No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As An Echidna With An After Eight Mint
Episode Date: December 31, 2021Happy New Year! It's the Fish Live Compilation Special! Dan, James, Anna and Andrew show why they're absolute pro podcasters, with a new bunch of outtakes and near disasters from our live shows. Vi...sit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone, it is New Year's Eve, if you're hearing this on the day that this episode drops.
Wow, 2021, what a year, eh?
Phew, dear goodness.
Well, we got through it.
We got through it.
And 2022, I'm sure, will hold lots and lots of exciting things for all of you people and all of us as well.
So what do we have for you this week?
Well, we have a compilation of outtakes from our latest.
tour. We like to think that we are the pros. We've been doing this for 400 episodes. We've been
doing it for almost eight years. Surely everything is so slick that nothing ever goes wrong.
Well, if you've actually been to one of our shows, you know that things quite often do go wrong.
Sometimes we say things that we can't possibly put out on the podcast, unless I very heavily
censor them. Sometimes it's a really good fact and it just doesn't quite fit in the final edit.
Sometimes the set just falls to pieces all around us.
And so what I've done is I've collected all those things together
and put them into a compilation of all the craziest bits
from the last few months of touring fish.
Really hope you enjoy it.
We'll be back with a normal episode for the first show of 2022.
For the time being, hope you enjoy this show on with the podcast.
And welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish.
My name is Dan Shriver
I'm sitting here with Anna Tashinsky
Andrew Hunter Murray and James Harkin
and once again we have gathered around the microphones
with our four favorite facts
from the last seven days
and in a particular order
here we go
starting with fact number one
and that is James
What?
Did you not bring your microphone?
Do you know I'm so relieved about that
because I forgot to bring my drinks on
All right you two go off cover
Should we start again?
So it turns out...
Unbelievable.
Listeners at home, James forgot to bring his microphone.
Anna forgot to bring her drink.
For a minute.
I can't work out which is worse.
I'm here, Dan.
Thank you, Andy.
Dan, I don't think anyone's noticed.
I think if we go straight to me, Dan, though.
Really, it's hilarious.
You didn't bring your microphone.
I think what's funny is it was only when I was speaking.
I started speaking out, I'm like, my voice is a lot of quiet and a normal.
And you started looking at your empty hands
and you were like,
oh, what?
Amazing.
Absolute pros.
Eight years we've been doing this.
Okay, it's time for fact number one,
and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week.
It's made no sense in the edit
when this show goes out.
His real name is not Caravaggio.
Yeah, he's actually called
Michelangelo, but that name was taken.
So he had to resort to where he was born.
So Leonardo da Vinci, that's not his surname, it's of Vinci.
That's where he's born.
Same thing with Caravaggio.
Michelangelo Meresi da Caravaggio of Caravaggio.
And so that just became his nickname.
And do you know why he was called Michelangelo?
No.
It's because he was born, we think probably, on the 29th of December,
which was the feast of the Archangel Michael,
which is also...
my birthday.
Wait, your birthday's not 29th to December?
September.
Oh, did you say September?
You said December, yeah.
But by the time the edit goes out, I won't have done.
Is there a reason why clownfish are so good to experiment on?
Can we know?
I'm actually not sure.
We probably mentioned it at some point in our 300 podcast, so you should go back and check.
Just kind of funny.
Yeah.
Good looking, yeah.
Photogenic.
You can fit a load of clownfish in the same car, which is useful for research purposes.
something.
And do you know why he was called Michaelangelo?
No.
It's because he was born, we think probably, on the 29th of September,
which was the feast of the Archangel Michael,
which is also my birthday.
I was looking into, I was just looking into names of dentists.
There's always that thing that if you're called Dennis,
you're going to be a dentist, you know, more.
There's the idea, and there's been lots of studies to show that Dennis or Denise,
you'll be a dentist.
and so I found a few names where it does feel like you're being pulled into it.
So Rachel B. Pullen was one.
And then in Rutland, there is a dentistry that are called
Dennis and Denneth.
Dental practice.
What?
You said that again.
Dentith and dentith.
Dentith.
Dentith and dentith.
Yeah, D-E-N-T-I-T-H and dentith.
But when they get their braces off, they're going to have to change the name.
aren't they?
So good.
In the 1960s,
some women were taught
how to breastfeed
using sock puppets.
Okay.
Sock puppets.
So they would...
They would.
I mean, we're just doing the sock puppet symbol.
Yeah.
They were, well, they were knitted breasts as well.
So there were sock puppets
and their knitted breast
to kind of demonstrate how the baby latches on.
