No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As An Heroic Fire-Goat
Episode Date: January 12, 2018Live from Leicester, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss meerkats' inside-out bottoms, California's imprisoned firefighters, and the risk of finding a golf ball in your crisps. ...
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Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you from Lester.
My name is Dan Schreiber and I am sitting here with Anna Chisinski, 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 no particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, Chazinski.
My fact this week is that Walker's Crisps
only sauce potatoes that are grown far away from golf courses
because their factory machines can't distinguish
between golf balls and potatoes.
That's amazing.
It's true.
So this is a Walker's Crisp factory in Leicester, obviously,
and well done, guys, a very good contribution to the country, I would say.
And yeah, its factory has this density-based source.
sorting system. So what it is is all the potatoes come in and the machine automatically knows
the stuff that has the right density to be a potato that can be turned into a crisp. But it just
turns out that the density of golf balls is exactly the same. And so it used to be that there'd be a lot
of golf courses next to the fields where farmers are growing their potatoes, which would then be shipped
to walkers. And lots of people got like hard bits of golf ball in their crisp packets. So would you
sort of, you'd be on the green about to take your shot and a walkers machine would just nab your
golf ball and whisked off to a factory.
I didn't read the details of it,
but I would assume it's more likely
that you'd take your shot.
It would go over into the field.
You're a golfer, James.
Sometimes you miss hit things, right?
Not you, obviously.
Very, very occasionally,
every single time I ever play, yeah.
Yeah.
And then it gets scooped up by the tractors.
But I wouldn't have thought
I'd be able to replace my golf ball
with a potato, for instance.
I know.
It's weird, isn't it?
It doesn't feel like they're the same density.
I'll give it a go.
And so, was this a problem?
Were there people sending packets back going,
I expected salt and vinegar crisps
and I got a golf ball?
Has that ever been a thing?
People did mention it,
mentioned that they had hard crisps.
But if you're interested,
each golf ball yields 18 crisps.
Really?
That's incredible.
But no, the factory is really cool, isn't it?
Yeah.
So one of the things I really like about it
is basically a crisp goes from being a potato
to being in a bag in 20 minutes.
which is extremely fast I think
and there's a man at the end of the whole potato line
who just said he's the potato
overlord and he just looks at the potatoes
and he said they're all good they're all good they're good
that one's bad
yeah it doesn't sound quite as exciting
as you just made it look though
because I think maybe you read the same article
as I did in the Leicester Mercury
oh
wow
another great contribution to the country
they said about this guy
who's checking the actual potato
go through, they said, he looks, unsurprisingly, utterly bored.
The worst thing is, they probably got permission from walkers to go in and said,
oh, we'll write it up really nicely.
They say, he looked utterly bored.
This is surely the worst job in the whole building.
Whoa.
In the whole building, though, maybe everyone else is a crisp taster, except that one guy.
There are crisp tasters, aren't there?
Yeah.
You have to be a super taster if you, you have to be a super taster.
if you want to be a crisp taster
and when you're doing it you're not allowed to drink tea or coffee
because it will interfere with your palate
and they have to have 20 minute breaks between tests
where all they eat is fruit
and they make it so that you're only allowed a certain number of crisps every day
so you don't go over your salt limit for the day as well
it doesn't sound quite as cool does it
no it doesn't like... I mean it's better than the guy
just locking up potatoes all day
but what use is that crisp once the guy's eaten it?
No no no no
They don't retrieve it afterwards.
You have the assistant vomiter,
and I think actually that's the worst job,
and they shove their fingers down his throat,
and they get the Chris back.
It's just for like the general batch.
It's like a sample.
You should have said that, because that makes sense.
You left us all hanging, thinking...
I think when you say Azol,
I think my feeling is that the people of Leicester got that.
I was talking about me and the voices in my head.
I think you said that,
because you've seen wine tasters
and you've seen them taste the wine
and then spit it out again
like they do, don't they?
And did you assume that other people
then drunk that, spat out wine?
Yeah, I thought they just pop that back in the bottom.
I have a fact about the Lester Walker's factory.
