No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As An Edam Tuba
Episode Date: December 22, 2022Merry Fishmas! Live from the Bloomsbury Theatre, London; Dan, James, Andy and Anna celebrate Christmas with facts about Switzerland, meatballs and Nostradamus; as well as a special nerdy quiz. Visit ...nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hi everybody.
Alex here.
Yes, Alex.
I am alive and well, and I'm here in the QI office on Christmas Eve Eve.
Dan, James and Andy and Anna have all gone home again.
Left me here to sort out this year's Christmas episode.
In a second, you're going to get Dan and Anna asking you to subscribe to things and buy all their merch,
but they couldn't even take the time to wish their loyal listeners a Merry Christmas
because they're all complete f***ing, freeloading, self-centered,
whole
bastards.
So yeah,
fuck them.
It falls to me
to gladly
wish all of you
out there
a very merry
Christmas
from everyone
here at
no such thing
as a fish.
And this means
that I finally
get to say
on with the
podcast
after these messages.
Hi everybody
just before we start
this show
we have a couple
of small
favours to ask you
it's that
begging time of year
when people
put their tins
out and shake
them around
asking for you
to do things
like for instance
voting for
of their favorite podcast in the National Comedy Awards.
That's right we have been long listed as one of the best comedy podcasts.
We're very excited about that.
And we would love it if you could get us to the short list.
To do that, you can go to QI.com slash vote.
You'll see all the options there.
You can also vote for your favorite comedians, your favorite comedy shows.
You'll see Sandy Toxfig up there, host of QI.
You'll see QI itself.
Why not register a vote for them?
And you'll see no such thing as a fish.
we would massively appreciate a vote.
Do it now.
QI.com slash vote.
That's right.
And there's stiff competition on there.
So we really need the Fish Army to come together and give us these votes because it would mean
so much of the podcast to make it to the live national comedy awards.
Outside of that, what we would absolutely love is if you could just very quickly just go
to the follow button on wherever you're listening to this podcast, be it Spotify or Apple iTunes,
wherever it is, and just press follow.
We've discovered that so many people are listening to this show.
without having press that button.
And it's extraordinary, what a difference it makes in helping us to be higher in the charts,
to get more exposure, to get more attention, to allow for the podcast to keep going.
So simple button press is genuinely going to be a huge deal for us if enough of you do it.
So please do.
That's our two big bits of begging.
Please vote for us in the National Comedy Awards.
Please press follow.
And that will allow us to keep going as a podcast in 2023.
Otherwise, we just have to shut shop.
That's it.
If we don't get shortlisted and you don't press follow, we're out of here.
Okay, come on down.
Enough, enough begging.
This is starting to get desperate and sad.
Look, do it.
Do it if you want to.
Don't do it if you don't.
No, what?
No, do it.
On with the show.
On with the show after you press followed and voted for us.
Okay.
Another episode of No Such Thing is a Fish, a weekly podcast.
This week coming to you live from the Bloomsbury Theatre in London.
My name is Dan Shriver.
I am sitting here with Anna Tashinsky,
Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones,
but not with our four favorite facts this time,
because this is our Christmas special episode,
and we have decided to instead use 500 favorite facts
from the audience members who are here tonight,
who have submitted them to us,
and at the end of the show, after reading out some of our favorites,
we're going to pick two of the best,
we're going to bring the two people who said those facts onto stage,
and we're going to have them battle in a quiz
to the death.
So, it's a very exciting episode,
a special treat.
What have we got from our audience here tonight, guys?
I just want to say, the facts are on my phone.
I'm not checking the football scores all the way through.
I just want to make that clear really early.
So shall I do a fact?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is one just that I just picked up notes.
Some people can grow hair on their tongues.
Oh, wow.
Like at will?
Yeah, that's what it sounds like.
Yeah, well, I mean, would that be a useful?
superpower to have, do you think?
A tongue hair, yeah.
Warmth, sometimes it gets very cold in the mouth.
Yeah.
When you eat ice cream too fast.
Oh yeah, that's a good idea.
Ice cream headaches.
I only say it is because the person who wrote it
is a surgeon.
Oh.
And I wonder if you're in.
Are you in the person who...
Yeah.
Yeah, okay.
Who's that? What's your name?
Malcolm.
You're a surgeon. Do you operate on hairy tongues?
Are you a glorified hairdresser?
Here's a weird thing that would possibly happen, right?