Wait, so the sock puppet would suck on the knitted breast
as opposed to the real breast.
Yes, that's right.
Like a weird puncher.
Judy show? It's a very weird punch of Judy show.
In fact, I told one of our colleagues
this in the office the other day and immediately
he said punch and booby.
Yeah. Yeah.
There was also an Advent Christmas clock,
wasn't there, which had 24 hands
on it, and so you would move the hand.
24 hands.
Yeah.
24 spots for the hand to move on
and so you would move it each day.
That was a primitive version of the eye telling them.
Your clock would be so shit. You just want 24 hands
and a clawing said, just look at the relevant hands.
to know what the time is.
Do you remember the time when they asked
if they could put our podcast on British Airways flights?
I think it was.
And they said, well, can you go back
through your first 100 episodes and remove,
we don't want any ones where you mention plane crashes?
And it turned out we mentioned it in every single episode.
Yeah, it was bizarre.
It was pretty bizarre.
That was so weird.
Yeah, it was weird.
We've already done it in this one.
Yeah.
Do you know, can I just say,
a non-orgasm thing to do with llamas,
which is that llamas,
there was a photo that was taken in the 20s,
which led to an international incident
where Tibetan monks, or monks from, I think of they were Tibet,
were flown over, and there was a photo taken of them with llamas.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, and this caused, so a llama with a llama was the idea
the British did when they brought them over.
And it led to big problems, because,
so this was part of publicity,
for a 1924 film,
which was filmed by a guy called Captain John Null,
who provided, for me, the greatest fact
that I think I've ever brought to this show,
which is he said that it's easier to escape a female Yeti
than it is a male Yeti
because female Yetis have such long-dangling boobs
that before they can chase you,
they need to chuck them over the shoulders
and tie them like a scarf,
otherwise they might trip on them as they're chasing you.
And in the time it takes them to do all that,
you can escape.
So that's Captain John Null, who said that.
And he was responsible for bringing the Lama, the Mucks to meet the Lounge.
So he was the official filmmaker on the Mallory Expedition.
He's the one who filmed the whole thing.
He made it into a big movie, and it was a, you know,
Hollywood-nominated movie, and it's still to the day, it's a classic.
But the publicity that he did is what actually banned any more attempts
from happening on Mount Everest,
because the authorities were so furious about the way that the religion
was parodied by having Llamas next to Lama.
we weren't allowed to go back to Mount Everest for ages.
That's interesting.
That happened when I tried to put some bananas in some pajamas.
It also happened to me.
Who are you accused of parodying, the bananas or the pajamas?
I don't know.
I haven't got that far.
I'm wiping out the joke.
Here's one really weird thing.
I don't know if we can do this in the UK.
I unfortunately found this way too late in the day
to research this a bit more, but in other countries this definitely happens.
So imagine you're at home, right, everyone.
and the bins have just gone out,
and suddenly you realize that you accidentally threw away
or must have lost something really precious in the trash, right?
So what you can do, and the story that I was reading about,
it's in a bunch of places, but in Montgomery County in Maryland,
you can call up your local trash place,
and if the truck is still doing its rounds,
they will separate the truck into a different area when it gets the dump,
dump the entire contents out,
and you can come in to go through all the trash to find your lost thing.
Oh, God.
So it's a 10-ton pile of trash, basically.
They let you go in it.
What would it have to be, do you think?
A wedding ring or...
You can buy new readiness.
A passport if you were leaving the country.
Like, things...
A child can throw away a thing, right?
Yeah, a child's teddy.
If I lost one of my teddy's in the bin when I was four,
my parents would have both been in that rubbish dump for hours looking for it.
Yeah.
And on the FAQs, when you read their site for doing it,
It says time available to work.
And it says, we must clear out all trash that comes into the transfer station before our day is over.
Therefore, we can give you a limited time of 30 minutes for your search.
I mean, we've had a few kind of TV formats that we've been pitching in the past.
This is a TV show waiting to be made, isn't it?
30 minutes.
You're going to fight your teddy in a whole bunch of shit.
Yeah.
And they sort of go, you might just notice your own personal black bag that you threw away a month.
amongst the 10 tons of blackness.
If you label them, yeah, of course.
I mean, don't you label yours?
You sew labels in, don't you?
Those couples.
We've got to move on in a set to our next fact.
I just got one more.
This is more about...
I was looking into the telescopes
and then I was looking into numbers behind them.
So this is a bit of a tangent.
There's a number called Graham's number,
which is so big that if you could imagine it properly,
it would cause a black hole to form inside your head.
What?
No.
Yes.
