No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Welcome Lasagne
Episode Date: April 30, 2021Anna, James, Andrew and Dan discuss Tetris, cow piss, and a leg that left the premises. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from four undisclosed locations in the UK.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Anna Tushinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is James.
my fact this week is that the world's best
Tetris player is a 13-year-old
from Texas. The world's second
best player is his 15-year-old brother.
Are they also the only remaining
Tetris players left on the planet?
No!
Anna, how dare you? It is hugely
popular, Anna. Yeah, the third best
is stung by the sounds of it.
The only other player.
I just think imagine
being in that family like
your two-year younger brother beats you
in the world championships.
But at least you are,
at least you're the second best.
So the best player is called
Dog Playing Tetris.
I don't think that's his real name.
He beat his brother
whose name is Pixalandi.
The surname of these two people is Artiega.
And if you go online,
you can watch the final.
It's only one hour and 15 minutes
with all the interviews as well,
which is 13 minutes shorter
than stop on my mom will shoot.
So it's a good use of your time
if you want to.
But this is an interesting thing, I think,
which is that all the best Tetris players in the world
were people of my age who kind of grew up with it.
And then very recently,
suddenly all these kids have come in
and started kicking everyone's ass at Tetris.
And the reason is that if you think about how I would play Tetris
as a kid,
I would be like on my Game Boy or whatever,
playing on my own and wouldn't really talk to anyone else about it
and would just have to learn it.
Whereas these days,
they learn it all on YouTube
and they're all swapping tips and all that kind of stuff.
And so the standard of Tetris has just gone through the roof in the last few years.
Yeah.
Just leave it to us.
Why are they stealing Tetris from us?
They've got a billion new, fangled, colourful, high pixel games.
Just let us have Tetris.
No.
It's new Tetrises.
They're different games.
It's not like the same Game Boy.
That's like saying we shouldn't watch football anymore because the great Manchester United team
of 1990 is no longer together.
But wait a minute, I mean, it's still blocks coming down from the roof.
And in the World Championships, they are playing pretty much classic Tetris.
Basic formula is pretty unchanged.
It's the same game.
Yeah.
The classic Tetris World Championships only dates from 2010, which I think is a massive
swears anyway, because it sounds like it's been going for, you know, centuries.
It started as a documentary the World Tetris Championships.
There was a few people online arguing about who was the greatest ever player,
and someone decided, well, let's get all these people together and have them play against each other.
In that world championships, the winner was a guy called Jonas Neubauer, who unfortunately died earlier this year.
But one interesting thing about it, what I was saying, about how you would kind of learn on your own and now you learn on YouTube.
There was the fourth place person was a woman called Dana Wilcox.
There was only two women in this championships, and she came forth.
And when she turned up to the championships, that was the first time she learned that you can flip the blocks in two.
different directions, either clockwise or anti-clockwise.
Oh, no way.
And she'd become like one of the top 10 players in the whole world without even knowing that.
How is that possible?
That's amazing.
Yeah.
I'm trying to remember if I knew that.
No, I don't think I did.
I don't think I did.
I don't.
You know that champion you mentioned James, Jonas Neubauer?
Yeah.
He won eight of the first 10 classic Tetris World Championships and he came second in the other two.
So he really very good at Tetris.
And he wrote an article in 2019 about.
his life in Tetris basically, which was lovely. And he said,
Tetris has helped me to make quick and plentiful decisions in everyday life. Have you ever
been to a restaurant with a 12-page menu? I can scan the choices and make a decision
almost immediately without a shred of regret. Even if they bring me the wrong order,
I'll make it work. I love that. I just think. Wow. How does he relate this exactly? Sorry,
what's the logically between his Tetris champion status and the fact he's fast ordering in restaurants?
Because you see the options, you see the options in front of few,
you get presented with a range of choices and you think,
bang, I know how to make that work.
I see.
I thought it was just, he was so desperate to get back to his Game Boy
that he part of trying around choosing me.
Do you think he only orders things like fish fingers and sausages
that come in that kind of blocky shape?
Absolutely, absolutely.
Square potato waffle.
That's too funny.
I actually watched an incredible moment in Tetris history
It was Kevin Beryl who became the first ever Western Grandmaster.
So there's never been a Western Grandmaster outside of Japan.
And he recorded the video that allowed him to become a grandmaster.
And what you need to do in order to get to Grandmaster level is you complete Tetris.
And you then have to play with invisible blocks over the credits.
And Kevin Beryl recorded him doing this.
It's a minute, 40 seconds, which is 48 seconds shorter than Stop on My Mum will shoot the trailer on YouTube.
you can save some time there.
And you watch him going, Tetris, when he says that,
and the moment that he wins it and becomes Grandmaster,
you are just with him.
It's heaven and he's jumping around the room.
Yeah.
Do you think that any grandmaster,
I'm going to use inverted commas for that,
in Tetris has ever been introduced to a chess grandmaster
and really claim, look them in the eye and said,
I'm a Grandmaster too.
Have a Grandmaster club where all the grandmasters of all the different
games meet up. The chess people aren't letting the Tetris guys in that club. Why? They are turning those
guys away at the door. Are you a grandmaster in Tetris? Yeah. Your instinctive finger movements
are at a level of no other human. Chess people take hours to play the game. Take single move.
That's a fair point. They're winning on speed. True. We haven't talked about the origins of it,
how it was officially owned by the Soviet Union. It was this guy, Alexei Pajitnov, who worked at the
USSR's Academy of Science in their computer lab. And he liked making games and he like geometric games.
And there was one which involved pentominoes, whereas Tetris uses, what are they called?