They aim to extract so much water from the potatoes
that they don't need any water.
Because potatoes are 80% water, okay?
So when the potato slices get sliced up
and then they get boiled,
all the steam comes off
and they condense it and get water from that
that they use for the process of running their building.
Well, they also use water to peel the potatoes, don't they?
They fire it at it, so it must be like that.
Yeah. So basically what I'm saying is in the event of a catastrophe,
this is probably the safest place to be on the planet.
You've got self-sufficient supplies of water and potatoes.
Yeah.
As long as the potatoes keep being delivered.
They might relax their whole no-golf course kind of deliveries.
They also have a sort of what was described in this amazing,
blog I read and I would really recommend
this blog. It was this girl who went to
visit the factory and gives a really detailed
description of her tour of it and I can't remember what she's
called or what the blog's called. So just Google and
Google until you find it.
And this is
she described how there's sort of a log flume
for the potatoes where they're dropped in this
water and as the potatoes
go through the factory all the starches
some of the starch comes out
of it. So in the various processes some of the starch
comes out. So when it goes into this log flume
to get transferred through the factory then the
starch goes into the water and it goes a kind of milky color.
And when she was being shown round, they reassured her.
They said, don't worry, that starch doesn't get wasted.
It goes to a starch recovery plant, which is just next door.
And then it gets turned into quavers.
Oh.
That's what quavers are.
That's awesome.
Did she work that out or did they work that?
Was she told that for the blog?
How would you deduce that then?
Would she have followed a secret door that said, you know,
Don't go here.
This is where we put the starch.
It's the Quavers factory.
Holy shit.
I just blown this thing wide open.
Oh my God.
Of all the things you could work out,
that really is one you have to be told.
Just opened a bag of Quavers three weeks later.
Oh my God, I recognize this.
Hey, so you know how you were saying it takes 20 minutes from it going from the van into,
so that's the full potato.
into a crisp packet in 20 minutes time,
the amount of potatoes that they use every single hour,
if you went to the Leicester Tigers Stadium,
I haven't been to that,
but I imagine some of you guys here have,
the amount of potatoes they use in a single hour
would carpet the entire floor of that stadium.
That's how many potatoes per hour,
and that's every day that this happens.
So there's way more potatoes on Earth than I realized,
is why I get from that.
That's a lot of potatoes.
That would make the sports matches
that get played at the Leicester Tiger Stadium
extremely amusing.
What gets played there?
Rugby.
Oh, brilliant.
Come on, Andy.
I've got to do your research before coming to these cities.
Did you guys read about my favourite part of the factory?
And then we can move on from it,
but it's a machine called the OptiSort.
And this is the last machine that the crisps are put through.
and this is to check for potatoes that might have flaws in them.
So there's a machine at the beginning that looks at them to check for green bits
and shaves the green bits off, but there might still be some left.
And what the opt-y sort does is it.
It separates the crisps individually onto this conveyor belt,
so they're one layer thick.
And then they get hurled, like catapulted really fast,
at three metres per second,
past this camera, really high-speed camera that checks for floors.
And if the camera sees any kind of little speck of green
or any speck of black or something,
then the crisp flies over a gap,
still going really fast,
a 10 centimetre wide gap,
and if it's a dodgy one,
then there's a swift puff of air
that blows down through the gap
and dismisses it from the production line.
Whoa.
Isn't that cool?
Yeah, but why all the drama
of the speed and the tight...
Because you've just got to be incredibly quick,
because you've got to make so many bloody crisps.
That's actually the motto of Walker's Crisps.
We've got to make so many bloody crisps.
I suppose you think it's easy,
you bastards,
at Kettle hand manufacturing everyone.
We've got a proper company to run here.
We should move on. We need to move on.
I have so much stuff on golf.
We don't have time.
We don't have time.
Why don't you try and crowbar a golf?
A golf fact into one of these.
Just wait for that later on.
Yeah.
Okay, it's time for fact.
Number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact is about golf.
It's not.
I could make it about golf.
I mean, that would really screw up the podcast, wouldn't it?
It would, yeah.
Okay, no, it's not about golf.