That's just not what I understand about black holes
No, it's not bullshit
It's real. Black holes form right
When there's an enormously heavy mass
Huge mass in a very small space right
Yeah
This number is so big
There are so many digits in it
That if you
If the smallest measurable space
A plank volume was a digit
And you had the entire observable universe
To write with
You couldn't write it
Therefore if in your head
You could conceptualise
Every single one of those digits
A black hole would form
in your head and destroy you.
Wow, I've received an unexpectedly
small amount of pushback on that fact.
I'm thrilled.
I'm not surprised didn't get that job on countdown.
Do you guys know there's a plant that lives entirely off Batpoo?
No.
And we only realised this recently.
It's a pitcher plant.
So you know those plants are like carnivorous
and they're like champagne glasses, champagne flutes
and then insects fall into them and they eat them.
But it was really confusing researchers
because they weren't trapping any insects
They didn't have enough of liquid in them.
They were kind of too big.
But what researchers kept finding
was that whole families of bats
were nesting inside them.
And it turns out they've adapted,
they've evolved to just become the home
for Hardwick's woolly bats.
This is in Borneo.
And they eat their guano.
So they attract them by basically
they're shaped like this parabolic dish.
And so bats give out their sonar.
And then these picture plants
are the only ones that are shaped perfectly
to reflect that sonar straight back to the bats.
That's amazing.
So then they're like,
like, okay, cool, that's the call of my home.
And they go to this plant, they go and live
inside it, poo all over it,
plant eats it up, and bobs your uncle.
That's amazing. Because there's another
one that's in Bono, I think, because I remember
seeing it, is like for, is it shrews as well?
They do kind of a similar thing, they sit on the edge,
and then they kind of lick the pollen, but it's
a laxative, so it makes them shit everywhere.
And then the plant just goes, oh, yum.
That's so amazing.
So it feels like the plant is a bit sentient there,
I know you're going to say no, but okay, let's move on.
So there is a tunnel under Mon Blanc now.
Oh, yeah.
Is there?
Yes.
Like a road tunnel or a rail tunnel?
It's a...
Look, it's a tunnel.
It doesn't matter whether it's all nuts.
No, it's a road tunnel.
It's a road tunnel, isn't it?
Thanks, guys.
Oh, okay.
Literally everyone in our audience knew that.
Yeah, yeah.
But, okay, it's a road tunnel, and it was started by...
one man who just decided to make a tunnel under Mont Blanc,
freelance, off his own bat.
He was a count called Dino Laura Totina.
He was Italian.
And when he was growing up,
getting between France and Italy around Montblanc is a massive pain.
And it took about 18 hours to make the journey.
And he called it an accursed mountain.
He grew up in the shadow of it.
And he became a wealthy businessman.
He owned a wool factory.
And he said, I'm going to do something about Mont Blanc.
and he just started digging with no permission from anyone.
He got 250 metres into the granite on the Italian side
and the authorities eventually said, what are you doing?
And they stopped him and then fine, he was stopped.
But by that point the plans were in progress
and France and Italy eventually agreed.
They were really nervous about it as well
because it was only 15 years after the Second World War ended
and they thought, well, this feels like giving the other country a route
just to pass military vehicle straight into our country.
country, but they did agree on it, and eventually it was completed in about 1962.
Wow.
And so now, you know, the 18-hour journey takes 10 minutes.
That's so cool.
Yeah, I have been through that tunnel, actually, because we got a speeding ticket on the French
side, on the way in, and then on the way out on the Italian side.
Wow.
That's...
What an example of learning nothing from Russians.
I went to the dentist for the first time in two years the other day.
Okay.
And I went because I had a bit of a problem.
And when I got there, the dentist misheard me when I said my name and put me down as Samuel Schreiber.
Okay.
And I didn't correct her.
And so for the whole thing, while she was setting it up, I was called Samuel Schreiber, which I thought was quite cool.
That was a nice cool name.
Anyway, it turns out when she found out my name wasn't Samuel, she gave me a lot of crap saying, you can't do this.
This is all in all the systems now.
This is all the records.
And she spent half an hour undoing it and then ran out of time, and she wasn't able to look at my teeth.
So I have to go back in six weeks.
I thought you were going to say, when she realised it wasn't you, the tooth that she pulled out, she shoved back there.
But it is important to identify people by their dental records sometimes.
That's true.
You know, so if they say, well, we found Aditha Zeditsky, James Hark, and Andrew Antimari, and some are called Samuel Shriver.
It's going to be confusing.
It is confusing, yeah, and I've got a painful tooth because of my dick-edness, so, yeah.
Seagulls use humans as taste testers.
This is so weird.
This happens at the seaside.
