No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Vampire From Devon
Episode Date: June 17, 2022Dan, James, Andrew and special guest Rachel Parris discuss piano prodigies, snow-struck skiiers, urine luck, and the Devon Dracula. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandi...se and more episodes.
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Hi everybody, Andy here. Just before we start this week's show, wanted to let you know we have a very special guest on.
This week, Anna is away, very sadly. She's on her holidays. But the great news is that in her place, we have the absolutely magnificent Rachel Paris.
Now, I'm sure you may have heard of Rachel, if you haven't, frankly, where have you been, guys. She's a comedian, she's a musician, she's an actor, an improviser.
She does it all. She has been on so many brilliant shows, and she is a musical comedian,
well. She tours the country with a grand piano performing magnificently funny solo shows.
She's basically the air to Tom Lira and Tim Minchin put together. And on top of it all,
she has just published her first book. It's called Advice from Strangers. And it's a kind of
comedy book slash memoir slash feminist manifesto, all centered around the time that she
traveled around the country, asking her audiences to give her pieces of advice. It's funny,
it's serious, it's hilarious, it's uplifting. And we're so,
glad that she could come on the show because as you're about to hear, she was absolutely great.
So that's it. Without further ado, on with the show.
Hello and welcome to another episode and no such thing as a fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, James Harkin, and it's our very special guest, Rachel Paris, and once again,
we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days,
and in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Rachel.
My fact is that List, the composer, played the piano so hard in his concerts that he regularly
broke piano strings, and superfans would nick those strings and make bracelets out of them.
So cool.
I don't play the piano, but it feels like that's quite a hard.
hard thing to do to break a string.
It seems like a guitar string, right?
That's not that hard, but piano string.
It's rare.
It's rare.
He's not the only person to ever do that, but I think that it happened to him all the time.
That was like his thing is I'm going to break these strings.
Why was he so angry?
I don't know.
Maybe he just had like really heavy hands or something.
There were comments that he had massive hands, which allowed for him to stretch.
A lot of piano players say that that's not actually a thing.
There were certain patterns that he would play.
that a big hand doesn't necessarily make you.
We actually have plaster casts of his hands
so we know exactly how big they were.
When you say we?
Do you mean in your home?
Yeah, I'm in my wife.
And here they are.
They're here tonight.
We find that his fingers were slender and long,
but they weren't like massively long.
I think Ratmaninoff had really big hands.
Ratmaninoff had 12 inches.
What?
And his hands?
I measured mine.
Mine's a nine inch span
because I've got small hands,
but a big stretch.
Big spank.
But, yeah, when you measure 12 inches out on a rule, that's insane.
So Ratmaninoff was known for having, like, absurdly big hands.
And you can only play Ratmaninoff pieces if you've got those...
Giant hands.
You can fake it a bit, but you have to do some very clever maneuvering.
If Rachmaninoff was alive today, and if he did that mime, you know, when you mime a phone,
when you were too opposite, your thumb and your little finger.
Yeah, he would hitch the top of his head with his thumb.
He'd knock his hat off.
He could only mime a car phone from the 80s.
Yeah, yeah.
So this whole thing of him banging on the piano, he was a passionate, amazing player,
and that was kind of a thing.
He was like a rock and roll.
List.
He was like rock and roll, wasn't he?
List.
But fortunately, if he did smash up a piano, he always had two pianos on stage with him.
That's such a cool idea.
And I'm not sure if it was necessarily because he knew he was going to smash up a piano.
It's because he was such a showman that he wanted to give both sides of his face, basically, to the audience.
So he didn't have a rowdy bringing on the piano when he broke his, like, dragging it along.
I think he would drag it out.
Really?
Yeah, it's like, I read an account of a gig where he dragged the second piano out.
And I think if you were an audience member, there was a second piano,
you would be slightly disappointed if it didn't come into play.
Yeah.
You'd think he hadn't given it his all.
It's like Czechos piano, isn't it?
And he had these, like, beautiful flowing locks of hair, which made him very popular.
He really had the whole, like, Elvis, you know, someone coined the term Listermania.
Yeah.
That people were absolutely obsessed with him the way they are sort of today about pop stars,
but he actually had the talent to earn it.
But yeah, people would ask for locks of his hair.
Yes, and they would collect his cigarette butts.
Oh, yes.
They would wear them in the chains on their necklaces with his initials sort of carved.
There's an account of one lady doing that.
I don't know how it's pretty much.
But there is it like it's, it did happen.
And apparently everyone hated it because she was carrying another stinky old cigar end, basically.
They were like, Susan, can you knit that in the butt?
That's really gross.
Knit in the butt?
No.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, very good.
Yeah.
Apparently, I was reading Listermania does sound like it was a bit of a just like
Beatlemania, you know, where it was just screaming girls and stuff like that.
But apparently the original term, the mania was used in terms medically.
It wasn't just that people were just getting too excited.
They genuinely thought that this might be leading to medical conditions.
So if Lists came into town, they'd be like, you know, we've got to get doctors ready.
I mean, I'm making that up.
To effect, that's what the mania meant.
People actually got ill.
Yeah, exactly.
I was thinking that his performance is a bit like you two, Andy and Rachel, you do
ostentatious, right, which is an improvised Jane Austen play.
And his concerts were quite a bit like that.
I was reading.
It's a while since I've seen you too like.
Poorly received.
Well, he would like get a member of his audience to give him a little sort of motif, a little theme.
And they might just go, do, do, do, do.
or something, maybe not like the Nokia theme.