They're called tetrominoes because it's four. And he had made this game. He didn't really know
how to publish it. And it was already being pirated overseas because of how popular it was.
So he gave the rights to the government for 10 years. And then the KGB got involved at one point in
terms of the rights selling. So they always did, didn't they?
They liked to have a finger in most pies back in the day.
Yeah.
He named it after quite odd stuff.
So Tetra Tetris, the Tetris, the Tetris, that's just the four.
But then the is bit is because his favorite sport was tennis.
It's just a mod for a man who devotes his life to sitting in front of a computer screen designing games.
But I suppose you've got to have another hobby.
So yeah, Tetra and tennis.
And I quite like the whole Omino's thing.
This grew out of the Domino, which was the original Omino, which is just a piece with two bits.
and then someone decided in sort of, I think, the 60s or 70s,
to make polyominoes a thing.
So that's one of those shapes with various numbers of squares in them.
So yeah, you've got dominoes, you got triominoes, you got pentominoes.
Did you say there was an original omino, or is that just a...
This is a botched terminology.
No, that's the stem.
I don't think it is there, because the dot in domino doesn't mean two.
No, no, it's not a proper step.
The do was, domino was a thing.
And then a person,
said, oh, DOS sounds a bit like it could mean too, so let's create this whole class of things called
Foliominium. It's a fraudulent. It's a fraudulent etymology, is what I'm saying. Domino derives from a word. It was
originally, we think, a hood that priests. It's Dominican monks, isn't it? Yeah, exactly. And so
the domino was the hood worn by the Dominican monks. It doesn't mean anything. So what should
call it then? I haven't got an alternative etymology just lined up because I'm not a faker. I wouldn't
do that to you guys.
I mean, you seem quite angry about it.
You had a few hours.
I would happily call it to dodomino
because it's four sections
and that could be two dominoes together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just sounds like you've got stutter.
Do you know why Tetris is so addictive?
This is due to something called the Zygarnic effect.
And what it is is that your brain is hardwired
to whenever there's an incomplete task,
you really, really want to fix it.
And so when the Tetris things come down, every time you do complete a task and you get rid of one or four of the lines, then it always kind of gives you more things to do because there are more holes that you need to fill and stuff like that.
And this was invented by a woman called Bluma Zygannic, who was Lithuanian.
And she worked this out quite early in her career.
And then she went on to get a job working for the Soviet Union.
but she carried on as a part-time research scientist,
which I quite like because she was all about kind of incomplete tasks
and she decided to carry on working part-time on it.
And then she won the Lewin Memorial Award,
but unfortunately the Soviet Union wouldn't let her collect it
and she died before she could collect it.
So again, that's another incomplete task in her life.
So she died happy probably.
Yeah.
She died doing what she loved, not completing a task.
Yeah, exactly.
And then there's the Tetris effects,
which we will have all suffered from.
I imagine the Tetris effects.
I think this is coined by a wired writer in the 90s,
but basically where you start seeing Tetris blocks wherever you look.
You know when everyone played Tetris in the 90s,
you close your eyes and you just see Tetris blocks falling in front of the dreams.
And you can expand the Tetris effects to lots of other things.
So it basically means that you're doing something so much to such a stupid extent
that everything in it is overlaid on the reality around you.
So Sea Legs is another example of the Tetris Effect.
So you get off a boat.
Oh, yeah.
So you're not at sea anymore, and yet you still feel like you're at sea.
Yeah, right.
Your body's too used to it.
Very nice.
Did you guys hear about the other study that was done on Tetris
about how it can help with traumatic memories?
This is amazing.
It's if you've suffered some kind of trauma.
Okay, so in this incident, it was people who've been a traumatic car accident.
If you play Tetris for 20 minutes within six hours of the car crash,
you will get 62% fewer intrusive memories in the following week.
It seems to prevent negative memories and flashbacks from even forming.
Because you think of Tetris instead or no?
I don't know.
It's kind of that within those first hours is when the memories get consolidated for long-term storage, basically.
So if you just disrupt during that time, Tetra seems to be especially good at it,
although I'm sure there are other things which could do it as well.
It kind of prevents the memories from forming in the first place,
and then you don't get flashbacks later down the line.
What if the terrible memory that you have is of being a 15-year-old
and your younger brother beats you in the world Tetris final?
That's good.
You should play Supermarry, yeah.
Just briefly back to Alexi, the inventor of Tetris.
I love that the very first version of it,
he built on a computer that had no graphics capabilities.
So he had to make a text version of the game.
So the blocks were basically brackets put next to each other.
That was the first version.
And then Alexi didn't just invent Tetris.
He sort of quite quickly invented newer versions of the game.
So did anyone of you guys play Hattress?
Hats come down with different, like a top hat and a, yeah?
It's literally that. It's literally that.
It's Tetris with hats.
And hats come down and you have to line them up.
So he invented Hattress and then...
I thought it was just playing Tetris three times.
It sounds a bit like you've called a Hattress.
That would be a fake etymology, Anna.
So sorry.
Yeah, so five hats of identical style had to be stacked, and that's how you would remove them.
And Entertainment Weekly at the time said, there is, after all, a cure for Tetris addiction.
It's Hattress.
That's even harder to kick.
There's word tris as well, which was another Alexi game.
So word tris, I actually think would be really fun.
The idea is that you had to create blocks of three letters.
So letters would drop, and you'd have to create a word.
So you could make it.
It's basically like a big crossword.
and you just have to decide where to land a letter
opening, yeah, the next one that came.
Yeah, pretty cool game.
Do you know, I think that James would have point blank
refused to play Tetris when it first came to the West.