There's a scientist called Madeline Gummis,
and she approached 38 gulls with a bucket, right?
Each bucket had a flapjack in.
Sounds like a riddle, doesn't it?
A wonderful riddle.
She would unwrap both flapjacks, right?
And then she would pretend to eat one
of the flapjacks for about 20 seconds.
She's like yum yum yum yum yum yum, yum,
you know, sort of mime nibbling away at it, right?
So then she would put down the flapjacks.
When Seagulls approached
and got involved with the food that she did,
just left, 19 out of 24 times
they approached the one that she had been
pretending to eat.
It does not mean it could just be that they're
decks? And it's
like, oh, she was really enjoying that one, so I'm going to
steal that one from her. Yeah. I mean, her
thesis is that they know that handled food
is probably good for you and not going to kill you, but your
theory also cuts a lot of ice, frankly.
But also, maybe the other thing is that it's discarded
food. She ate it, she no longer wants it,
so I'll take that, and we're going to have a cool
symbiotic relationship. It's like, cool, I'm not going
touch your good stuff. How many seagulls
have you met, Dan? Because
symbiosis is not on their
to-do list. When they
steal a chip out of his mouth, he's like,
oh, it's okay, I wasn't going to eat that anyway.
That's nature.
Good on you.
More on the weirdness
of a kid in the bodies, just a bit.
Because we've mentioned a few things, but
they have so little stuff
that we take for granted. So they have
no stomachs. They have no teeth.
They just have to crush their food up
against the roof of their mouth with their tongue.
They have no nipples.
So when the baby hatches and is in a little pouch,
there are these glands which just leak directly out of their skin.
They're very basic, basically.
And they have to pop when just for the baby itself.
They have to kind of like curl up and pop it out of their bum.
Yeah, because they're an animal that is called like mono-hole.
Monotree.
That's it.
It's sort of fact number one about echidon.
on the Wikipedia page.
They are a monotree.
Mono hole.
I missed that episode of the Sipsons.
Monothole. Mono hole.
They are one hold.
It's their bum and they're everything.
It's everything.
It's a monolole.
It's a monol.
Okay, so they bring it up
and then the baby sort of pops out
and obviously there's an egg
which is cracked and it pops out
and then they have a pouch much like a kangaroo does
and the baby crawls along and it goes inside
and that's where the milk is secreted into.
Wait, are you talking about goodness?
Yeah.
That's not what happens.
Oh, shit.
I thought it was it.
How was the baby crawling along?
It's in an egg?
It's what?
The baby's in an egg, right?
So the way the mother...
No, it's like a kangaroo, isn't it?
A Joey who climbs up.
I'm afraid that's the difference
between your monotrims and your marsupials.
Your Dolby dreams.
Yeah.
Right.
Okay, so...
But it is very fun.
the way they give birth, the mother, it's much harder than as a kangaroo, because you can just
give birth and the thing sorts itself out, clutches at your hair and crawls up.
Right.
As an echidna, you lie on your back and you give birth, the egg comes out in egg form, no legs,
and they have to sort of shimmy it up their stomach.
A bit like, oh, you know that game where you have to get an after eight down your forehead?
I was just going to say it's like that.
And pop it in your pouch, and then it sits in your pouch for a few more days, and then it cracks.
It's a different game when the after eight comes out of your vagina, isn't it?
Well, when it gets late, some parties, you know.
My God.
I was thinking, yeah, that ping pong ball talent thing is a...
They were the originators.
Talent.
It's a talent.
It is a talent.
I haven't seen it.
It is a talent.
Yeah, yeah.
I haven't.
I thought they'd laid what was inside the ping pong ball, and that's what shot out.
I didn't realize that it was...
Anyway, let's move on.
So...
In fact, we actually do need to...
move on to our next bag. That was a terrible insight
into Dan's internal monologue there.
I felt really alone there.
I think you were alone. It was incredible.
I also felt like everyone, 900 people
were going, shh, just...
Let's see where it goes. Let's see
where it goes. Quite similarly,
she was the oldest person ever in a rap
song. And again, someone just recorded her
saying, je ma'améle, jean
What's happening, Dan? Have you broken the table?
My table's falling down.
I'm literally holding it up.
You were telling such a good story
and they don't want to do anything.
I actually think he might all be in one of Dan's terrible dreams.
Can't fucking believe us.
He's going to be naked and have to do an exam in a minute.
Okay, don't lean on this table, okay, Dan?
Holy shit.
Don't touch it.
I was literally, I was like...
Like, um, who are Atlas?
You're like Atlas there holding up the world.