If you had a very hairy tongue
and you were, say, making out with someone
and you did some French kissing,
would ever be the case that their hairy tongue
would wrap around your tongue
and then you would get stuck?
Does it ever happen that you walk next to someone
and your hair wraps around them
and you get stuck together?
No, but you know when you like put Christmas lights back in the box
and then they come out next year
and they're all tangled up?
Oh yeah.
And, you know, sometimes, remember,
I had a friend at school who had braces
and he kissed someone who had braces.
No.
And they got stuck in their braces.
They're still stuck, aren't they?
No, it's not a myth.
It sounds...
I saw it myself.
It sounds like an urban myth.
It does sound like an urban myth.
Well, I saw it.
Maybe you're the source.
I shouldn't have been watching, but I saw it.
I popped out from the cupboard and went,
guys, I can help, I can help.
Can we...
Should we just quickly go back to Malcolm?
Yes.
Check whether it's part of your surgery.
You actually grow people hairy tongues.
If you reconstruct somebody's tongue
after a big operation.
Yeah, and you said,
said in your message, so you can reconstruct people's tongues,
but you said in your message that it might be come from your forearm or your thigh,
and so when it comes in, that's where the hair comes from.
I see.
Isn't that something like your hair, even if you take it away,
and this will explain why people have hairy tongues,
even if you take it away from a certain bit of your body,
it always remembers it was there and grows in accordance with that.
So I think there are things where, like,
if you get some hair planted onto your head,
if you want to sort out your baldness, for instance,
then I believe if like the hairs,
let's say you get it taken from your pubic region or something,
because that seems to be where I'm pointing.
Yeah, that's what lots, yeah, that's,
I think that's the most common that people get, isn't it?
Yeah. If the hairs that were around it start to fall out,
then that one will also fall out.
So your hair has a thing in it that tells you how long it needs to grow, right?
because your eyebrows are not the same length as your head hair.
Speak for yourself.
And your pubic hair is not this.
What you can't see at home for the podcast is Anna has enormous hairs on her eyebrows.
And so, yeah, it has those.
And then when you transplant, say you put eyebrow hair on your head,
they would all grow for that amount of time and then stop.
Could you transplant all hair, as in could you transplant eyelash hair onto your head,
should you want it?
Well, we have a surgeon in the audience.
Don't ask us.
Malcolm.
Shall we do some more facts?
Yeah, let's do another fact.
I have a fact that only I, and presumably the person who sent this in,
who's called Jamie Drummond, will enjoy.
And it's that...
Why are you reading it?
Stop with the hard sell, Anna, please.
I think sometimes it's good to have a private bonding moment
in these mass experiences.
Cool.
In Gladiator, release in 2000,
Russell Crow had a dog, quite a ferocious dog,
played by a dog called kite,
who was a Belgian shepherd.
apparently a tervuren Belgian shepherd.
Anyway, she went on to be Wellard in Eastenders.
No way.
Of course, that's the name of the dog, Wellard.
Yeah, Wellard in Eastenders, yeah.
Named by Gus, I think,
who was a funny guy, which is why he named in Wellard.
Great fact.
That is a really good fact.
Any more? Any more?
This is a cool one.
This is from Polly or at Saying Nice Stuff.
My husband Frank says the electrical cable in this theatre
would stretch from here to Grimsby
if placed end to end.
Yeah. Why haven't we done that?
Yeah.
Do you mean all the different cables?
Because presumably if it's a cable, it is end to end already.
It's just a cable, right?
It's not a cable, is it all the cables?
It says the electrical cable.
There's one cable in this place.
Wow.
But I feel like cable can be a plural kind of collective noun, right?
All the cable in a place.
You could say that, right?
Yeah, I see that.
Yeah, we said that all the time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Another one on places.
I've got one which someone sent in saying,
in Switzerland, it's illegal to flush the toilet after 10pm.
What?
Illegal.
Illegal, according to this person who apparently lives in Switzerland,
as so they claim.
I remember there was a woman who wanted to get a passport in Switzerland, didn't she?
Do you remember?
And in order to get a passport,
she needed to get the permission of all the other people in her village.
That's right.
And they all hated her.
Yeah.
And they all wrote to the government saying,
no, we don't want her in our country.
And she didn't...
I think eventually she got it.
Did she?
I think so, yeah.
Yeah, they were like, she's so annoying.
We just don't want her.
Yeah.
That's bad.