So it was, Andy sort of referenced it earlier,
but it was a big deal that it was a Soviet export.
And no one had ever really exported something
for financial gains in the Soviet Union before
because it was so difficult to do
because that just wasn't what they were about, obviously.
So came out.
And the West was kind of very excited.
And it seems like the Soviet Union aspect was a bit of a gimmick.
So they included the right visuals on the Tetris packaging for the West.
And so, of course, when you got the Tetris box,
Oh, my God.
Backwards are.
Was it a Backwitz are?
Oh, my days.
I'm afraid it was spelled with the Backwazaar.
Brilliant.
I'm absolutely furious.
It's really, I think it's like the Tetris effect that when you're learning Russian
and you just see these backwards letters everywhere,
you can only read them.
Because you're used to doing it, you can only read them in the correct way.
And just none of the words make any sense.
Maybe we're supposed to be pronouncing Tetris that way.
So how should we be pronouncing it, James?
It would be like Tietjeris.
But then also there's no eye in the Russian language that looks like an eye.
I'm now picturing how pissed off James must have been going to buy this backward R Tetris
as he's walking into Toys R Us to get it.
Hey, can I give you one?
One last fact, which is that the link between Tetris and Cats.
Was there a Catriss then?
There wasn't a Catriss.
I mean Cats the Musical, specifically.
Oh.
Ah.
Which is that the Texas theme reached number six in the UK charts in 1992,
and Andrew Lloyd Webber was the man behind it.
I bought it, I remember.
Did he really?
Yeah, yeah.
He had a pseudonym.
He said he had the pseudonym, Dr. Spin.
So you, James, walking to the shots, would have just thought,
oh, I'm going to get the cool new track by Dr. Spin.
It was actually Andrew Lloyd Webber.
I think we knew at the time that it was Lloyd Webber.
I think, I can't really remember it very well.
But at the time, a lot of video games kind of came out as dance tracks.
Okay.
Oh, cool.
Andrew Lloyd Webber composed the tune?
No, he remixed it, didn't he?
Because it's an old, it's a very old, well, it's in Tetris.
So it sort of existed for it.
It's a Russian folk song.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Is it?
It's by Nikolai Necrosov.
And it's the story of a young peddler who seduces a peasant girl.
in a field of rye.
And he keeps saying that he'll offer her like some of his goods in return for a kiss slash a shag.
And then she accepts a ring from him and he goes to the to sell his words.
And he says, when I get all my money, then we'll, we'll kind of get married and stuff.
And that's where the song ends.
But the original poem, he actually gets robbed and killed by a forest ranger when he asks for directions on his way to the market.
But that's not in their song.
Game over.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh has ruled that all government offices must be cleaned with cow urine.
Wow.
On pain of death.
No, it's not death.
But it is a new ruling.
So Madhya Pradesh is the second biggest Indian state in size, and it's got 72 million.
people living in it. And their government has released an order saying that usually they'll use
chemically made f-enyl, P-H-E-N-Y-L, sort of chemical. Oh, right. Not there. Oh, yeah.
Not the Anisee tasting vegetable. Sorry, they're not just rubbing liquorish flavor,
although that would be awesome. And they have to use cow urine instead or use sort of an
acid extracted from cow urine. And the decision was made in a cow cabinet that was held in the last year.
I think it's kind of quite a similar phenyl or phenol that they make from the cow urine, isn't it?
It's kind of a very similar thing.
And is it the insides of the offices or is it like the walls on the outside or what do you know?
Oh, I think it's the insides.
I thought it was sort of like floors and surfaces.
Yeah, so in place a detergent, right?
Yeah.
That's what you scrub with.
And the idea is they want to create demand for cow urine in order that the state sets up.
up loads of cow urine bottling factories and, you know, cow urine extraction factories. So they think
that if they make this ruling, they'll have to set up factories that manufacture cow urine for them.
Okay. And the idea is that at the moment, people keep cows, especially for milking, but then the male
cows are often kind of abandoned often. And so by creating this demand, it means that if you have a
male cow, then you might not abandon it because you can milk it for its urine. Ah. That serves a purpose.
I would have thought looking into the amount that cow urine is used in India for various different things,
you wouldn't have a need for sort of creating more demand.
Yeah, well, there's a thing there, which is that there are literally millions and millions and millions of cows on the loose in India,
which are too sacred to be killed to the Hindu religion.
And so it is a supply and demand situation, but unfortunately, the supply is so massive compared to the number of people willing to use cow urine for whatever.
So what else do they use it for them?
So, you know, some people drink it there.
It's seen as a health drink.
I read particularly about one of Bollywood's biggest actors,
Akshay Kumar, who drinks it every single day because it's part of his fitness regime.
So that's one of the things.
It's used for religious services as well.
So if a new baby is born and you want to sort of bless your house for good luck,
you might, you know, put some cow urine around the house in order to do that.
In fact, they sell it in London.
You can buy cow urine in London specifically for that.
I believe is imported, sometimes from India, but also they manufacture it in Watford.
And it's called Gal Mutra.
And there was a BBC report where they found it being sold in certain shops, sort of on
the shelf above the nanbread.
And there was questions about whether or not you should be doing that because it's...
Yeah, we should say it doesn't work. It doesn't good for your health.
It doesn't help anything. It doesn't have health properties.
Do we know that? Do we know that for sure?
No, we don't know. But I imagine it works no better than placebo.
and in lots of cases quite a lot worse than placebo.
It can contain harmful bacteria
and cause diseases such as leptospirosis,
whatever that is.
Oh, right.
But are they in India where technology, science is such a big thing?