My fact this week is that during World War I,
trucees would occasionally be called in the trenches
so both sides could yell insults at one another.
So good.
That is really cool, isn't it?
So this is the diaries of a guy called Sapa French.
Sapa was his nickname.
And he said in one of his diaries,
and this was been quite recently found,
I saw a rather curious thing in the trenches this morning,
heard some shouting and laughing
and saw a German
leaning over the parapet
and shouting across to our men
the distance was about 75 yards
one of our men shouted
come on over Fritz
shelted back in perfect English
no blooming fear
in fact they could all speak good English
this went on for half an hour
and then all the heads went down
and the wall went on the same as usual
that's pretty cool isn't it
they just thought let's just do a bit of insults
and then we'll carry on shooting each other
A lot of German people who'd been in Britain before the war had been waiters,
and there was one instance, which was a bit of a nicer instance,
of how they used to actually chat between the trenches when they weren't actually at war.
And someone recorded how one Englishman had shouted Guten Morgan at dawn,
presumably the only two words he knew,
and then the German guy on the other side had responded and said hello in English,
and then they started exchanging some kind of fun insults,
and they'd ended by saying the English guy said,
Waiter, and the German guy said,
Coming, sir.
The war so nearly tipped over into banter.
We could have avoided hundreds of thousands of deaths.
Yeah.
The trenches were really interesting
because the British ones were made
as if it was going to be quite temporary.
That's what they thought.
And the Germans thought,
we might be here for a while.
And so their trenches, they had doorbells.
No.
Yep.
They had staircases, electric light, steel doors,
real kitchens and wallpaper.
wallpaper.
No way.
The doorbell is an especially impressive thing
because obviously when the British go over the top
and arrive they'll have to wait after ringing the doorbell.
Very clever.
But they were.
I just recently read All Quiet on the Western Front
which is an uplifting read if you haven't been there yet
about the First World War
and the constant chat among the German troops
was how their stuff was better than the Allies.
That's cool.
And there's kind of a history of yelling and shouting
in wars, the Georgian hero Tariel was apparently able to drop opposing warriors using only the
force of his mighty war cry. Okay. And in Welsh mythology, their hero, Kulhuk, he was said to be able
to give a battle cry so loud and violent that all women in the court would become sterile.
Oh. Whoa. He must have been a really popular guy at parties, sir. I thought you were going, I was
wondering where you were going and I thought you were going to say, pregnant.
No, it sounds like it would be that
doesn't it?
Exactly the opposite, actually.
Yes.
Yes.
A sobering thought.
I have another fact about life in the trenches.
And sort of agreements between the two sides in the trenches.
So there was a guy in the First World War,
British officer, Captain Robert Campbell.
He got captured by the Germans,
I think after the Battle of Mons.
And after nearly two years imprisoned,
in a German prisoner of war camp,
he heard his mother was dying,
and he wrote to the Kaiser,
you know, asking to be released
to go and be with his dying mother.
Incredibly, the request was granted.
He was given two weeks leave
from a prisoner of war camp on the German side
to go back to England,
visit his mother on the understanding
that he would then go back and go to prison again.
And he did.
He went, he visited his mother,
he spent time with her in the last days of her life,
and he then honoured the agreement
and returned,
And then the next day he's like, oh, my dad's sick now.
And it's the only time that happened in the whole of the war.
Well, because didn't the Allies then, so there was a German prisoner of war with the Allies who tried it, I think, because that had happened.
Oh, really?
And the Allies did not let him go.
And then they said, no, we don't trust you.
And so then it was clamped down on.
So, yeah, he's the only one.
Wow.
It's so weird, though.
I think these insults mean a lot to military when they're doing it to each other, because it still goes on to
this day. And a few years back, there was a big moment between North Korea and the Americans.
The North Korean soldiers were seeing American soldiers point at them, make strange noises.
They were pulling disgusting facial expressions at them. And this was their big problem with them.
And the Americans said, we wouldn't do this. And this is how important that is in the follow-up
bit to the statement of them going, they're pulling faces at us. They're pointing at us really weirdly.