Thank God we didn't have that system here.
I'd be homeless.
This is quite a cool fact.
I think Danny might like this one.
It's kind of spooky coincidence.
Oh, cool. Nice.
So this was sent in by email from Nick Speechley.
And it's that in one of his recent rant,
Kanye West,
I know not a promising opening.
We don't love a lot of his work.
Claimed that Hitler, I also not promising, I'll give you that.
There'd be a huge U-turn coming on this fact, I know.
Claimed that Hitler invented the microphone, weird.
In actual fact, the technology that 90% of microphones used today
was invented by an African-American man who was called West.
Ooh, that's good.
Spooky.
Is Kanye trying to plant that in our heads somehow?
What is he trying to do?
Well, you think he's going to then say,
well, it's my relative,
so I'm going to take all the money?
Oh, maybe, yeah.
Are you saying he's a gold digger, is what I'm asking?
Oh, that's one of his songs.
Is that a reference to him?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Is it true with, sorry to move into Hitler,
but is it, I read years ago, years and years ago,
that there was a story that
whenever Hitler was going to do a speech,
the sound system, so this is to do with the microphones as well,
the sound system would play a sort of note,
a slightly annoying note while everyone was waiting.
So it was just a sort of, one of those notes that, you know, that says...
Not the one that makes everyone poo.
No, not the poo notes, but like, you know, certain ages,
you can hear certain ones, and it's just a little...
Like a mosquito tone.
Yeah, mosquito tone, and the idea, again, I don't know if this is true,
the idea was that when he came on stage,
they would turn it off, and the sense of relief that you would get.
when he came on stage,
played into this sense of,
oh, someone who's going to help us is here.
It was just a little psychological thing.
Has anyone heard that?
I have heard that, yeah.
From you.
I bring it up every episode.
Why is it not made it in?
But that's actually what we were doing
at the start of this show
when, and for listeners at home,
there were a series of maybe
two or three dozen technical glitches,
but it was just to create that sense of relief
when we come on.
I've got a fact for you.
Yeah.
This is from Steve Early, and it's this.
I'm just going to read a verbatim.
It is possible to make a tuber out of material other than brass
and somebody once made one from cheese.
And it sounded okay.
That's pretty good.
I remember reading once that, I think this is tubas.
I might be going completely wrong, but I think it's tubers.
Basically, in America this is,
all the high schools have all got bands.
they all have tuba players.
But then, when you go to, like, top-level bands,
you only need one tuba player in a band, right?
And so there's a massive, massive, like,
competition for tuba players in America.
Because there's loads of really good ones.
Like, there might be loads of really good violinists,
but you can have 10 different violinists in an orchestra, right?
Yeah.
But there's not much use for a tuba.
I would have thought it was always proportional, you know,
in the schools.
You've got, let's say, you've got lots of violinists
in every single.
school.
Yeah.
So only a certain percentage of them
are going to get through to the...
But they can also play in, you know,
string quartets.
I see.
You don't get very many tuba quartets.
Steve, can I just ask
what kind of cheese it was?
I'm guessing it was a fairly hard one.
I've got to be a hard one.
Yeah, yeah.
I've got a fact about cheese, actually.
This is Swedish cheese called
Vasta button-soust.
And apparently when you make it,
requires a bit of, you need to stir it and then leave it
and then stir it and then leave it.
And apparently it was invented in 1872
by a dairy maid called Ulrika Lindstrom
and she kept being distracted by her work
to go and have sex with a local boy.
And she would go away, have sex and then come back and stare it.
And then go away, have sex, come back and then stare it.
And then when the cheese was made, she was like,
this is delicious.
Yeah, but she must have been starving after that.
Anything would taste good.
Just quick time, I'm just thinking if it was an e-dam,
you could presumably get one of the holes to go all the way through,
and then you'd have a cheese tuba.
You think of lear dam?
I'm thinking of e-dam.
It definitely has the holes, right?
E-dam's got holes in it, right?
Oh dear.
Doesn't.
Oh, wow.
Emmental, I'm getting.
Emmental.
Yeah.
Lear-dama does as well, for sure.
And lear-dama, yeah.
That's probably why no one liked that.
That would be the reason.
Yeah, yeah.
Make a good drum.
An E-D-D-D-M, wouldn't it?
I don't know what an E-D-D-M is, as we now well know.
I'm slightly struggling to remember what a tuba looks like.
What does it look like?