Is there a big split between the people
who believe that this is useful and the people?
Is it kind of like homeopathy over there?
It's not seen as part of science.
It is, but obviously it's incredibly widespread.
So it's part of the Ioveda medicine, isn't it?
which 80% of people in India would subscribe to that to some extent, I think.
But there definitely is a divide.
So, for instance, here with this ruling, there is a rival body that's been set up,
which has launched a competition to challenge people to apply the scientific method
to all these claims that the government's releasing about the good that cow urine can do
and basically prove that it can't do any good.
Because it's a big push by the government.
It's huge at the moment.
So there are cow ministries popping up all over the country.
and cow ministers in states.
And it's kind of related a little bit to obviously a bit of Hindu nationalism at the top of government.
And it promotes that side of things.
So, yeah, there is a divide, but it's really widespread.
Okay.
Hey, by the way, if you spill your cup of cow urine while you're drinking it in the office,
do you just sort of leave it?
Because it's what cleans up the office now?
Well, okay.
If you are in the office and you have a glass of water and you spill it, do you just leave that?
Well, you've asked the wrong person here, but would a normal person clean up?
Yes, I imagine they weren't.
Well, yeah, I think you can analogise from that.
Yeah, yeah, it is a really good analogy.
It is really bad.
Lots of scientists in India have basically been under governmental pressure to make research proposals
on the subject of Gomutra, which is cow urine, or the related substance,
pancha gavia, which is a mix of milk, yogurt, butter, lovely zofar, then cow urine and cow dung
on top of that. And basically they're saying
they won't get research funding unless they
research this stuff. So,
yeah, it's a problem.
Panchagavia means five cow derivatives.
Just a bit of that's clever.
There's just every bit of the cow, apart from the meat, of course,
goes into it.
Arguably, I would say the nicest bit.
Although, that wouldn't get me very far in India because eating cows is
so verboten in almost all the country.
Cow politics in India dates back to the 60s.
And this was when Indira Gandhi was in charge.
Indira Gandhi, who was the daughter of the famous politician.
I'd say...
Neru.
Oh, Anna!
I've completely ruined it.
I'm so sorry.
I was so excited that I remember that from my Asia and Africa course of university.
My foot was hovering over the landmine and Anna just stepped in and put a safe mat in.
I can't believe I did that.
I apologize to the listeners.
I apologize to my parents.
I've been looking forward to my parents.
that all week.
I knew he was going to fall for it.
Yeah, Nairu's daughter.
We'll cut that, do it again.
Right, go. I'll say quiet.
So in 1966, there was a storm of the Indian Parliament.
They were trying to pressurize Gandhi to criminalise cow slaughter.
And she refused to kind of count out of what they wanted.
And she had like, oh, yeah, I didn't think of that.
Yeah.
That's one thing that I hadn't been looking forward to a week.
I know you think that I was and you think that I've been leading up to that and that's the whole point of this fact, but no.
So then Gandhi negotiated with these protesters and actually people really started respecting her a lot more after that.
And her party Congress, they chose the cow and calf symbol as a result of this.
And then cow politics kind of became quite a big thing in India.
But what I like about Indira Gandhi is she started at quite a young age.
When she was 12 years old, she led a bunch of children in a group called the Monkey Brigade,
which included 60,000 young revolutionaries.
And they would like send letters to people.
They would make flags.
They would put up notices before the demonstration and stuff like this.
And even before that, when she was five years old, she burned her own doll because she found out it was made in England.
Wow.
The Monkey Brigade sounds like a deceptively innocuous name for a bunch of revolutionaries.
It sounds like you're getting you little monkeys as they're burning your house down.
Yes, correct.
It's the Lord Rama in the epic Ramayana had an army of monkeys, and so they were named after that.
And so what's the connection of why she has the name Gandhi?
Is that through a marriage or is that something to you?
I think if memory serves, she was educated in England maybe, but she met someone who was
not related to Muhammad Gandhi at university, I think.
Right.
It happened to be called Gandhi.
Yeah.
Wow. It's a good name. It's a good name to sort of take to the world of politics.
Like if I was a politician and I had the chance of changing my surname, I would so look for
someone with the surname Obama. I just what?
What's your name? Kathy Obama? Absolutely, we're marrying.
Okay. Here is another use of cow excrement. It can be used as a mobile phone case.
There's one quite hard line, Indian politician called Shankar Lal,
who says that he has coated his mobile phone with cow dung,
and he said, if cow dung can treat cancer,
why can't it save us from a phone's microwaves?
Okay, there is a flaw in that logic, isn't it?
If, and it's a big if, cow dung can treat cancer,
because it can't. It absolutely can't do that.
And this is a man who's speaking with poo down half of the side of his face,
so you wouldn't take him seriously, would you?
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Andy.
My fact is that in 2020, a woman in the UK received medical treatment in two different hospitals at the same time.
What?
How is that? What?
It's great.
It's great. So exciting. So this was a story that was in the news.
It was about a lady called Jan Ritson, and she had a tumour, cancerous tumour, in her leg.
Now, she needed to have the operation where the shin bone was removed and then treated for the radiation.
But unfortunately, due to COVID, all sorts of cancer operations had been moved to a specific hospital, which has been kept clear of COVID patients.
So procedures had kind of been separated out.
So the surgeons who were planning the operation realized that they had to take out her shin bone, take it to a different hospital.
irradiate it to completely kill any cancerous cells while she was still under anaesthetic,
then bring it back and reinstall it in her leg.
Oh my God. Unbelievable. I know. I phoned the surgeon who did the operation to ask him about it.