And then he would spend the rest of the concert
just like doing the amazing bits that are using that.
That was awesome.
He had a very interesting life.
So he was a prodigy as a child.
And he was a hot house by his dad.
They all were bad.
Yeah.
None of these was like doodling around until they were 50.
But it was kind of interesting just on that.
We'll go back to that.
But like because mass market pianos are just coming,
And also the French Revolution had just happened.
So you had pianos were only played by posh people,
and they were really, really expensive,
and you could only get them if you were super posh.
But then suddenly, just around the time of Mozart,
and then list after him, suddenly you could get cheap pianos.
And that meant that children could play it,
and children could practice it.
And so you had these children coming up.
So you were as good as the, you know, posh, you know.
And also all the previous pianos were cheap,
if slightly spattered with the blood of aristocrats.
who had been dragged away.
Second-hand of the evening.
Some, somewhere.
But so his dad took him around.
His dad sort of worked him like a dog for years, you know, years.
His father died when Franz was 15,
and he took pupils as a 15-year-old prodigy,
and then had this incredible performing career
until I think his late 30s, maybe,
and then step back.
Yeah.
Because he had a lover, a countess lover,
who encouraged him to compose.
She said, look, this performance.
He's all well and good.
He's making a lot of money.
And he just kind of stepped back.
He moved to Weimar.
And just started composing.
Who was the lover?
Do you know?
Yes, she was called countess.
No, sorry, she was a princess.
He was married to a countess.
I'm traded up to Princess Caroline von Seine Wittgenstein.
Anyway, she left her own marriage for him.
And there was this whole thing about whether they could annul the marriage,
so they could be her marriage, so they could be married.
And the Pope agreed to it.
And then he changed his mind.
It was a big old thing.
But yes.
So he took a really crows.
job as a Keppelmeister at the court of Weimar and he had to wear archaic clothes to perform
him. Oh wow because he was a rock star and then he went in. So it was a bit like actually. Suddenly it's like
a music beef eater or something. I did think of ostentatious a bit and that you're basically
dressing in stuff that was the height of fashion 200 years ago. And the pay was so bad it only
paid for his cigars. That was literally all the other. But we don't know how quality his cigars were
to be fair. Yeah. Yeah, that's true. Yeah. He could have sold the one eBay afterwards.
And Caroline designed Victorinstein.
She was a Catholic princess, wasn't she?
And she got him into Catholicism.
And then he went on to try and become the Pope's personal.
Try to become the Pope.
Try to become the Pope.
Hey.
Good luck to you.
Take a cigar.
He wanted to be the official composer to the Pope.
But he was turned down.
And the alleged story of why he was turned down is that apparently he was playing in the
cloisters one day.
And all the nuns in the nunnery.
He ran to him and started kissing him and like, what?
Coking stuff.
And the Pope decided, well, if he's like that, if he's going to have that effect on women,
we're not going to have him as the official.
How hot was this guy?
Yeah, I was just like that.
He must have been fit as.
I think he was.
I think he was six foot two.
We've established he had big old hands.
Great hair.
Great, lovely locks.
Yeah.
Oh, what a thought he.
Yeah.
And he had a lot of mistresses in his life.
He did.
He did in later life take holy.
orders, but minor holy orders, he didn't become a full priest.
I think maybe because it would have involved a vows celibacy.
And he was just, he wasn't quite ready.
He just did it as a hobby, like embroidery.
To meet the nuns, basically, I think it might be the...
Well, here's a weird thing.
In 2018, in Spain's got talent.
He didn't.
There was...
He showed up.
Just one very big hand comes out of the race.
Holding a cigar.
Smashing pianos left and right.
Bang, bang.
No, no, he did not show up itself.
However, he kind of did in a way because one of the competitors of that year was a guy called Michael Andreas,
who's supposedly the great-great-grandson of List.
Really?
But this guy is claiming that he is the great...
Descended from both lines.
Yeah, descended from both lines.
So he isn't even picked like a mother that you can't trace it back to.
So supposedly we have a descendant who's incredible, by the way.
I've seen him play.
He was a prodigy as well.
He was a child prodigy.
He was winning competitions since he was five years old.
They're all prodigies.
You're a prodigal, Rachel, because you're a classical pianist.
I am.
I don't think I was a prodigy.
I did like piano competitions when I was small.
Did you?
Yeah, yeah.
And I was teaching when I was 15.
Really? Yeah. Wow.
What I'm saying is you don't have to be a prodigy to teach at 15.
You just have to be willing.
Were you teaching smaller children or were you teaching adults?
So I was like grade eight and I was teaching grade one.
That's really impressive. That cigar that you're smoking at the moment.
I like that. I don't know.
I do think if you've got the willingness to practice and basic like strong musical aptitude
and if you start young then you're going to be a child prodigy.
It sounds like I'm doing it.
It sounds like I'm really doing down.
Like, Bach wasn't that shit hot, but like, you know.
That's so interesting.
Do you get hours?
You'll get there.
Do you guys know Lang Lang?
Yeah.
One of the big concerto players, piano players of recent years, and he's a global name.
He only got into playing piano.
He was a child prodigy, by the way.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
He only got into it because he.
I want to see Rachel and Britain's got telling him.