I like,
I was reading about this group of people that like to get to the top of a mountain
or somewhere a bit hard to get to and set up a jacuzzi.
And then they all hop in the jacuzzi and they managed to do this on the top of Mont Blanc,
which even though a lot of people assume it's quite an easy mountain to climb,
it's responsible for a huge number of deaths.
It is a very hard mountain to get to.
So they packed up all their stuff and they managed to get this jacuzzi on top of there.
And you can see photos of about 30 people who've gone through all the night,
treaching up there. Yeah, yeah, and setting it up. And using, it's heated by the snow with the
system that they have. It's heated by the snow? Yeah, so they have a system and, oh, shit, okay.
So, and they put the snow onto these kind of really cool things that then heat up the water that
somehow they've brought up with them. Have they brought water up? No, you wouldn't bring water to the
top of Montblanc. Why would you do that? That's an unnecessary. Why would you do that? So, um,
It was really hot because it was powered by snow.
And, okay, so they get to the top.
Here's the fascinating thing.
They're on the top of Mount Blanc.
And suddenly, this Italian group that climbs up and they see them.
And obviously, it's a shock for anyone that suddenly sees a jacuzzi
full of people in their swimwear on the top.
But it just so happens.
This Italian group had already met these people in a jacuzzi
on a previous mountain that they'd been on before.
Completely by coincidence.
Got up there and they're like, you again.
And they now just think there's someone in a jacuzzi at the top of every mountain, don't that?
That's amazing.
That's so funny.
It is funny.
And so it doesn't matter about how you can make a jacuzzi pot with snow.
This has not been a good one for me, guys.
I'll admit that right now.
It's been a shitter.
We need to move on to our next fact, guys.
Oh, can I just talk about an origin of life thing?
Yeah.
But I really like.
So there are lots of theories about where life started.
And most of my sensible scientists, but one was,
by an American homeopath at the start of the 20th century
called Charles Wentworth Littlefield.
And he was reported as a scientist
and it was in all the news
that he's found out where life comes from.
And the way he found it was,
he took some salt out of one of his patient's wounds
and he looked at it under a microscope
while thinking about chicken.
And he saw it turn into a chicken.
Sorry.
What?
Some stuff from a patient's wound.
Some salt.
Some like bodily, bodily salts, basically said,
sieved them out, looked it under a microscope.
It's all about chicken.
into the shape of a chicken.
Not a live chicken, that would be stupid.
But he realized that by concentrating on any grain of salt,
he could make it transform into the thing he was thinking about.
And it was always inanimate until he thought about octopuses,
tiny, tiny octopuses.
And then he created live octopuses from these grains of salts.
And he concluded that this must be how life initially formed.
Okay.
Well, who was doing the thinking?
And that's the question.
I suppose that's where God comes into it.
What was the octopus bit, though?
He thought of octopuses and they didn't turn to octopuses.
No, no, they did turn into octopuses, but they were alive.
So it was life.
Sorry, given that all this is complete bullshit, what is the outcome?
Well, hang on, don't judge it just yet.
Because there is a theory as well that octopuses are actually aliens that came to Earth.
And so that would be the original life, right?
So it's she, this guy was probably just going through every single animal
and then suddenly hit on the one that actually, if you stare at it long enough,
does turn into a living octopus.
I should just say that theory is also bullshit.
I think it's demeaning it.
It's demeaning us, James, to say it's bullshit.
So what was he just crazy this person?
Yeah, he was just taken vaguely seriously in the news at the turn of the century.
And, you know, I like the idea and who's tried it.
Who's tried looking at salt and thinking of an octopus?
Not me.
Yeah. So don't knock it.
Well, listen.
Okay, this half of the table thinks there's something to it.
That half the table doesn't it?
I'm not signing up to this.
Instead of the first car on the moon, we almost had the first Pogo stick.
What?
There was debate, so as I said earlier,
Apollo 15 was the first mission where there was actually a vehicle that was driven around.
They drove it around, and they were there for three days.
They drove it around for like at least six hours a day,
which actually is just quite a long time to be bloody driving.
And they had to wear seat belts,
The seatbelts really didn't fit
and they took ages trying to get the seatbelts on
which seems so weird to me.
How many obstacles are there?
How many cars coming at you?
There's a lot of rocks around.
There are a lot of craters and dips and...
Okay, look, I reckon I could hack it.
I don't know if I'd wear the seatbelt.
That's the main question at the NASA Astronauts election actually.
Do you reckon you could hack it?
Yeah.
Come on, though.
Come on, then.
Anyway, there were lots of ideas for what kind of vehicle to design for the moon.