They said, oh, also, they're aiming their guns at us. That's like,
the second thing on the list.
And then just to prove
how childish it is, the statement
warned U.S. troops to stop the
hooliganism or face
dog's death anytime,
any place.
Like, it's just, it's all it is
like banter wars, isn't it?
That reminds me of, is it in that book or did we
cut it, in Bhutan?
It's in the book, yeah, yeah. In Bhutan,
there was a battle. It wasn't a battle.
It was an argument between India and China,
and they went kind of arguing over this tiny bit of Bhutan
and if they went to war it would have been something like
a quarter of the world's population would have gone to war
and they all went to this tiny bit of Bhutan
but they decided they none of the one really wanted to have a war
and so no one brought any weapons
and you can see videos of it and it's just basically
some Chinese soldiers and some Indian soldiers
kind of just chest bumping each other
yeah it's incredible
yeah it's literally it's a whole line of army members
just not fighting but sort of just
Like a night out in Leicester.
Is that what it's like here?
You don't know just go home and have a nice pack of crisps?
There was a lot of friendliness.
There's a really good book about World War
called Meeting the Enemy, the Human Face of the Great War.
And even more friendly than that,
there was one instance where Brits arrived at the Somme
and they were expecting, they were like,
you know, we're fighting the enemy, you know,
all geared up for a massive battle.
and they arrived, and they just found
on a bit of barbed wire a note,
and it was from the German saying,
why don't you send two or three of your guys
with some stuff you want to trade,
and we'll send two or three of ours,
and we'll swap presents.
And they met up in the middle of No Man's Land that first day,
and they exchanged kind of magazines and souvenirs
and periodicals that they wanted to read.
It's amazing having a book club in the middle of a total war.
It really is.
It's so impressive.
And we haven't even mentioned the Christmas truce,
which was a big thing,
a sporadic thing, along a lot of the Western
front. So I didn't know though. It stretched not only in the army, it stretched to the other
services as well. So on Christmas Eve, 1914, the Royal Flying Corps flew over a German
airfield at Lille and they dropped on the runway a plum pudding. And then on Christmas date,
the German Air Force flew over a British airfield and they dropped a bottle of rum to say thank
you. At the Christmas truce, there was one really lovely moment. A lot of Germans had been living
in the UK before the war and during the Christmas truce they all went up into no man's land
and one of the English guys realized
that one of the German guys
was his barber
who used to cut his hair in Hoban
and he said I need a haircut
and so his Hoban barber
cut his hair for him
I mean that's very trusting
as I'm trusting
do you know who didn't take part
who was an absolute killjoy
at the Christmas truce actually
was it the senior officers
or the...
Yeah they didn't
but in particular
one soldier on the German side
you might be able to guess
who it was
Oh I can guess
Is it the most famous one
It's the most famous one
Hitler
He absolutely was not
a fan, hated the Christmas truce.
Yeah, refused to take part. He sat in a
strap on his own and just
said really disapproving things like you guys have no sense
of honour and this isn't what we should be doing in wartime.
Classic Hitler.
Hey, we should move on to our next fact, right?
Okay, it is time
for fact number three
and that is my fact. My fact
this week is this and I find this
so interesting. 14%
of all California's firefighters
are in prison.
Is that amazing?
14%.
They take people who are in prison,
women who are in prison,
and they say,
would you like to sign up for this?
We'll relocate you to a program
whereby you'll be a firefighter
but under the confines,
but you won't be an actual prison.
And lots and lots of women
have signed up to it.
So as a result,
14% of their whole firefighting force
are prisoners who are serving time
and then when they're needed,
they go and either fight fires
or they clear paths,
where fires might happen.
Cool.
I think it, I mean, it's women and men, isn't it?
At one point, it was 40%.
It was 30 to 40, but I think, yeah, no, it's both.
Lots of men.
And I don't think they get to do the super fun stuff,
like the hosing.
They do a lot more clearing, like you said.
Yeah, some of them do get chainsaws.
Ooh.
Yeah, because obviously you need to clear a path in forest.