A little kid comes out
This again
Go on
Child prodigia
It just means
Has a piano
And the time
He was inspired
Hearing Lists
Hungarian Rhapsody
Number 2
By Tom
from Tom and Jerry
And that's how he got into
playing the piano
Oh I totally grew up watching that
I can really understand that
It was called the Cat Concerto
And it was Tom
was playing piano
Jerry's on the inside
gets woken up and they start having a fight. It's an amazing piece. Supposedly a lot of piano
players began their love watching this one cartoon of Tom and Jerry. And then when you get older,
the piece, yeah, it's the Hungarian Rhapsody, which is already a phenomenal piece,
incredibly difficult to play. I can play the first few pages and then it gets to the really
hard bit and I'm like, no, but in the cartoon, which I had on VHS, so I watched it over and over
and over again. They mess with it, they pull it around and they go into like the can-can,
and they go into a little jazz bit in the middle of it, and then return to the piece.
when I got older and I started playing it, I had, I'd be like, oh, oh, the cancans doesn't happen here.
I'm so weird.
This bit doesn't turn into jazz.
It's so confusing.
I've got one other connection that List made in his life.
Yeah.
So we said before, List had big old hands, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's someone else he met who also had big hands.
George Elliott.
George Elliott.
George Elliott.
We have a running fact on this podcast that George Elliott had great big hands.
If you have one big hand, one big hand.
She could play at Radenoff, but only the right hand.
Did she have different size
Hand?
Yeah, but we don't
It's supposedly
She was a dairy maid
In younger life
And she churned the butter
And I milk the cows
And this gave for one
Absolutely honking Hulk fist
Oh wow
And if you look at pictures of her
They never show her right hand
They didn't have enough pain
Didn't have enough pain
But basically
Oh big hands herself
George Elliot
Big hand herself
In 1854
She visited
List with her lover
George Lewis
They were fleeing scandal because he'd left his wife to be with female George, Elliot.
And they made friends, they had coffee together.
Imagine the conversations they would have heard.
Wow.
High five.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the downhill skiing at the Nagano Olympics in 1998 was postponed due to snow.
Too much.
Too much.
Too much snow.
If you go on Encyclopedia Britannica about the Nagano Olympics, it says the most memorable
aspects of the Nagano Games was arguably the weather.
Oh, wow.
It said it brought heavy snow and periods of freezing rain.
There was even an earthquake.
An earthquake.
Yes.
That's incredible.
Where is Nagano?
It's in Japan.
Oh.
Well, that's prone to earthquakes, isn't it?
Yeah.
You want to pick somewhere right in the middle of a tectonic played if you don't want to.
Yeah, it wasn't like a massive one.
It wasn't, but everyone felt it who was there at the time.
If you were halfway through a ski jump, you'd be the only person who didn't feel it.
And you'd land.
And everyone else would have fallen over.
Maybe the earth moves to your advantage by about 50 meters.
Still you've broken the world record.
Amazing.
But yeah, the LA Times said at the time, they said,
we are seeing firsthand the fundamental problem of the Winter Olympics they are held during the winter.
Yes
It's like the ski resorts
They often have not enough snow
Don't they?
Or they say oh
Snow hasn't happened
Or it's fallen
Do you ever get the wrong kind of snow?
Yeah
I feel like that's a
Yeah I've been dragged into the world of snow
For my husband
Oh you
Oh you walk through that wardrobe didn't you
Yeah that's it
Yeah
A nightmare
My husband's a huge skier and snowboarder
I am not
Never skied before
Meeting him
And I get dragged to ski resorts
now
and keep trying to learn to ski really painfully.
But also, yeah, the cancellations for snow happen at ski resorts all the time.
They're like, yeah, the slopes closed because of snow.
Yeah.
I think that skiing is something that you should be a child prodigy at, right?
Yeah.
Because it's easier to learn when you're a child and you don't have the fear.
I learn when I was in my 30s.
Right.
And I say learned.
I can't really ski.
It sounds like we're at a similar state.
It's the worst thing.
I feel like for me at the moment, skiing is,
simply trying to stop.
It's all it is.
It's just, I'm in a deep plow all the way down.
Why aren't I stopping?
Deep plow, what's that?
When you put your skis in a V shape, yeah.
I see.
Whenever I've gone skiing, I've mastered the going fast and the spinning and the, you know,
not the spinning, sort of the shark turns.
Spinning.
Yeah, yeah.
Spilling as well.
A brag.
I've mastered the roly-poly down the hill as well.
But I've never mastered the sideways style.
So no matter how cool I've looked
I've always had to go into the big V plow
Angrily
Like Spider-Man trying to hold the train
From falling off the track
That's a pretty cool way of describing what you're doing
No offense then
I'm sure it looks that good when you're doing it
That's going down doing his pizzas
He's going spider-man
With great power
Do you think Spider-Man's ever been skiing?
Sorry, never mind
But would he enjoy it?
spiders don't like the cold do they he's not a real spider he's not a real man
he's neither he's a freak he's just a boy
I'm the only one who's never been skiing I'm surprised you've never been skiing
why not because you seem like someone who would have been skiing
because you're posh
yeah I think if people were to meet me and you
they think I haven't been skiing and you have been skiing
I see I see it just goes to show that you shouldn't judge a book by its cover
people would look at me and say he must be just eating pies and drinking blue wicked
Too much to leave skiing.
People look at me and see what, like, polo and croquet.
I'm afraid so.
Yeah, sorry.
Oh, dear.
Maybe you guys all know this and it's all really common.
So ski jumpers, they have to get as little friction on the bottom of the skis as possible.
Yeah.
Because I guess you get loads of ski.
So.
They got fast.
Yeah.
And they're plasticie on the bottom.
And they drip hot wax onto it.
And then they iron their skis sometimes to get the wax sort of distributed.
Yeah.
And all the ski makers are really secretive.