Well, imagine a big tube.
Yeah. Surround it with brass.
Yeah. There you go.
In fact, do you know what you should imagine?
Because I've always really loved this.
You know, the fallopian tubes, if you can picture of filopian tubes.
Of course.
A common.
an everyday household item for Dan.
From diagrams.
You can see the shape of them and they get wider
at the bottom. Yes.
So they were named after the tuba.
Oh, really?
How really?
I'd say more like a paper clip,
but it's a big musical instrument, right?
It's got those bending bits and it's got...
Yeah.
I'm just trying to think of something
that Dan might have seen more than the fallopian tube.
I've seen a lot of fallopian cheers, Jibs.
Here's a fun Christmas sack that I got sent.
I got sent this this morning, nothing to do with the show.
So at Steve Down Under is not going to realize that he's made it onto our show.
But he's written in from New Zealand.
He DM'd me on Twitter.
And he said, Kiaora, Dan, quick fact for you, you might like to use for fish.
Jesus had a disciple named Thomas the testicle.
No, no, no, no.
Happy to elaborate if you're interested.
Now, I don't want to be a doubting Thomas, but I don't think that.
Why would he say that?
What's he saying there?
Thomas the testicle.
I don't know what he's saying.
Does anyone in the audience have any idea
if he might be making some kind of weird reference
to an actual fact?
Was he hitting on me?
We'll let you believe that's what it is, I suppose.
We didn't actually put a call-up
with some Christmas facts on Twitter
and we got some great ones in.
So this is not from people in the audience here,
but I did particularly like that.
So I like this because I have friends who live in the Netherlands
and I refuse to believe they're this deranged.
But in 2006, people in the Netherlands were banned
from adopting rabbits over Christmas
because there's a popular festive song about a family cooking their pet.
And it was believed that all Dutch people who adopted rabbits
would just be trying to replicate that song.
It's terrible, isn't it?
And I think around the same time,
the Dutch version of the RSPCA said
that everyone who had a rabbit,
it should keep it indoors so that no one would kind of pick it up and try and copy this song.
How often do you sing a song and then sort of enact the lyrics as you do it?
Yeah, I'm always going around bullying reindeer's.
Yeah, apparently this is a thing and it's really, really popular.
And if you go to the Netherlands and they play like the top, you know,
20 Christmas songs of the year, they always play this one.
Wow.
Oh, we got sent another Christmas animal slaughter related fact.
I've got it here.
It's from Holly Tea.
I think you're in.
Hi.
This is great.
I really like this.
This is a historical fact.
It's that in 1797, Tom the Goose
was brought with thousands of other geese to Ledenhall Market in London to be slaughtered.
But Tom escaped perusing the market and evading capture for days on end.
His life was eventually spared and he was adopted as the market's mascot.
And he had a bar named after him, which is called Old Tom's Bar.
The Goose.
The goose.
Yeah, yeah.
Do we buy that?
I buy it.
Yeah, I think so.
And definitely we know that the geese were taken to town
and they were walked all the way to town
from North and stuff like that.
They put little boots on them, wouldn't they?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's what they say.
They always say, oh, they put little boots on the geese,
but actually, I think what they happened was
they would dip the feet in like tar.
I think they'd walk them through a big tar, didn't there?
So it's not quite as nice.
But that definitely did happen.
That did happen.
And they did used to always go rampaging the animals
around Smithfield and stuff.
So, yeah.
I was saying more plausible than Thomas the testicle,
if that's the hierarchy.
Of the Tom's, yes.
Yeah.
This is a cool one.
We got sent by At Flameyes,
who I think is in here tonight.
Diego, are you in here tonight?
Diego's here.
Google engineers in California
had no clue about the Football World Cup
and were alerted to it
when traffic drops suddenly
for more than half an hour,
then suddenly spiked and went back down again.
Nowadays, most tech companies have a dedicated sports event calendar as a result.
It's just pretty cool how much it sort of influences the world.
Yeah, except no one in this room who have continued with your ordinary lives
despite the football match being on.
And we respect you for it.
Here's one.
In 1834, we also had three prime ministers in a year.
So we did this year.
Lord Melbourne was a prime minister.
He was sacked by the king, and Sir Robert Peel was chosen.
But Sir Robert Peel was on holiday.
Italy at the time. So they sent someone out to find him. And while they were trying to find him,
the Duke of Wellington was an interim PM. That's good facts, isn't it?