NASA was very interested in a...
motorcycle at first. I thought that might work. And then there's an idea for a giant
pogo stick, which would be manned by two people. I think sort of one on each...
Oh, that is... Like the things that you do to get yourself along the railway tracks.
You know, that's not what a Pogo stick is. No, but it's manned by two people, you know.
Yeah, but so is a pedal. So is a pedal.
Yeah. A seesaw. I don't think the audience needed a simile for manned by two people. I just
just... I thought maybe they'd each be standing at one end of the Pogo stick and then one would go up
and one would go down.
At the same time, that is a seesaw.
That's not a Pogo stick.
Yeah.
Okay.
Look, we've drilled down and we've asked to take that.
I don't know what a Pogo stick is.
You are failing that NASA interview.
Praise that.
If they're testing laboratories,
dog food is often used to put down them
because it has a sort of...
To simulate the...
It's got the same consistency as my poo, for example.
Okay.
Do you get it in jelly or in gravy?
Okay.
My poo?
Oh, okay.
Sure.
You know, there's quite a difference,
there's quite a range of textures, isn't there?
But I suppose that's true of poo and dog food.
James, I want to split off and start a ride the podcast.
Just on this table.
There used to be a takeaway place near me
that would cut off the loaf at top of a loaf of bread
and they'd hollow it out,
and then they just pour in a stew
and they'd give you the bread back.
That sounds great.
It was nice, it wasn't it?
Yeah.
South African thing, I think, uh...
Okay.
Say again?
Bunny chow.
Sunny chow.
Yeah.
Bunny chow.
I don't think it was a bunny in it.
I think it was a very
option, but it's very nice.
Wow.
William Christmas, very quickly.
Oh, yeah.
The Aviator.
He claimed to be the third person to fly in America,
but we think he probably didn't
because his planes were all terrible.
He kept inventing these really awful planes.
So there was one called the Christmas Bullet.
The wings were supposed to flap as you flew,
but unfortunately they crashed on his maiden flight,
and then they made another one,
and that one crashed as well.
He made another designer,
it was a plane which had a huge hole in the top.
His idea was, right, if you get a parachute,
a lot of parachutes have a hole in the top,
and that's because you don't want all the air to properly,
just get properly into the parachutes,
otherwise it might get a bit wobbly.
So he thought, why don't I do that for a plane?
Interesting.
I don't they tell you when you do a parachute jump about the whole thing,
because I can't imagine how fucking terrified I'd be
if my parachute, I looked up, there was a huge hole in the top.
It could be worse.
James, when you said they have to have a hole of the top,
top. I just thought, I thought you were going to say, because obviously if the air all goes up in there,
it just gets stuck in there and you just stay where you are in the sky.
That's how that works. Yeah.
Do you know that, you may have seen it, actually, this is like extremely cutting-edge soup news right now.
That there's...
Heinz have just released a Christmas soup, which is very exciting. They've just announced it as a kind of PR thing.
They've only made 500 tins, but it's got, you know, everything.
It's got turkey, sprouts, stuffing, roast potatoes, pigs and blankets, gravy, cranberry sauce.
Well, I mean, that sounds all right because it's at least it's one course.
Have they just mushed it all up?
No, you get chunks of turkey and things like that.
Oh, great.
Yeah, there are chunks.
James, don't worry.
There are chunks.
Yeah, right.
But it could be worse because in 2013, game, the video game people,
they launched a thing called a Christmas tinner,
which was for people too addictive to video.
games to cook anything on Christmas Day
and the top layer was scrambled egg and bacon
then there was a layer of mincemeat
then there was some turkey and trimmings
and then there was a Christmas pudding in the
bottom of the tomb.
Where are all the quality street?
Wow.
Are you allowed to eat a painting?
What do you mean are you allowed to eat?
Legally, if you own a painting
This is in the US...
Yeah, of course you can do whatever you want. If you own it, you can do what you want.
Well, you're absolutely right.
Okay, it's time number three.
Any more for that?
Not really.
Is that mid-bastic?
Just, you know, would you be allowed to eat the Mona Lisa
if you owned it?
Yeah.
Well, you're right.
Has someone put this in the statute books?
Yes, they have.
Thank you, Anna.
Good question.
It's the 1990...
Oh no, hang on.
No, it is all right, actually.
There are laws about works
that might still be in copyright,
so if it's within 75 years of the artist's death,
or works that are protected under the 1990 Visual Artist Rights Act.
You're not allowed to eat some of those protected ones.
But the good news is,
anything from Caravaggio's time is on the menu.
Wow.
That's interesting.
I mean, we really had to pull it out of you,
but 75 days after...
75 days?
Years.