Like competitive ski teams, really secretive about the ingredients of their wax.
Oh, really?
Yeah, because they have these, you know, like they give the bottles boring-looking labels or code names and all this.
But the wax wears off, right, as you're going down.
So that's a problem.
And in 2007, a pair of chemists who were called Peter Stiring and Alex Ruth, they developed, I love this, skis which wax themselves.
Self-waxing ski.
How?
So you pour the liquid wax into a little reservoir, which is between your boot and the ski.
So far, you're doing a lot of the work.
The skis aren't doing it.
But yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah, but it's just then it's there.
So you've got it like an like air, you know, that shoot.
So you've got a bubble beneath it.
Oh, okay.
And then you're not allowed to have any means of power down there,
but the wax feeds into this little tube,
which runs all the way along the ski surface.
And as you go into a turn, you put pressure down, don't you?
And it sort of parps a bit of the wax along the bottom of the ski.
Yeah.
That's clever.
I don't know if it was allowed or banned or anything like that.
Yeah, it feels like a...
Feels super off the books.
It does, doesn't it?
The coldness of the coldness of.
the Winter Olympics has it is a problem it's like a big problem for a lot of the events
one of the early day things that happened 1924 games is that the guys who were having to use the
stopwatchers in order to monitor how fast you were crossing the line their hands just got too cold
and so they were just getting it wrong all the time so there was actually a gold medalist who
won who was called charles jutral who was an american who won his event despite being
utterly perplexed by the fact that he'd managed it because he'd never ever ever
had trained for this event before. He came in thinking, I'm going to come last of everyone. And
he ended up winning it. He didn't even train for the event. He sort of just showed up and did it.
And are you telling us that the stopwatch didn't work? Exactly. The stopwatch ran a bit too
long. Oh, sorry, a bit too quick. The guys' hands were freezing and it was a big problem.
So, yeah. Did you hear about Remy Lindholm in the Beijing Olympics quite recently?
No. He did the 50K cross-country ski and the third. Well, it was 50K, but it got short into 30k because
the weather was so bad.
And at the very end, he needed a heat pack to treat his frost-bitten penis.
No.
Yeah.
Apparently.
Should have kept it in his trousers.
He forgot one of his poles.
That was probably.
And the thing is, this is the second time that that happened to him in less than a year.
Does he have an unusually frostbite-prone penis, I wonder?
It feels like he must do.
There must be something there, right?
Maybe he's not wearing a crucial thing.
thermal pant layer or something.
None of his mates have told him.
Yeah.
The thermal pants are available.
He's still going on one thin pair of eminette briefs.
The article I read didn't presuppose what was going on.
Yeah, I think now it's happened a second time.
I think we are allowed to ask the question.
Maybe you're prone to it once it's happened once.
Oh, yeah.
The tip never really recovers.
Yeah.
It's just a guess.
Just waiting to.
I'm not an expert.
Anyway, that was a thing that happened.
Poor guy.
Wow.
I found another quite funny cancellation of a sports event in 2016,
the Premier League match between Manu and Bournemouth.
Sorry, I said Manu, that's Manchester United for people who don't know.
And that's football.
American football?
No, I knew you wouldn't know.
So stick to skiing.
You don't look like a football.
Too busy, too busy teeing up for another chuck-up.
That's polo pan.
Well, half of it was.
So they had to cancel the match at the very last minute
when a suspicious item was found in the Jens Lou at Old Trafford,
but the suspicious item had been put there
by the security firm that was monitoring for suspicious items.
So they'd done it as a testing, as a trial test thing.
This is what a suspicious item looks like.
Yeah, like, can you see if you can find it?
What's the drill?
What will you do?
They accidentally left it there.
And the match got cancelled.
Wow.
That's so funny.
I wonder what it looked like.
Probably had like wires coming out.
I certainly think of a big sort of black cartoon ball.
Yeah.
With a fuse coming out.
And bomb written in white on the side.
Yeah, yeah.
Have you guys heard of the, this is an amazing thing.
It was proposed.
In 2002, it was a British firm called Snowdonia Gateway Limited.
They wanted to build a revolving ski slope.
Okay.
Okay.
So what it would be, it would be 13 stories high.
Yeah.
And it would be kind of like a record player, but on an angle, okay?
If you can imagine that, yeah?
And you would start down the slope as the slope revolved and moved upwards, okay?
Now, the incline was going to be 300 metres long, but the plan was, if you skied slowly enough,
and if it got up to its full revolving speed, permanent skiing.
I, the speed that I ski, which is really, really slope, like, I'm going to be going backwards around that.
You'd never get, you'd fall off the top.
Yeah, and they would generate permanent fresh snow with snow guns
That's extraordinary
So it never happened sadly as far as I can tell
Is it because it's completely impossible to build?
Weirdly, no
I think it was just too ambitious an example of the thing
So these days I think there is at least one rotating disc slope ski simulator
In Europe
I think it's someone like the Netherlands
But it's quite small, it's not 13 stories high
And allowing you to like a sort of ski giant mountain thing
That's so cool
just sounds so much fun.
Wow, that sounds incredible.
I can see the problem that if you were at a certain speed, you would just be stuck.
Like, you would have to be rescued, right?
No, they can turn it.
They can slow it.
They can turn it.
I'm watching the end of the day.
Like, they're not going to stop it for every middle speed skier, right?
No, no.
You'd have to get down eventually.
It might be like the waltzes that you just have one go and then you have to come off and other people go on.
Imagine the poor guy, poor guy, right.
It's, I have a frostbitten penis twice.