I love the idea of trying to just find the PM.
Well, they'd have struggled with Boris, wasn't they? Check the fridge.
There was another fact about, oh, I think it was Lord Liverpool, who was the fifth Tory prime
minister in a row, and was at the kind of late end of an administration, and wasn't seen as
being very good at the job, was really young as well, was in his early 40s when he got the job.
And he was in charge for 25 years.
Wow.
Yeah.
Are we sure there wasn't a Thomas the testicle?
Because I feel like that would be, of all the disciples,
the one you'd want at the last supper, right?
Like, he's party disciple.
Bring the party disciple, Thomas the testicle.
I thought you meant as a kind of dim sum option.
I've got another fact on balls.
Someone sent this in.
My interesting fact is that frozen meat bowls that go in pasta,
ready meals, set off metal detectors.
Now, can you guess?
Let's see if you can guess why that might happen.
Frozen meatballs set off metal.
Frozen meatballs?
They've got metal at them.
It's a reasonable thought, but no.
Because you wrap them in aluminium.
No, no.
More surprising than that.
More surprising.
Is it to do with them being frozen?
The freezing process.
Quite close.
Whose facts is it?
Jack.
Can you explain why?
Because that's why the frozen glass
That's so dense
And the metal detector
You're actually looking for metal
It's supposed to really dense on that
No, I didn't know that
So metal detectors don't detect
Metal specifically, they detect the density of the object
Yeah, and the big balls are really dense
That's why Dan sets it off whenever he goes through
When I go home and my wife says
How's the gig?
It's great, they, the room clap for me at one point
It's all great
Here's one.
This is from, I think you're in the room, Samuel Wilkinson.
Hello.
So, Sam Wilkinson says,
only five people on the planet know the formula for Angostura bitters,
and they have made a pact to never fly on a plane together
or even to eat in the same restaurant.
That's a really good excuse if you've got people who you don't like, isn't it?
Just give them something and you're like, oh, we can't go for dinner together, I'm sorry.
Yeah, yeah.
I was always told when I was a barman,
I don't know if this is true because I never looked it up,
that Angusura bitters is technically poisonous.
It's a poison.
And that's why they always said you're only allowed to use a tiny little bit.
I don't know if that's true.
I mean, everything's poisonous in large enough quantities, isn't it?
Yeah.
Such a clever dick thing to say.
Well, I got really worried recently
because my husband made a meal for me
and it tasted quite strongly of a specific spice.
I was like, God, what is that?
You put lots of it in.
He said, oh, it just put loads of nutmeg in it.
And I know.
And I got suddenly quite nervous
because, you know, nutmeg is actually banned
in a couple of countries
because it is in certain quantities poisonous.
And surprisingly small quantities.
Like if you had two tablespoons of nutmeg,
I think you'd be in trouble.
Really?
Yeah.
And then I actually,
I don't think I've admitted this to him,
so maybe don't tell him.
But I wanted it to feel okay.
So I said, no, I'm sure it's fine.
How much did you put in?
He showed me.
And then I actually threw up
because I thought,
I'm not fucking dying.
If this guy wants to die, if not my poisoning,
he's good.
He can go, but I've got a long life to live.
Oh, my God.
But you thought it was worth saving yourself?
Well, I didn't want him to think I was paranoid.
Yeah, you certainly haven't come across as paranoid in this story.
And then did you just watch him and see if he died?
I watched him like an absolute hawk, yeah.
And he passed on that night.
Yeah.
Is it legal these days to have a massive company
and have all the ingredients on the back,
but then go, but there's a secret, something, we're not telling you.
Can you legally do that these days?
But they all do, don't they?
Like, KFC and Coca-Cola and stuff.
We've got allergies. We have, like, people have things.
I think if you had peanuts in there, they'd make you put that on.
Yeah.
Well, I don't get, why, they're not allowed to go to the same restaurant
because, in case it's poisoned.
Well, if all five of them die in the restaurant.
I see, yeah, but in case there's a poisoner chef in the restaurant.
Yeah, yeah.
Anna's husband working.
Welcome to Nutmeg Nick.
There's a few things of those, right,
where people aren't allowed to travel in the same plane or whatever.
I can only think of the Wright brothers,
because they weren't allowed to fly in the same plane for years and years and years.
The Royal Family as well, there were certain things about that's been said.
I read, and again, don't know, because we're just flying off with routine facts.