Cool. He was a he's an orthopedic oncologist called Ashish Mahendra and we had a wail of a time
talking about it because it's just such an interesting kind of miraculous procedure.
Was he the surgeon who dealt with it at the hospital where she was or where the shin was?
Or was he just like the taxi driver or?
No, no, no.
Okay, so he was where the majority of Ms. Ritson was.
He was with her.
He wasn't with the shinbone.
I read in one article.
I don't know if Dr. Mahendra said this to you,
but that she could watch the footage of her shin bone being dealt with from her hospital bed.
So they filmed it and she could watch it.
But you said that she was anisitized, so I don't know if that's possible.
Well, why would you want to watch that?
Oh, why not?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, what else is on Snooker at the moment?
I don't know.
Netflix? You got Netflix.
Watch stopping a mumble sheet.
I don't know.
You'll watch an hour and 15 minutes of nerds playing Tetris,
and you won't watch your own jingo being operated on.
Well, is it a whole channel?
Can I flick over to someone's, you know, nose being operated on in a separate hospital?
Like, is it just one?
I did say, when I spoke to Mr. Mahendra, he did say that she was under.
I'm pretty sure that he said that.
So I don't know whether she was possible.
I think maybe she might have watched it afterwards, maybe.
She might have watched that on plus one or something.
Yeah.
But it's such a tricky operation to do this because when you remove,
most of these tumors happen kind of higher up, maybe the knee or the hip, that's more common.
And reconstruction is much easier because you need to give some, you can give someone a hip replacement, can't you?
Or you can put some metal in which kind of does the job.
When it's a shin bone, it's much harder to reconstruct after the operation.
You know, there's not much muscle cover.
The bone is really near the surface.
And there are many fewer options for reconstruction afterwards.
So the bone, the shin bone they had removed, was the best thing to go back in.
And that's why they needed to do that.
They irradiated the bone, killed off all the cells.
But unfortunately, then you've killed off all the cells.
You know, there's no live matter left in that bone.
And there normally is in our bones.
so they had to use her fibula, which is the next door bone,
and kind of use that as a spare to put that right against the now dead shin bone
that was being reinstalled, and that then helped to bring that bone back to life.
So amazing.
And then did you have to have like an arm bone taken out to replace the fibula and then
the thigh bone to replace the arm bone?
It's not like rearranging a spice rack where you think,
oh, well, if I just put that there.
The only other thing I asked about was the container they used.
use because it's put in a special sterile container to be driven across the city.
And he said there's no specific optimum size of the container.
It depends on the tube.
It depends on the bone.
So frequently they will have to tailor make a suitable container for the bone that is being
moved around.
I spoke to my sister-in-law, Beth, who used to be a nurse.
And she said that she thought probably the reason they don't do it much is because of
contamination, right?
you don't really want to be taking stuff across to the other side of the city in case you get some
you know a bit of dust on it or a bit of grease or something but then she did tell me that what they
used to do to stop that sometimes with you know when you had to remove some skull some of your skull
to release some pressure they would take that bone and then they would put it inside your belly
almost like inside your body because that's where the perfect sterile places for human bone
isn't that amazing they would cut you open cut little floor
They would put it in there while they're letting all the pressure release and then they'd put it back.
That's incredible.
That's amazing.
I was talking also to a surgeon.
So my buddy Harry, Harris Akram, is a brain surgeon in London.
And he was saying that when he was in India, the hospital that he was staying at, you would be fitted with this frame around your head.
Imagine like in all those sort of mad scientist movies where they put this giant frame on your head.
So it's metallic and it's big and it really sits on and clamps on.
So they would put that on there.
But at the surgery in India, they didn't have an MRI scanner.
So they used to send their patients on the bus over to another hospital wearing the frame on their head.
They would go have the scans done and be prepped and then get the bus back and then have their surgery once the scans have been sent over.
Yeah. So in India, you would see people with these giant frames on their head who were just transporting themselves to a different hospital.
Very good for social distancing
because from what you're gesturing here
it looks like you couldn't get that close to them.
It's a very, yeah, it's quite a big item.
It sounds like that thing on saw, you know,
that rips people's heads open.
Like you put them in this contraption
and if you don't get the key in time,
I'm the only one who's seen that movie.
Okay, never mind.
It's not a reassuring thing to say
to the person who's sitting next to the bus chains
on the way to their brain surgery.
I was reading actually at the study about,
a particular brain surgery where the surgeons use stickers to label little bits of the brain.
So this was kind of just a throwaway comment in this study, but they referred to it as
intraoperative electrical stimulation mapping. And they were basically trying to work out
which bits of their brain are responsible for which things. And so what they did was,
they would have a, you know, when patients are awake but you're operating on their brain,
the surgeons stimulated different parts of their brain and then,
looked at what the patient did to see which things it affected. So if they prodded one bit,
the patient might lose language. If they prodded another bit, the patient might start dribbling
or something. And then they added a little label to each little bit saying, language bit,
dribbling bit, walking bit, playing the violin. So I didn't see a picture, but I'm imagining a brain
covered in post-its. That was incredible. There was another world first of surgery,
which happened last year. This was the world's first double penis.
removal.
Ooh.
Just from one person?
From the same person.
It was a baby boy who was born with three penises.
Wow.
Not two, but three.
Yeah.
It's the first recorded ever case of human trifalia, which is a correct.
I was going to say treatise, but that's...
That's Alexey's latest game is working on.
Anyone for trinus?
That's incredible.
Did they keep the middle one or the left one or the right one?
Oh, good cool.
They kept the functional one.
Okay.
Yeah.
The other two were more stubs than full on.
They would have been able to get erections in.
They were built.
Could they urinate?