I'm just going to have one more skiing and have a nice time.
Oh, no.
I'm never coming on.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, that is Andy.
My fact is that the 18th century health writer William Bucken told his readers that anyone suffering from persistent deafness might benefit from pouring their own urine into their ears each night.
That's really good.
I'm just looking at my notes because I paraphrased what you'd said to us.
And I've written, in 1772, William Bucken told people to piss in their own ears.
Wow.
He pretty much.
Can I just say it does seem possible that the first person who heard this advice simply misheard?
Oh, yeah.
They are deaf.
Did they say, you know, I know a guy in Taurin or do you want some tea I'm pouring?
Are they a reliable source?
Yeah.
Well, William Buckin was this writer.
He wrote this book called Domestic Medicine, which was basically the Beal and Endel of Health Advice in the 18th century.
He was a proper doctor and he was, I think it was actually pretty good, as in he wasn't a quack.
He was really trying.
And it had chapters on absolutely everything under the sun.
One of the chapters is on deafness.
And he writes, a gentleman on whose veracity I can depend told me that after using many things to no purpose for an obstinate deafness,
he was at last advised to put a few drops of his own urine warm into his ears every night and morning from which he received great benefit.
He does say you could also use assault solution.
Would it work?
Would it work?
Like, let's say you've got wax in your ears.
Would it moisten them, perhaps?
I don't know I do.
You'd need phenomenal aim.
That's the problem.
That's the...
It's a few drops.
That's a good detail that I didn't know
when I tried it early this morning.
That would have been very helpful.
But he also had advice in the book
for putting onions, onion juice in your ear
in order to help with deafness.
So is it just a sort of like any liquid
that has some kind of, I don't know,
acidic property or something?
This is the best of the mask.
This is the thought slightly is that earache will eventually go.
And the thought is that maybe what it was was a sort of pseudo thing
where it was just making it feel a bit bearable
and then you mistaken the fact that it happens
because people still parents, there's blogs all over on those mum blogs.
People pissing at the turn of the biz.
No, using onions.
Using onions.
No, it's a community, Andy.
That book, by the way, domestic medicine,
there is an argument that it might not have been written by William Buchan
and might have been written by friend of the show,
Willie Smelly.
Willie Smelly.
Yeah.
The original gynecologist.
The original...
Midwife.
Midwife.
Not that Willie Smelly.
The other Willie Smelly.
The Encyclopedia.
The first editor.
Yeah.
So there are two famous Willie Smellys from the 19th century and 18th century, one of them.
And this one, according to Smelly's son, who's called Kerr Smelly, he said that Willie Smelly might
have entirely rewritten his original draft.
So Buck and handed in his draft.
and then Smelly sort of put all of his own bits in.
So it could be that his was normal and then Smelly added the ear ear ear.
I wouldn't want Willie Smelly's urine in my ears, I'm going to say.
Also, the interesting thing about this book is that it was sort of a sort of equivalent to what I'm trying to say would be a magician releasing all of the trade secrets of how to do tricks.
Because doctors at the time didn't want patients to know this kind of thing.
They actually looked down on this book saying you shouldn't be giving.
this information out to the patients.
This is what we do.
And so he kind of put it all into a...
Might you put like just one bit of advice in there that was wrong to try and trick people into...
Or a bit like those spoiler...
Like internet spoiler things.
It's like step one is this.
But for more, contact your doctor.
Yeah, yeah.
He wrote a lot of medical advice, William Buckin.
He wrote this book called Advice to Mothers, which again, like quite democratizing.
of becoming a parent.
Oh God, I'm strapping in for this.
He wrote to mothers that, and I'm quoting here,
in all cases of dwarfishness or deformity,
99 out of 100 are owing to the folly misconduct
or neglect of mothers.
Wow.
Yeah, which was, I'm sure, science at the time.
It's just nice for mothers to feel more guilt.
There isn't enough going around.
Yeah, I think mothers didn't feel bad
until he really advanced the form like that.
So, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He was an amazing guy.
Like, he started young.
He was a child prodigy, actually.
He was, when he was going around, pissing in other children's ears.
Like, I do, we're joking about this, but I do feel like, as it goes on.
This is proving my point.
It's just like, anyone who excels anything probably excelled as a child.
Yeah, it's true, yeah.
No, he supposedly was the amateur doctor to the village when he was still at school.
So he was so.
So, he was so.
annoying.
No, it's not.
You'd be so annoyed by him.
Yeah.
the baby doctor.
Not if he was helping you.
No, you would be annoyed.
Really?
Yeah.
Especially if he's helping you.
What doctors have to put up with, particularly baby doctors, it sounds horrific.
Imagine a 12-year-old boy coming to you when you're pregnant going, oh, it's your fault.
You haven't been behaving right.
You know, one of the things that Buckin suggested that when you, if you'd burnt yourself,
the cure was to hold it back near a fire.
What?
Oh, yeah.
I did read that.
What?
There was a few other things.
Like, you should put salt on it.
Salt?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like the old saying goes, rub salt in the wound.
And everyone's a winner.
It does sound like he was like a child doctor, but he didn't go on to learn anymore.
Just left it in the knowledge he had at 12.
One of the earliest records for treating hearing loss.
is from the Ibis papyrus,
which is an old ancient Egyptian papyrus.
And that's specifically for wax buildup.
And they suggest that you put olive oil, red lead,
ant eggs, bat wings, or goat urine into your ears.
So they do go for the urine quite early.
And also, olive oil, you use that now.
Olive oil for blocked ears.
Do you hang the bat wings out like a...
