. I bet he gets invited to a lot of parties. He's an official ice cream taste tester and he was called John Harrison. He was the ice cream taste tester for dryers from 1980 to 2010, so for 30 years and he had his tongue insured for $1 million.
Starting point is 00:34:33 In fact, the company had his tongue insured for $1 million. They always say this, we've insured your tongue for $1 million. What's the risk? There isn't a gang of roving. tongue thieves. It's a very precious tongue. I'd get it if I could. He would know. No.
Starting point is 00:34:55 And before you can explain what that means, it is time for fact number four. Our final fact of the evening is James. Okay, my fact this week is that in 1997, a town in Saskatchewan held a referendum on whether the end of a toilet paper should hang under or over the roll. and luckily that was the last time anyone ever asked a stupid question by means of a referendum ever again
Starting point is 00:35:29 So this was a local election in Saskatoon which is in Saskatchewan And they were trying out new voting machines basically and so what they wanted to do is have a trial question Which was nothing to do with any kind of politics and wouldn't kind of get people riled up And so they said What do you think should be the official town microbe? The question was, are you in favour of toilet paper in all public washrooms being installed with the loose end coming up and over the front of the roll?
Starting point is 00:35:59 And the answer was 80% over. Okay, and so they said they didn't want it to be political. Oh, we've got a few over fans in here. Oh, okay. That was definitely 52% over. In Sunderland, they feel completely the other way about it, all right? But yeah, one teenager did a science project about it and did a survey and found that liberals usually go
Starting point is 00:36:19 for over while conservatives usually go for under. Really? So actually it was quite political after all. And was it enacted, as in did all public washrooms follow the overwhelming mandate of... I think it became the rule, but I'm sure there isn't a person who goes around checking them all. So it wasn't legally binding. Far be it from me to criticise the people's choice, but I think they got that absolutely wrong. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:36:52 The toilet roll thing, that's insane. And there's no wonder Liberals go for the over the top because over the top waste so much more lue roll because it easily gets, you know, tangled. It doesn't waste more? It falls down more easily, especially if you've got a cat. It's not cascading down like that. Like, no, I can fall.
Starting point is 00:37:08 If you've got a cat? If you've got a cat or if you get home drunk, it's a lot of water water. Guys, guys. So what was the moment that no such fingers of fish really ended? Wow. I feel tense. Some more referendums that have happened. Well, since that one works so well.
Starting point is 00:37:29 No, but it's really interesting. So, America is really big on this. So in the USA, they have extra referendums kind of attached to votes that they're having. So you might have a state or a national election, and you'll just append a few extra votes, which are yes, no things normally. And some of them are quite fun. So in 2006, Arizona voted on whether to give a million dollars to a single resident chosen by lottery simply for voting.
Starting point is 00:37:53 To encourage turnout, one person would get a million dollars. It was called the Arizona Voter Reward Act, and they rejected it. Classic. Oh, really? Yeah. Classic human. They think, what if it's not me? There was a great one, which was in Castlewood, Virginia, and this was in 1997, and the question
Starting point is 00:38:13 for the vote was, should we exist? Yeah. Yeah, and they decided they shouldn't. And they no longer do. What are you talking about? Well, I think it was quite a tiny community that was right next to a bigger community, but it came with a lot of extra taxes off the back of existing,
Starting point is 00:38:32 so they said, let's not exist anymore. So they abolished themselves and became part of Russell County. Yes. But they had literally only existed for a couple of years, right? They'd signed this big petition saying, Oh, we want to exist. We want to exist. We want autonomy. We want a government.
Starting point is 00:38:46 great, let's do it. So they bloody did it and then straight away they were like, taxes, what are you talking about? Fuck off. Literally, immediately, the second administration
Starting point is 00:38:56 they put in power was this mayor called Roy Castle whose whole platform was to abolish their existence. Wow. So people are able to change their minds and have another vote a bit later
Starting point is 00:39:06 if they feel like it. Subtle, very subtle. By the way, this show isn't going out for about three months, so fuck knows if any of the about. You'll be able to trade this for food this episode of the podcast.
Starting point is 00:39:25 You'll be all sitting around your carrot sticks at home. It's on a stick, it's on a stick. I mean, you can make carrot into sticks. That's the weird thing. Just some other good referendums. In 1993, San Francisco had a referendum and it was on whether one specific policeman
Starting point is 00:39:45 could patrol with a ventriloquist dummy. and they got pretty into this. So this is this great guy called Bob Geary who was a community policeman and he was given the remit to make policing more creative and ingenious and he did that by spending a lot of money on a big wooden ventriloquist dummy
Starting point is 00:40:04 and going about and he properly learned how to do it he got all these tapes, he practiced in front of the mirror and he called it and he called it Brendan O'Smarty as sort of like a flip on the idea of a dummy and he dressed it up in police uniform with a water pistol, patrolled the streets, and then eventually the person in charge of police complained and said he had to leave it in the car.