Could you urinate out of them?
I don't know if the cords.
Yeah, no, fair enough.
Fair enough.
Like a sprinkler system though, Dan.
You think you could stand him in a garden when he's older?
You could stand at all three urinals at the same time.
You could piss on three people's shoes at the same time.
Do you think you would keep them if that,
happen to you, would you ask to keep them?
Because people do that for surgery, don't they?
It's a vex question, yeah. I don't know.
You wouldn't wear the beseer rings or anything, but you might keep them in a drawer.
Put them on a mountain piece or something.
I wouldn't know someone who kept her hip bone after it was replaced, yeah.
Yeah, I was talking to someone we all know, Case Molaker, who's the curator of the Natural History
Museum in Rotterdam.
Anytime he has surgery that is removed, a bit of his body is removed.
So like gallstones or, you know, anything like that, he keeps.
keeps it in a jar in his home and he's shown me them.
There's like, and all the things to do with his kids when they were born, placenters and so on,
they're all in formaldehyde sitting in his house.
I know what you're saying, Dan, and I love Case, but he is a bit weird, so it's not.
He should turn it into a museum.
Call it cases, cases.
Oh, that's good.
Wrong.
Lovely.
Yeah, tall.
Yeah, it's weird the whole do you keep your limbs stuff.
I was reading a thing online from someone who used to work in a funeral home
and said that they'd been asked to keep a leg in a freezer
and it ended up being for over a decade
because the person who'd had it amputated wanted to be buried with it in the end.
Wow.
It's nice.
I think that's a bit cheeky.
Why?
Well, it's using someone's freezer space, isn't it?
If I said to Andy, I've made some lasagna and I want to keep it,
but I don't have enough room in my freezer, can I keep it in your freezer?
I think that is.
I know, but you would feel that you had to say yes.
As the years went by, I would slowly grow more resentful of the lasagna in the freezer.
I think, oh, I've got some leftovers, but I can't freeze them.
I've got a James of bloody lasagna.
And you probably keep, like, occasionally bringing up lasagna just in case I remembered that, wouldn't you?
I would, I would, James, every conversation we had I would bring up lasagna in some way or freezing or leftovers.
Yeah, but this lady can't go.
Any plan on dying soon?
That's your question.
She can.
How's your house?
come to a rental agreement in the end.
I imagine that the rental agreement would be the best way for.
Really? Okay.
When James says to me, for 50 p a year, you can keep.
You're going to charge me to put my lasagna in your freezer.
After two years, James, which is my cutoff, and I think that's reasonable.
I would insist on some kind of arrangement.
Carverly, I thought we were friends.
Anna, have you got a freezer?
I'm not getting involved in this.
49 p a year.
you get briefed on how to care for your limbs
if you choose to keep them.
You get told because you can be given them
in formaldehyde and water.
For instance,
it's one way they get stored.
And apparently you get a little briefing booklet
which says you need to change the formaldehyde and water
every 10 years.
Oh, okay.
So just setting along every 10 years.
It's like changing a fish tank,
which I think is about the same from memory.
That is a great alarm to go off mid-meeting, is it?
Oh, damn, sorry, I just got to change the,
water and formaldehyde of my leg
just lean over behind you
and release one spigot
starts draining
do you know that people
didn't really like wearing surgical gloves
when they first came in
like any technology I suppose
there's always some resistance
but there's quite a lot of hesitation
with surgical gloves
because people would kind of root around
with their hands
and they felt like if they wore gloves
then they wouldn't get the feeling
and they wouldn't be able to do the job
quite as well
but one of the reason is because
like some of the gloves that they used were not exactly good for purpose.
So the first ones were like elbow length cotton or silk gloves.
And they would just like get covered with blood within about two seconds and you'd have to
keep changing them.
And then there was one surgeon who put wax directly onto his hands.
And so kind of dunked his hand in some molten wax and then let it dry and then would use
that.
And the idea of course was to try and make the operation sterile.
But a lot of people thought that may.
be that's a bit pointless.
They thought it's impossible to make everything completely sterile.
So we should just accept there will be some contamination,
but then try and kill the bacteria afterwards.
Do you know what I mean?
So there's like these two kind of sites of what they should do.
Right.
But now they use gloves.
Which did they go with?
Yeah.
I think sterilization for operations,
largely speaking, is orthodoxy now.
It's the preferred way.
Although sometimes you don't have a choice.
There was a case in 1995 when a woman just was getting onto a plane and slipped.
And she thought she was okay, but then it turned out that she'd fractured her rib, which had punctured her lung.
And the plane was already in the air.
And so they weren't going to be able to do an emergency landing because the change in pressure might kill her.
And so they had to do something about it.
And there's these two doctors called Angus Wallace and Tom Wong.
And the case was written up in the British Medical Journal, which honestly is such a good read.
It's an incredible story.
And they kind of got a urinary catheter, which was in their first aid kit,
but it wasn't good to be used for a chest.
So they had to use a clothes hanger to stiffen it up.
They didn't have any sterilization stuff.
So they used covoisei a cognac to make it sterile.
They didn't have any surgical clamps.
So they held the incision open with a knife and fork.
Sorry, had someone lost the first aid kit that's supposed to be on board?
Well, since then,
And since this happened, the medical kits on certainly British airlines, and I think American as well,
and probably throughout most of the world, have improved a lot, and they've got a lot more stuff now.
So I read the story, too, and I love that she had complained about it before the plane took off,
and she said that she'd had a slip, and it was this rib problem.
So the doctors actually saw her before the plane took off, and they went, okay, no, you should be fine.