What do they look like that?
You're literally flapping out you ears.
Rachel, you've just written a book of advice effectively.
Based on advice from strangers.
Correct.
Is there any honkingly bad advice that you received?
Because I saw some of the gigs where you collected advice.
Yeah, correct.
Well, some of it I just really didn't agree with.
Some of it was very, very individual.
Like, acquire as many guinea pigs as possible.
Happiness is bound to follow, which I really profound, as a previous owner of a guinea pig.
I don't think that's true.
I don't think they improve in large numbers.
Yes.
we didn't try.
No, that's true.
You only have one. You didn't pass through the threshold, which is nine.
In Peru, they eat guinea pigs, don't they?
So if it was a Peruvian person, it might be just a way of, you know, stocking up before
lockdown.
Give a man a guinea pig and he'll eat for a day.
Give a man two guinea pigs.
As long as what is male and one's female.
And they're both at the right age.
And they're sort of, yeah.
And there's consent.
Yeah, yeah.
And he'll eat for the rest of his life.
I also, I enjoyed and really,
really disagree with the advice that I've given, smile whenever possible, which I think is a very
old school idea of like, just whack a smile on no matter what you're feeling. And it made me think
of all those songs of like, smile when your heart is breaking. Smile when your heart is breaking.
Put on a happy smile, you know, all the wartime songs about smiling through the war, smiling through
loss, smiling through tragedy, smiling through heartbreak, which was a very of the 20th century.
century. It was very keep calm and carry on.
Bottle it in.
Yeah, exactly. Don't let your smile ruin my day.
Bottle it up. Pour a few drops into your ears each night and morning.
So yes, I did not agree with that advice, but it's quite common advice. It's still given.
Do you know the first agony on it was?
No.
So far as we know.
No, I don't know.
Clare. Plainty the elder.
No, okay. So I would say this is, James is closer in time, possibly, the 1600s. It's probably, probably really. In 1691, there was a guy called John Danton, and he had an experience where he was having an affair. He needed some advice anonymously, but there was nowhere to ask. And so rather than thinking, I'll just leave that, he thought, wow, what if there was a place I could ask? And so he invented an entire magazine.
the Athenian Gazette, which its job was basically to just answer questions.
So members of the public would just send in their questions,
and everyone on staff would write answers to.
And that is sort of like the modern version of the Agony Art.
There's probably examples of things like the Oracle of Delphi and, you know,
the original Agni Arts.
So he, this Athenian Gazette, Athenian Mercury, it was also called.
It was supposedly this group of a dozen of the best astrologers and mathematicians and philosophers
in the whole of London, right?
and scholars and all this.
Actually, it was just him and his brother-in-law and two other blokes.
They were complete amateurs and they didn't know anything.
But people loved writing in the questions.
So the questions included, what is the cause of suction?
This is about love and relationships.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
Why do Scotchman hate swines flesh?
Good questions.
That's a good question.
I really like this one.
If I'm thinking of committing any great and enormous crime and sin as adultery,
but do not personally and actually commit it, am I guilty of the crime and sin?
That's a great question.
Wow.
I mean, that's given to agony aunts today.
Yeah, that's true.
Here's a couple more.
Why does love generally turn to coldness and neglect after marriage?
Oh, sorry.
Oh, bloody hell.
I don't write it, Paulina, if you're listening.
I'm just reading it.
It was a bit Q-I-ish, actually.
So one of them was, why should the pudding of a vending?
a man's hand in cold water occasion a sudden emission of urine.
Oh yeah, we have done that.
Yeah, and they said...
And I have done that.
It's in life.
And they said it's not true.
They said, they pointed out, it's a vulgar error.
They said, it's...
What?
Sorry.
It was a coincidence, Dan.
That you pissed yourself.
Yeah.
We did that to our baby last week.
Wait, wait.
So, he had a fever.
We were in hospital doing some checks.
And they said to check.
for a urine infection, we really need a urine sample.
And obviously, it's a baby, you can't just make him wee.
And he was a bit dehydrated from the fever, so he was weeing not very often.
So they gave us, like, a test tube with a funnel.
And they said, you've just got to sit here and wait for him to we
and be ready to leap into action.
So bless him, I was just for like a good hour and a half.
He was just sitting there with like my husband holding him up,
and me like staring at his winky, waiting, waiting to leap.
for the wing
and we were
it got to like an hour
I don't think we should blame parents
but she does have a complex
when he goes home
me just staring at it
shaking a little tube
and at the end we were like
what about that thing of like
if you put your hand or your foot in water
then it will make you wee
so we tried it so we got one of those
cardboard bucket things
that they have in hospital
and we filled it with warm water
and we put his feet in it
and it didn't work initially
but about two minutes after he'd stopped having his feet in water, he did then we.
But again, it's probably a coincidence.
That's science.
Maybe it's taking a feet out of warm water that makes to do that.
But people don't normally go to sleep in a swimming pool, so we don't know that.
We don't know.
One other interesting notable name from this period who was into agony-aunting slash uncleing was Daniel Defoe, author of Robinson Crusoe.
and yeah, he would reply to members of the public.
And interestingly, you know, a lot of these replies were sometimes really crude.
So in one reply to someone, he actually called someone, even though he sort of blanked out the full spelling of it.
But he called someone a whore.
You know, he basically disagreed with what she was trying to ask in terms of illicit sexual stuff.
And he said, you're a whore.
I mean, it was really quite crude back then.
Just going back to deafness.
Yeah.