I was a picture in some of it.
It's really drooling paper.
Okay, cool, 75 years.
That's Christmas lunch sources in the Hunter Murray household.
I think the very first ever study of it,
the Long Beaked Echidna, was published in 2009.
And even then the study author,
who was a guy called Muzay Opiang,
spent 500 hours studying them before even seeing one.
Wow.
Was he studying them then?
Really, for that first five hours?
He was warming up. He was doing stretches.
They are quite hard to find, though, aren't they?
There was a guy the first scientist to study the testicles of echidnas.
He did that by employing Aboriginal people to find these echidnas for him.
And he always paid more for the females because it was more hard to find the females.
And actually, we now think that of all...
I presume it is much harder to find the females' testicles.
Is that what you said?
He did lots of studying, but he happens to be the first person to have studied the testicles.
And this guy actually committed suicide.
He was a German scientist.
He committed suicide in 1918 while wrapped in a German flag.
Because he was so upset with the way the war was going.
Right.
But yeah, he was most famous, I think, for studying the testicles of the echidnais.
And his name was Dick Seaman.
No.
What?
What?
Richard W. Seaman.
Oh my God. That's incredible.
A, change your name.
B, don't study testicles if your name is Dick Seaman.
Sorry, Dan.
I mean, the guy was obviously a...
troubled man, let's not kick him while he's down.
Okay, fair enough.
Seriously weird thing, so random, on soup.
Ted Cruz, you remember Ted Cruz?
He came second to Trump in the primaries.
2016, during
those primaries, his wife revealed that
after they got back from their honeymoon,
the first thing he did was he went out to the shop,
said he was going shopping, he came home, and all he
had was 100 cans of Campbell's
soup, and so she
said, she said, we had to have a tough conversation.
I explained to him, you don't come back with a hundred of anything.
Lo-alone Campbell's soup
He said, you know you're not going to cook, love,
so this is what I'll be eating for the rest of our marriage.
And she was...
Look, he didn't say put it in those terms, don't worry.
But basically that's what he said.
She snuck out and returned them all the next morning
before he woke up.
And then she talked to her mom on the phone,
and her mum said, are you going to cook for him, though?
And she went, no, I'm a terrible cook, can't cook at all.
Her mom was like, go and get the soup back.
She went and got the suit back.
No.
Yeah.
And that's a beautiful marriage right there.
There's one cashier at the soup shop who has no idea about this whole story.
Just knows a weird thing where some guy turned up, bought a hundredtins,
the lady came and took him away.
Yeah, then returned and divided the back.
What's going on?
Am I on a reality TV show?
Can I tell you one more trick?
Yeah, we're going to have to wrap up in a sec.
Okay, this is a trick by one of the greatest magicians of all time.
Robert Hudain, who Houdini got his name from.
This is the trick.
He would take a handkerchief
from an audience member.
He would turn that
into a file of liquid.
He would pour that liquid
on a dry twig.
That would sprout and grow
into a bush.
The bush would then grow
oranges on it.
Robert Hudan would pick
the oranges off the bush.
He would throw them
into the audience one by one.
The final one,
he would split open.
Out of that final orange,
two butterflies
would fly, living butterflies
holding the handkerchief
between them
and return it to the audience member.
Return it, the butterflies would return it.
And we're going to be, we're going to do that tonight,
ladies and gentlemen.
But unfortunately, no one has a handkerchief anymore.
Sorry.
Can I just tell you one more thing about postcards?
In 2017,
Europol, so kind of like Interpol,
but for Europe,
they started trying to catch criminals
through the mechanism of postcards.
they develop these postcards
each one featuring one of Europe's highest profile
fugitives and they
said things like
you know dear Arta, Belgium fries are the best
and we know you miss them, come back to enjoy them
we'll have a nice surprise in store for you
that was for a famous drug dealer
So did they send them to him?
Did they send the postcards to him?
They just sort of published them and made people aware
that these people were on the run.
Because I'm going to say if he knew where he lived
to send him a postcard.
That's true. It's so true.
Hi David, we've been trying to get hold of you
because there is still so much to discuss.
Please get in touch soon, the police.
That was for someone accused of multiple,
quite serious sexual offences.
And they won an award for it,
and three criminals were actually...
For the sexual offences?
They didn't win a sorry.
Okay.
It's hard, it's very hard
to transplant testicles, obviously,
onto a different part of the body.
Oh, sorry.
What?
So, actually...
Who's...
What a shame?
I got that not around.
Which part of the body, was it?
It's actually a lot easier to translate.
transplant testicles onto a different part of the body than into a scrotum.
And this has been tested on rats.