It's possible this is true that people who may.
made the parachutes for NASA, for the rockets that come back in,
so Apollo 13, when the parachutes came out,
the people who know how to make the parachutes,
there's only like three people who know how to make that.
Can't be right.
Three people who know how to make their parachutes.
Yeah, there's a secret ingredient to the...
It's the ropes.
Just on the Royal Family, by the way,
because we just quickly mentioned them,
when he was child and the nanny told him to do something
that he didn't want to do,
Apparently, Prince William used to say,
when I'm king, I will have you punished.
Whoa.
This is a cool one from Charlie Brooke.
In the 1960s, a British scientist began an investigation
into whether there were people who could see the future.
The project ended in 1968 when two of his subjects
accurately predicted his death.
And this really...
This really happened.
And this is...
So, as Charlie Brooks says, this is from...
a book called the Premonitions Bureau, which is a new book that came out this year by Sam Knight,
and it was about a guy in London who, following a very tragic accident where a school was taken
out by a landslide and there was a lot of deaths, a few people said that they had accurately
predicted that this would happen. There was even a few school children from the school that had drawn
these quite ominous drawings ahead of it. And so he thought, what if this is the case, a premonition
was a real thing? What if we had a bureau in London that was able to accurately gather together
There were all these predictions
so that we could see if there was going to be a big train crash
in the future or fire somewhere.
We would be able to stop it before it happened.
And they predicted his death.
They both independently said...
Did they kill him?
Yeah.
I haven't got to the end of the book.
I went to Nostradamus' house this year.
I knew you were going to do that.
That was great.
Yeah?
What was your favourite thing?
Oh, well, it was a plaque.
That's it.
That's it?
What was the plaque?
Is plaque said that he'd lived there
or was it like in code or...
It said he lived there
and it talked a bit about the stuff he predicted
which I think is...
Oh, okay.
They hired you to work for their tourism
outreach program, didn't they?
Can I quickly say my favourite Nostradamus fact?
Oh, gosh.
And it's not a fact, obviously,
but when he died, he was buried
and there was all these rumours swirling around
that if you wanted to inherit the powers of Nostradamus,
you had to get a skull
and you had to drink through his skull.
And so he died.
And then in 1791, which is, I think maybe even 100 years after he died,
May of 1917, 1791, these grave diggers locate his grave,
and they dig him up and they open it.
And there, laying in the cave, is Nostradamus.
But around his neck and on his chest is a little board
on which it's written May 1791,
as if he went, I knew you'd be here.
Oh my God.
That's good pranking.
Yeah.
And is that true?
Oh, it's not true.
I think this is really interesting.
I can't believe I didn't know it if it's true.
This was sent in by Willoway Culpeper.
So in Pennsylvania, you've got the Amish community.
You know they're called Pennsylvania Dutch.
Do you guys know why they're called Pennsylvania Dutch?
I thought they originated in the Netherlands.
Apparently, they were German settlers,
but they introduced themselves to the English,
and what do they introduce themselves as?
Deutsch.
Deutsch and the English one.
Yeah, sounds like you're probably Dutch.
And that's stuck ever since.
Okay, well, look, I think we've got a good pool of facts to pick from here
for going into our fact-off for the nerdiest person in the room.
So James and I are going to be deciding who are the two finalists
and whoever we pick is going to be on our team.
So we're going to ask you to come up on stage and sit next to each of us.
and we'll do this quiz along next to you.
And so James, do you want to pick first who...
Yeah, I'm thinking that maybe to psych you out,
we should go for the Meatballs guy.
Because it felt like you really lost it around that time.
And I think by bringing him up on this side of the stage,
that's going to really...
Okay, all right, Meatballs guy.
And I will go for the lady who hasn't flushed her toilet
since 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
in the mornings every single night.
So while you're making your way down
and making your way to front of the stage,
we are going to find out the rules of the quiz,
how it's going to be played,
how we're going to determine the winner.
So here to introduce it all is our quiz master herself,
Anna Tushinsky, everybody.
Yes.
Yes, so the way this is going to work,
as we alluded to earlier,
is we will be quizzing our two contenders,
Jack and Geyer,
and we're going to be quizzing them
on how well they know the no such thing as a fish crew.
So come on to stage, Jack.
You're on James' team.
I'm sorry about that.
But if you take a seat there.
It's the winning team, Jack.
Don't worry.
And I just want to introduce you also
to my little scoring boy over here on the left.