So I got very into this woman called Jaipreet Verdi
has written a book about historical cures for deafness
and it's also about the concept of deafness needing a cure.
It's very interesting.
But she talks about ear trumpets, you know,
like do you remember in alo-a-a-lo, like the ear trumpet,
the sort of comedy item that is the ear trumpet?
But in Victorian times they would be customized.
So a lady, say in mourning,
that the example they've got in a museum is it's been painted black and trimmed with lace.
That's cool.
And at first historians thought, you know, this was a sign of like she had to hide it, you know, to be discreet because it was an embarrassing thing to have.
But actually, this author is making the point that how cool, it's really sort of owning your deafness.
And it's customising what you need.
It's sort of the equivalent of like, you know, pimping out your walking stick or signing a cast in a way.
Surely it's pimping up, isn't it?
Not pimping out.
Yeah.
You pick out your walking stick, you sort of put it in the street with a little sign.
And Daniel Defoe calls it a whore.
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show.
And that is my fact.
My fact this week is that a tourist guide in Whitby got so tired of being asked where Dracula was buried
that he commissioned a headstone just so that he could point at it instead of explaining that Dracula wasn't real.
So this is apparently, it's a big problem in Whitby.
Whitby is one of the great scenes of Dracula when Dracula makes his way over to England,
and it is where Bram Stoker spent a few months where he went looking around,
and he incorporated a lot of the landscapes, a lot of the churches,
even some of the names from the gravestones into the story.
And the issue is that when visitors come, a lot of them don't actually realize that Dracula doesn't exist.
So one particular guy, Harry Collett, who's a tour guide, and he does tours around Whitby about Dracula,
so sick of being asked this question
he did get one commissioned a headstone,
which he can just point to as they're on the track
and say, look, that's where he's buried.
Do you think maybe he should give up his job as a tar guide
if he's sick of people asking him questions about Dracula?
Yeah, well, I guess that is a very good point.
Hang on, what does the headstone say?
Does it say Dracula's here, or does it say Dracula's not real?
No, it says Dracula, and then I guess the dates of Dracula on it.
That's a great idea for your headstone, isn't it?
When eventually you die, it's like,
here lies James Harkin.
Of course he wasn't real.
Because I thought he was trying to,
because the church has put a sign on its door
saying Dracula's a fictional character.
So I thought he might be doing that.
Because actually, if someone tries to dig up Dracula,
they'll find, ooh, there's nobody there.
It's only going to add fuel to the fire.
That's true.
Yeah, this church, the St. Mary's Church,
this is the church that appears in the book.
They constantly have people coming to the church
who are Dracula fans asking about Dracula.
Apparently the pews are just quite often filled with Goths,
who are sitting there just enjoying the scene.
Well, it's Gothsville.
Yeah, it is Godfiel.
They have a twice annual.
In fact, they have four got got goth festivals a year, right?
So they've got the Whitby Goth Weekend, which has been going since the 90s.
And then in 2019, a rival event was set up called Tomorrow's Ghosts.
There was a spooky schism in the Whitby Goth Weekend event.
The founder had set it up, and there was a parting of ways with a venue.
And so now there's a rival festival this year called Tomorrow's Ghosts.
And I read their website about this year's autumn.
festival. It says this. Our headliners for 2022 are Fields of the Nephilim who take the Friday
night headline slot and really need little introduction. Topping the bill on Saturday night are
the loveless who needs some introduction. They actually put that. That's really good.
It's got a cool, quite got gothicy heritage this whole area anyway. Yeah, not just Dracula.
Yeah, not just Dracula. I mean, St. Hilda was Whitby, wasn't she? I think St. Hilda was Abyss of Whitby.
Did she like drive the snakes out of Whitby or something?
That's a story.
That's a story.
Will she turn them to stone?
Is that not?
That's driving them out in a way.
Yeah.
You're making it hard to drive them out.
You're making them heavier if they're heavier of anything.
Yeah, but they're less likely to bite you if they're made of stone.
That's true.
Is that what the ammonite stones are all about?
That's what they call them the snake stones of Whitby.
And they're ammonites.
They're ammonites.
But they, and some people would carve little heads on to make it to make selden.
So Ammonite is like a little fossil that looks a bit like a snake, right?
Yeah.
Especially if you draw a face on them.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And she was, she started a monastery, which is on the spot where this place you would talk about St.
Mary's.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And yeah, she resolved the date of Easter.
Yeah.
She was part of the team who did that.
Okay.
There was the Synod of Whitby in 664 AD where they all got together in Whitby and decided when we should have Easter.
Because some people would.
doing it in the Celtic time and some people were doing it in the Roman time.
And we thought, let's move down to the Roman time.
So she, she's, she's, she's, she's, she's, she was probably still alive in 666 AD.
She was actually, yeah, yeah, yeah.
She was, like, a teacher as well.
She taught Cadmon, who was the first English poet that we know the name of.
She was his teacher?
The question, though, that we're all asking, was she a child prodigy, James?
I know not.
St. Hildes College.
Did you?
Yes.
And then they have a little
ammonite on their shield.
Did they?
That's cool.
I think that's called,
that species is called
Hildosserass.
Really?
It was named in honour of her.
It was found in that area.
Yeah, nice.
There's a really cool
set of stairs in Whitby.
Ooh.
Yeah.
It sounds pretty spooky.
As you head up to
St. Mary's Church,
it's 199 steps to get to the top.
That's in Dracula, isn't it?
That's mentioned in Dracula.
Yeah, yeah.
As you're going up them, there's little rest points, little...
Ooh, benches.