Starting point is 00:40:24 And so he got enough signatures for a referendum, and it happened. And bizarrely, the result, I find this so unfathomable, the result of the referendum was just 51% to 49% in favour. Who were the 49% voting against a policeman having a dummy? I reckon it's probably the other policeman who, when they call for backup, and Brenda No Smarty rocks up.
Starting point is 00:40:49 With his water pistol. Hello? There's a very, very, very small fire that needs to put it out. Can you send Brendan? He cost $1,700, which in 1993 was not nothing. Yeah, but he already owns it,
Starting point is 00:41:03 so he doesn't need to buy a new one, does he? I guess not. No. Still, I'm part of the 49% saying no to Officer Ross Month. You are, are you? It was to entertain children, wasn't it? On patrol. To entertain people, I think.
Starting point is 00:41:16 And he did manage to apprehend criminals with it. No, stop. Apparently there was more than one suspect that he took down with the dummy in one hand and the suspect in the other. Are you kidding? No. Did he do good cop, bad cop with the dummy? Look, I'm managing to hold him off you, but I can only restrain him for someone. Let me Adam, let me Adam.
Starting point is 00:41:41 He's going to shout, let me Adam, let me at him while I'm drinking a glass of water now. There was another, just speaking of entertainers in Sao Paulo, there was a Brazilian clown who was called Tirerica, who won an election, and he was going for a federal deputy, and this was in 2010. It was a question as well, which was,
Starting point is 00:42:05 does anyone really want to know what happens behind government doors? That was simply it. And everyone went, yes, someone's going to tell us the truth, and it won him the election, but he was a clown. And did he reveal? Did he... I should have read the rest of the article, really. Can I talk about House of Lords votes?
Starting point is 00:42:23 Because they're quite weird. So, first of all, so Lords aren't allowed to vote for MPs, which is fair enough. There was actually quite a good article looking at funny voting comments over the years. And apparently, in 1948, then someone in America said that
Starting point is 00:42:41 he got in touch with the House of Commons because he was interested in the qualifications for voting in England so he called the reference library in the Houses of Commons, and he received the following pronouncement. In Great Britain, any adult, 21 years or over, may register and vote except peers and lunatics, and we make an exception for the latter
Starting point is 00:42:59 if they have a moment of lucidity. And that moment was in 2016. Well, they can't vote for MPs, but they do have their own elections, and they're often quite weird. So in 2016, there was a by-election in the House of Lords. It was to replace a Lib Dem, Peer, called Eric Lubbock, who was actually a very cool guy
Starting point is 00:43:19 who wanted to leave his body to batty dogs home to vary their diet. But that's... Besides the point. Anyway, he died, so someone had to replace him. And the only people qualified to vote to replace him are the other Lib Dem hereditary peers, of which there were three. And there were seven candidates.
Starting point is 00:43:38 So they had a proper election where three people voted for seven candidates. Wow. Which he might be the only election where there are more candidates than voters. That's really good. There was in 1862, there was a referendum in Greece because the people overthrew King Otto
Starting point is 00:43:55 and decided to hold a referendum to decide who would take his place. There were 240,000 votes counted, and the winner was a guy who got six of them. And that's because the Greeks voted 95% for Prince Alfred, who was British, but Britain, France and Russia had signed a treaty saying that no person from any of those countries was allowed to take over.
Starting point is 00:44:17 Okay, so the guy who got six votes was William of Denmark, who took over and duly raid for 50 years. Did he say how many votes the first guy got, Alfred? He got 95% of 240,000, so I'm sure you can work that out. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:33 There were 93 people who voted for having a republic rather than any king at all, and there was one vote to bring back King Otto. I wonder who that was from. We're going to have to wrap up in a second. Oh, I've got one last fact about presidential elections.
Starting point is 00:44:50 Yeah. Which is just not really on referendums, but this was sent in by someone in the audience tonight. Someone called Charlie Gennis, Jenis? Hi, yeah. And it's this. It's that in the 1948 U.S. presidential election, the Democrats commissioned a Papié-Mache donkey, which was designed to have smoke belching from its nostrils to make it look impressive and intimidating.
Starting point is 00:45:12 Unfortunately, all the smoke came out of its back end instead. Amazing. That's a good fact. Okay, that is 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 account. I'm on at Schreiberland, Andy. At Andrew von derrim. James. At James Harkin. And Chazinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep. You can go to our group account as well, which is at no such thing or our website.
Starting point is 00:45:43 No Such Thing is a Fish.com. We've got. everything up there from our previous episodes to upcoming tour dates. Okay, that is it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much. Good night!

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