And then when it got up to high altitude, it started really hurting.
and then she came clean that she hadn't just slipped.
She'd actually been knocked off her motorbike and hit by a car
just before getting on the plane.
So it was a proper accident.
Actually, if it was 10 minutes, this bit of surgery,
and then they put this catheter in,
and she spent the rest of the flight just watching the movie.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, it was stopping my mum will shoot.
She died of boredom.
Okay, it is time.
for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in 1990, five children in America were given the first name
spelt A, B, C, D, D, or Absidy.
All were born in Hawaii, where the local alphabet doesn't actually contain the letters
B, C, or D.
Wow.
It's amazing.
A lot of things to unpick here.
So, it's pronounced absidi.
There's actually a couple of pronunciations, but that is,
one of them, yeah.
Sometimes I'm pronounced Ab City, which is what I'm going to call my gym.
Yeah, so this was in an article that sort of erupted in 2018 when a girl who was trying
to book herself, her mom was trying to get her and her daughter onto Southwest airplanes.
They took a picture and put it online going, look at the name of this girl.
She's, her first name is ABCDE, and kind of shamed her and that turned into a national story.
But then people were digging into it and finding out that this isn't as rare a name as one girl in America.
It turned out that as of 2017, 373 girls were named ABCDE or ABSID.
And further people have done sort of their little checks into how far back the name goes.
And in 1990, five were registered as being given that name.
And all five of them were located in Hawaii.
And yeah, and it's been growing ever since as a name.
And it doesn't really have an origin as far as I can tell.
Well, I mean, it does probably, but no one knows it.
It must have started somewhere, mustn't it?
Some alphabet teacher in primary school going, oh, I think that sounds like a nice name.
I'm spread from there, but we'll never know unless someone out there does.
Yeah.
And it's, yeah, so the Hawaii, this is the modern Hawaiian alphabet that doesn't have it.
And I looked up our names, James, there's no J in the Hawaiian modern alphabet as well.
so your name is different.
So Anna, your name, if you were being translated into Hawaiian name,
is still Anna with one N, A-N.
James, you are chemo, K-I-M-O.
Strong.
I am Caniella, so K-A-N instead of a D.
And Andy, you are anal-l-l-U.
A-N-A-L-U.
That's what you.
An-L-U.
Yeah, anal-oo.
I like that pronunciation, and I'm sure.
it's correct. I don't know what the production is. It's A-N-A-L-U. It sounds like a product.
Are you bored of anatole? Then try anal-U.
I thought it sounded like a bathroom cleaner. It's more like something to sit next to the cow urine, I think.
The sequel to Despicable Me.
A-L-U.
A-Nor-U. To baby names.
Oh, yeah.
Baby names, we only know about baby names due to a guy called Michael Shackleford, who in the...
Before him, people just didn't give babies names.
They were like, what's this called? No idea.
Just don't know.
1997.
We need Michael Shackleford here.
He was a guy who...
What are you talking about?
He worked at...
So, it's the sort of...
We only know that there are 373 absides, for example, because of Michael Shackleford.
He worked at the Social Security Administration in Baltimore,
and he and his wife were expecting a baby,
and he just wanted to know if they were going to have a baby with a very common name,
because he was called Michael, which was a massively common name in America.
And wherever you go, three people born in his generation.
You know, someone shouts Michael, three people turn around.
And they didn't want that.
So he thought he'd just programming a little computer program
and work out the names,
and he thinks he was the first person to see an accurate nationwide sampling of first names.
Wow.
And that was 1997.
Good old Mike.
A lot of people listening now think that I'm saying.
I read an amazing book called Frou-Frew-Frizzby and Brick,
the book of Unfortunate Baby Names by Russell Ash.
And it's got people such as Mabel Abel, Ruth Booth, Danny Fanny, Hugh Glew, and Nellie.
These are all people who were around.
there was someone in the 1830s in New York called preserved fish.
His father was called preserved fish and his grandfather was also called preserved fish.
But his father and grandfather were both blacksmiths, but he was actually a shipping merchant.
He started off as a whaler and then started selling fish.
And he was called preserved fish.
Amazing.
That's pretty much the most, it's not a subtle nominative determinism, is it?
Yeah.
It's a bit too on the nose.
I like it.
Does it help the name when you add the third to the end of it?
I don't know.
Preserve Fish the third.
Yeah, just sort of like, why you called the...
Okay, the third.
I get it.
You got weird ass grandparents and parents.
Urethra Scoggins, feel your leg and posthumous mints.
Feel your leg?
Feel your, P-H-E-L-A-L-A-L-A-L-L-A-L-L-E.
Postomous mints.
I want all my mints to be posthumous mints.
not there now
well I've got some lasagna in my freezer
you'd be very welcome to
do you know when baby
baby sort of naming books
took off
1997
no one had books before then
it's weird
well
there were
I mean they sort of really did take off
in the in the 80s
but actually they do date back way before that
sort of names of interesting babies
but they used to
to be in the back of cookbooks, because cookbooks used to have all kinds of extra gubbins in the later
pages just to kind of pat out the recipes, I guess. So Mrs. Clark's cookery book in 1883 was
subtitled, including what to name the baby as kind of general all-purpose household guide.
So you got that kind of thing in the 19th century.
It's weird. Because you don't want to confuse a recipe with a baby name.
That's how actually preserved fish got his name.
And posthumous mince, yeah.
A couple of people who do have Hawaiian names that we all know.
So Kianu Reeves.
Kianu is a Hawaiian name.
And yeah, and it's a lovely unique name in Hollywood.
And it means cool mountain breeze.
But when he first started in Hollywood, his agent said, this name's not going to work.