So a few years ago, a team put a load of testicles of rats.
They did some transplants and they moved the testicles either into other rat scrotide
or onto the necks of the other rats.
And it had a much higher success rate, the transplant,
if the testicles were just put on the necks of the rats.
Yeah, but you'd be pissed off with your surgeon when you woke up.
They said, well, transplant was successful.
Of course, it was easier to do it onto your forehead,
and so that's where we put it.
So you don't mind.
It's so strange that you have a tiger with canine teeth
because they're felines, but they've got canines.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
That's weird that, isn't it?
It makes you think.
It really does.
What does it make you think about?
It doesn't really make me think about anything.
It just makes me think in a kind of abstract way.
Bill Gates is intending to block out the sun.
What do you mean?
He wants to use.
some of his money to help scientists
at Harvard University who are
proposing an experiment that can
hopefully stop global warming
by sending a balloon up there,
sending a load of particles into the atmosphere
where the sun's rays will come down,
bounce off into space and it will be less hot on Earth.
I can't see that going wrong.
No.
Will it also look... Why not? Let's do it. Let's do it.
Let's do it. I'm up for it.
It's going to look like a worldwide children's birthday party.
Because that's quite cool.
That would be cool.
That would be cool.
He's one of the few people in the world
who has a McDonald's gold card.
And I don't know if it's connected to this.
What's that?
McDonald's gold card is where you can go to any McDonald's.
You hand it in, and no matter what you've ordered,
they give it to you for free.
Oh, thank God.
Because otherwise, how would he be able to afford a Big Mac?
So we don't have it in the UK.
What we have is the Nando's black card.
It's quite a famous card, which I've experienced a couple of times.
It's like, I have, yeah.
A couple of friends of mine have had.
So Tom Davis, who is King Gary, he once had it.
The other guy had to stop using it because he was...
Good luck with the Nando's lawsuit, Dan.
I am not saying...
Good point, let's edit that out.
We're not saying that Nando's.
We're not. Put it from your minds.
There was an amazing thing that happened in the Netherlands
at the start of this year, actually is the end of last year.
And that was that there was an Armenian family
who'd been living in the Netherlands for nine years
and the country had decided they wanted to deport them.
And they were like, well, we can't go back to Armenia
because if we go back, you know, we'll be in terrible trouble.
And they said to the church, what are we going to do?
And apparently there's an old and obscure Dutch law
that police aren't allowed to arrest someone
in the middle of a church service.
And so the local church started a mass
that went on for 24 hours of day,
for 97 days
while this family were living in the church.
They started off doing it for a few days, a few days.
Eventually, more than 650 clergy members
were signing up to be the next person to do it.
They kind of tag teamed all the priests.
And eventually the government just thought,
fuck this.
And they went, fine, you can stay, you can stay, you can stay.
Oh, really?
I would have thought they'd go, fuck this.
We're going to walk in and arrest you anyway.
It's the law.
You can't break the law if you're a government.
Can you?
Well.
Caravaggio died maybe of sunstroke, we think.
Really?
Really?
Yeah.
This is what people have claimed.
I couldn't define what their evidence was except that.
So researchers, there's this big mystery of how he died,
all shrouded in mystery, like, was he murdered?
Was he poisoned?
Did he have syphilis?
And they thought in 2010 that they found some of his bones,
fragments of his bones.
They studied his bones, these researchers,
and they said, showed signs of lead poisoning and syphilis,
but they think what eventually killed him was sunstroke.
And then the only evidence I could find that they had
was that 1610 was an extremely hot year.
That's the reason, that's done it.
That makes sense, yeah.
It's been quite cold this winter.
In future, every single person who died this year,
people will look at them go,
I reckon that was the cold that killed this one.
I'm not sure they were.
I think there might be.
It was a very heavy cold.
A bit too much Nando's, I reckon.
No, we can't keep that in.
It has to stay.
No. Who's more litigious?
Gates or Nandoes?
We'll find out when this episode goes out.
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our facts.
Very much hope you enjoyed that show.
if you would like to get in touch with me, you can find me on Twitter, and I can be found at
at James Harkin. Andrew Hunter Murray can be found on at Andrew Hunter M. Daniel Schreiber can be found
on at Schreiberland, and if you would like to get in touch with Anna, you can email her on
podcast at QI.com. We also have our group Twitter account, which is at No Such Thing, and if you
are the lawyers of Bill Gates or Nando's, or indeed anyone that we have libeled on this week's podcast,
it's Christmas guys
give us a break we're only joking
okay listen we'll be back
next week at the start of
2022 can you believe it with a whole
new episode so we will see
you then good bye