So you sit on this bench and you think you're sitting on a regular bench.
But actually, it's not a regular bench.
It's not a...
No, it's not a possessed bench either.
It wasn't built by Yetis.
It was because the graveyard with St. Mary's Church was at the top,
you had all the pallbearers who were having to carry up all of the dead bodies to get to the church.
And it's a very tiring business.
So what's now used as seats, these planks of wood, were actually pit stops to put the dead bodies on so that they could get rest.
It is spooky.
It is spooky.
The dead men's benches.
Benches.
Another thing about Whitby is if you go to Saltwick Nab, which is just south of Whitby, you'll see where the cliffs are.
There's huge chunks taken out of the cliffs.
And that's because they try to get alum, which is a thing you get in shale, it's type of rock.
And it's really useful because you could bind colors to cloth by using it.
But it didn't work on its own.
You needed ammonia as well.
And the way they got their ammonia was from stale urine.
Ah, urine again.
Urine again.
We come back to urine.
And so in Whitby, they used to have barrels where you would go and wee into the barrel.
And then they would take the wee to the alum mines and then they would color their cloths.
And did they have a little trough of warm water that you could stand in if you were struggling to get yourself going?
And what point does urine go stale?
I've never thought about that.
Well, I would say if you don't drink it straight from the sauce.
You can put in a cup first.
You don't drink it straight from the sauce.
So the point is, and I think we mentioned this in a quite recent podcast, is ammonia isn't naturally in urine.
And monia is made by bacteria.
Urine is generally more or less sterile.
So you get your urine.
The bacteria comes from the air, goes into the urine, makes ammonia, and that's what it becomes stale.
So it takes a couple of hours.
Have you ever forgotten to flush a toilet and then gone on holiday?
Wow.
And then come back.
That's when it's stale.
Oh my God.
Blimey.
But Dan, if you're bottling it correctly with sterilised bottles, it lasts years.
Yeah.
Okay.
She's got to visit Andy's urine distillery.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Keep it out of the sunlight.
Wack a label on it.
It's just bringing them on the plane.
And it's from my ear is actually.
You have to bring so many under 100-mill bottles, that's the really annoying thing.
Anyway, this urine, they couldn't get enough in Whitby.
So they ended up putting barrels in Newcastle and London to get enough urine.
That's a long way away.
There's a lot of piss, isn't it?
Yeah, from a long distance.
Well, there's a lot of people in London, so that was one reason why they went there.
And they always tried to get the urine from poor people.
So they put barrels in the poor areas, and they would want poor people's piss.
Why?
Because it was illiterative.
No, why do you think it was?
Something about poor people's diet or consumption of alcohol?
Because he's got it.
He's not only got it.
Did they want it?
They wanted it to be more.
No, they thought that the poor people wouldn't be able to afford alcohol.
And so they didn't want alcohol in the urine
because they thought it wouldn't set the colours properly.
Oh.
Do you know where Dracula was from?
He was from Transylvania.
Well, exactly.
But there is a minority theory that he was from Devon.
Is this theory put forward by Devon?
Evan.
There's a writer called Andy Struthers
who claims that Bram Stoker
was inspired by a lot of different things, right?
But he claims there was especially an Exeter writer
called Sabine Bering Gould, I think I'm saying a right,
who'd written a book about werewolves, which
Bram Stoker read, and a vampire story
called Marjorie of Quether, and was therefore
claiming that Dracula was effectively
from Devon, which I think would make him less spooky.
I'm going to drink your blood.
Do you mind?
All right, my lover.
Yeah, but his descendant, Dacre Stoker, Bram Stoker's descendant said it's a mix of sources actually.
You can't just say.
Well, one of the sources was about Drackel, wasn't it?
Vlad the Impaler, who was from Transylvania, was he?
Or Wallachia or somewhere like that?
In Romania, anyway.
And he supposedly read about this guy while he was in Whitby.
So he went down to what was the coffee house end and the public library there.
He found the book there and that's what gave me the inspirations.
You know, as you say, there's a lot of.
He was already working on a novel, but it was about a character he called Count Wampire.
Sounds like a camp vampire.
I thought that was the original, vampire was the original dramatic.
Still sounds stupid, though.
Okay, cool, sorry.
I am a vampire.
Or rather, I am a vampire.
I've been to Dracula's Castle.
Have you?
Actually, yeah.
In fact, I've been to both of them.
There's one which is real and one of them which is fake.
The one which is fake is called Brank Castle
And that looks really gothic
It looks amazing
It looks like it could be his castle
But it really isn't
And there's another one which was his actual castle
It's about 100 miles away
And that is just a
You know, it's a semi-detached house
As in it was like Vlad the Impalers
Yeah but it's just like ruins really
And they have a few stakes with dolls on them
Like a sky
Yeah they do
But in the Brank Castle is way better
Because they've got a proper you know
Give shop
Branc Castle, they've really made big on the publicity, haven't they?
So last year, Branc Castle got a bit of publicity
because they offered three doses of the COVID-19 jabs.
What?
Yeah, with doctors wearing fang stickers.
And they put it in your neck.
No, they didn't put it in.
Interesting fact, I was in Bran on the day of the Brexit referendum.
Oh.
You're going to have a spooky loss of play.
trade.
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over
the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shreiberland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M. James.
At James Harkin.
And Rachel.
At Rachel Paris.
And you can go to our group account, which is at No Such Thing or our website.
No Such Thing as a Fish.com.
All the previous episodes are up there.
Do check it out.
We will be back again next week with another episode.
We will see you then.
Goodbye.