You need to go away and come back with another name because no one's going to hire you.
It's too weird.
So he agreed.
And he went away.
And he came back and he said, I've got my new name to his agents.
And they said, okay, what is it?
And he said, I want to now be known as Chuck Spadrow.
diner.
Chuckspadina.
So, yeah, his agent said, I'm not sure that Chuck Spadiner's going to work.
Go away, come back with another one.
So then Keanu Reeves went away, brainstormed, came back and said, okay, I got my new one.
I'll now be known as Templeton Page Taylor.
And they said, what?
Mate, you're not getting this.
And so they said, just keep Keanu.
And that's the only reason he kept it.
He was so ready to change it to either of those names.
So do you think that he came up with these stupid names to stop the idea of him having
to change it. It was like a clever thing, or do you think
he just is an idiot who doesn't know?
What normal name is?
I think, yeah, I hadn't actually
thought that, so maybe
that's exactly what he was doing.
Yeah, not sure.
It's sort of read, that story reads like, you're reading
Rumpel Stiltskin backwards, isn't it?
You know when you go and try
and guess at the name every day.
Yeah.
In 1900,
91% of all children
were given a name from the top 1,000
most popular names.
in America. But by 2000, only 75% of girls were given a name from the top 1,000. And for boys,
it was 86%. So a lot more children are being given unique names or very unusual names. And they've
looked into this. There was a 1995 study. And they find it's very common in African American families.
And they looked at the whole country over the whole of that century. And they found that in Illinois,
in 1920, 31% of African-American girls and 25% of African-American boys had unique names in the whole
country. And the reason they think this, there's someone called Sandra L. West, who is the co-author
of the Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance, and a couple of scholars called Ayanna F. Brown and
Janice Took Lively. And what they think is basically the surnames that African-American families
have are often things that were given during slavery times, and they were forced upon them
by white people, whereas the first name is something that's given to you by a loved one, by a family
member. And so people will give names that kind of show that they're loved by their family.
They can show that by giving them unique, sort of special first names because they're stuck
with these old-fashioned surnames. That's interesting. We are definitely getting more into our
unusual names. There have been various studies about why we have, but I mean, it's largely,
obviously because we're a bunch of individualistic millennials, I suppose,
and if one wants a special name for their kid.
But there's also a really interesting study,
which I thought sounded like rubbish,
and then I saw it being written up in a serious and reliable way
about how there's an exact correlation
between how recently a US state joined the Union
and how many newborn babies get unusual names.
And so there's the idea that if you're a frontier settler,
so you know, you're going and you're settling a new land,
you are more bold, it's more bold society, it's more individualistic, it's more gung-ho,
get out and make your own way, and it's much more likely that you'll be willing to break the mould
and give your kid a weird name. So there's literally an exact inverse correlation between
common names and how recently a state was settled. Same with Canada on the east of Canada,
which was settled first. Kids have much more common names, but the west of Canada,
which was settled more recently, still has that hangover of, yeah, when you hear, we'll do what
the fact we want and that correlates.
That's a very interesting idea.
Not many Ivankas, it turns out,
that people thought that perhaps there might be more Ivankas
because she was a prominent political figure.
Do you know why that might be?
Not many Ivankas.
Because it sounds Russian-y,
which might be a bit off-putting to all Americans.
I think there's something about that.
Basically, there is not much fashion at the moment
for any name which contains the letters,
N and K
next to each other.
This is accorded to
Laura Wattenberg
who wrote the
Baby Name Wizard book
and runs
BabyWatnerD.com
she said that basically
NK is very much
out of fashion.
So Frank, for instance,
very much out of fashion.
Frank Kivank, anything like that.
Yet my son Wanker
is fucking the trend.
You can get consultants,
can you can get
professional advice on this if you like.
are various services which do it. There's one which I found in America, which is called, I love this,
it's appellation mountain. Okay? So it's appellation as a naming, but obviously there are the
Appalachian Mountains. Thank you, Andy. Just in case not everyone knows the Appalachian Mountains.
They're not in the top three mountain ranges, I would say. I reckon I'm more familiar with
the mountain range than the word to mean to give someone a name, actually. Great point.
Really good point. Well, anyway, I've covered the ground, I think pretty exhaustive.
I agree now.
And you can pay for like the very basics is a 45 minute call as a kind of urgent assistance thing.
If you're, I don't know, maybe if you're hanging around outside the baptism office, whatever.
Or you can pay a lot more and get an eight page report.
You know, if you need a baby name to work in three different languages, let's say, because the parents are from different places.
Then you can get that and it'll really drill down into the detail.
You want to avoid particular syllables.
That's what you go for.
So they basically kind of go through, you know, like in The Simpsons.
when they name Bart, they try and work out if there's anything that rhymes with it,
and they go, cart, dart, e-arts, no, we're fine.
Does this, for these people basically do eight pages of possible ways
that your child could be bullied in every different country?
Bullying nicknames, basically, yeah.
I think it's if you want to avoid particular abbreviations of the name, they can do that too.
Interesting.
I think if you need professional consultation over what to name your child,
you've got to take a really long and hard look at your capacity to make an independent decision.
Okay, well, my parents wanted to call me anal-U, so I'm glad for one that they took that advice.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Schreiberland, James.
At James Harkin.
Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M.
And Chazinski.
You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yep, or you can go to our group account, which is at no such.
thing or our website. No Such Thing as a fish.com where we have all of our previous episodes
as well as links to any upcoming live shows we might be doing and video links to anything
that we've done that's on YouTube. Do check it out and come back again next week because we
will be here with another episode and we'll see you then. Goodbye.