Andrew the Red Nose Reindeer.
Hi, Gaya, you're on Dan's team.
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to read out some questions
and you're going to have to tell me
which member of no such thing as a fish
is the answer to those questions.
Can you stop distracting your contestant, please?
Okay.
Without further ado, let's start the quiz.
So, question number one.
Who once lost a quiz by saying one of the seven dwarves
was called Bernard?
Please choose quite speedily.
Guy, you've gone for Andy, you've gone for Dan.
The correct answer is Dan Triber.
Get in there. Come on.
Cross it with me. What the fuck are you doing?
I'm an idiot.
She thinks too much of you.
Oh, actually, that's very kind.
of you. Oh, thank you. Oh, okay.
Okay, question number two. So sorry,
scoring boy, what is the score?
One, nil.
Thank you for your invaluable contribution to the game.
Question number two, who was given birth to
in front of live observing students?
And you guy have gone for James,
you, Jack, have gone for me, Anna, the correct answer is me.
Brilliant, Jack. Amazing.
You knew it. You knew it. You just knew it.
Scoring boy, what have we got?
Who, no.
Wait, sorry, why were people watching you when you were born?
They asked my mum halfway through Labour if she minded.
Excuse me, was that Anna Tishinsky?
It's about to be.
No, they said, do you mind as an educational process
if people can watch your child being born
and she said, go for your life.
And so they ushered about 20 people into the room.
Gosh. Wow.
Are they still in contact with yours?
Yeah.
Yeah, she has them round every time, every Saturday.
Every time you come back home.
I squeeze myself through a very small window.
A cat flap.
Okay, so question number three.
And Jack, if you get this right and you get this wrong,
then Jack's taking it.
Who owns a light up ear spoon?
Who owns a light up ear spoon?
You've both gone for James Harkin.
And the answer is James Harkin.
Yes.
Yes, Guyah.
What's our school then?
Three one.
Three one.
Well done.
You could call it back now.
Yeah.
But not if Jack gets this one right.
So, who played Joseph in their nativity play alongside their brother who played a blade of grass?
You've both gone with Andy and I'm afraid that's not right.
No.
I'm afraid it was me.
It's not me.
This guy, James.
And he will be absolutely delighted we're bringing it up for this podcast.
Okay.
No change.
No change.
There we go.
Still on 3-1.
And so final...
Oh, hang on.
Let's do the final question anyway.
We'll do the...
I'm sorry.
That's been of an underwhelming announcement to say that Jack's won this.
Very, very hard to come back from at this point.
But it's possible.
It's possible.
We can do this.
We can do this.
Guy, according to Dan's brain, you can do this.
believe in you.
Double points.
Who once had a brilliant, self-described,
idea for a cheese chessboard?
You've gone for Dan, you've gone for James.
So just to say this is double points, right?
Oh, we're actually giving Guyra a chance.
Wow.
Just because I know the answer, yeah?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm afraid it was Andrew Hunter-Murray.
This is obviously my idea.
Come on.
The cheese board.
But cheeseboard is already a thing.
But every piece is a different cheese.
As we've learned, you know so much about cheese.
Well...
I had an idea for a t-shirt
where you have a chess board on the front, right?
And it's called chest, right?
So you have little Velcro bits, right?
And then, check this out.
Check this out.
On the back, what have you got?
Backgammon.
Backgammon.
Oh, backgammon.
Way better.
Way better. That's why that didn't work. Monopoly is too complicated.
So, Guy, I'm so sorry, you're the second nerdiest person in the room,
but I'm going to have to usher you off stage now.
But Jack, if you want to take centre stage here,
and I'm going to hand you over to Andrew Hunter Murray.
Jack, well, you have done it. You did it with your facts.
Get ready to take your prize, Jack.
Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for Jack, the nerdiest person in the room.
Okay, that's it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening to this episode.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said on this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter account.
I'm on at Schreiberland.
Gaya?
Hey, it's Gaya.
Jack?
At Monkey 2738.
Are you a bot, Jack?
You're the nicest bot I've ever met.
Andy?
At Andrew Hunter.
James.
I'm James Harkin.
Ada.
You can email a podcast.q.com.
Yeah, or you can go to our group account, which is at No Such Thing, or our website,
no such thing as a fish.com.
All of our previous episodes are there.
Thank you for tuning in to our Christmas episode.
We'll see you again.
Goodbye.