You're going to need a chainsaw to do it.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
And they get paid something like a dollar, an hour,
in America, but the exchange of it is that they're not in a classic prison system.
They get to, and they get days off their sentence every time they serve for what they're,
what they're doing with their job as a firefighter.
But it's only a dollar and out when you're actively fighting a fire.
Normally, you get paid about a dollar a day.
But I think there is a certain economy in prisons, isn't there?
And, you know, there's a lot of trading that goes on.
And did you know that they have their own shopping catalogs?
Well, in prison?
Yeah.
So there are inmate shopping catalogs, at least in America.
So Gizmodo, the really great website, did a series of articles called Lockdown,
and interviewed this guy who said that they have a shopping catalogue of approved items.
So it's anything that you want, really, from TVs to toothbrushes or whatever.
And what happens is you can pick what you want and you take it out of the small pay that you might have got in prison
or your family can buy it.
And then it gets delivered.
And then it gets engraved.
So you get automatically engraved items because otherwise, all the other prisoners have also got the same stuff.
and so you need to know that it's yours.
And actually, weirdly, in the YouTube clip
I was watching of the guy being interviewed,
he was saying, and this is some of the stuff
the prisoners have ordered this week,
and he was opening packages,
and he opened up a DVD of the series
Richie Rich, Season 2.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
I only know Richie Rich as a film.
I did too until I had to look into this.
You're saying they've made a TV series of Richie Richie Rich.
Yeah, it's the same general thesis.
Oh, sure.
That is fantastic.
Well, I get, I mean,
you hit a fact within a fact there.
It gets something like 22% on rotten tomatoes,
but you could certainly give it a go.
But so the thing that really amazed me about this fact was,
A, that's an amazing percentage that are in prison
that are working for the firefighters.
But B, I thought that firefighting was largely about fighting fires,
and it turns out that it's not.
It turns out that most of the time that firefighters spent
is doing tasks that the public call for them to do,
and there was a report from the UK from a few years ago
that said we need to stop responding to these weird calls that we're getting
because we just keep wasting our time.
Between 2009 and 2011, these are the stats.
1,613 incidents where people were locked out
where firefighters had to go and let them back in.
276 adults called firefighters out
because they were locked in toilets.
14 people were locked in cupboards.
One woman was stuck.
in a fridge, one man was stuck in a freezer, and one person was stuck in a recycling thing.
There is so many ridiculous things that they get called out to on a day-to-day basis.
They used to shout as they ran to a fire, and this was going on as late as 1901 in America.
As they went to the fire, they would shout, hi, y, hi, y, hi, hi, hi, hi, hi, hi, y.
Were they doing the Ninos themselves?
Well, it seems that way, right?
Yeah, I mean, I worked out what I thought the tune might be.
It might not have been that.
Okay.
It might have been high-ye, high-eye.
I don't know.
But when they decided to replace the shouting with a gong...
A gong?
A gong.
And they all hated it.
They were like, no, we like doing the hi-ya thing.
Right.
And also, when automatic fire alarms came in,
they all hated that as well.
The reason being that they had lookouts,
who would look out for the fire.
And as soon as the automatic fire alarms came in,
those guys lost their job.
It's the robots taking over the jobs, isn't it?
That was the start of it.
It is pretty much.
And so then the firemen started doing fire alarm pranks
to set off these fire alarms.
Did they?
But that's the thing.
There used to be loads of rival gangs of firefighters.
And there's a scene in New York
where all the firefighters getting the scrap outside of fire
because they all want to be the ones to solve the fire.
So you know in Japan firefighters,
they bring water pumps to the fire,
but they don't aim the water at the fire,
they aim it at themselves.
What?
So they wet themselves down
so they're not flammable.
And then they, this was in the Edo period
in the 17th century.
Oh, right.
Not now.
And so they would wet themselves down,
they'd run into the house,
and then they'd pull the house down.
And that's how they stop the fires.
And they used to smother them, didn't they?
So they had deliberately very, very thick clothes
that would weigh, you know, as much as a person
when they were wet, and they would go up to a fire
and just smother it.
They'd go up to a familiar.
They would just jump on it, basically.
They would be able to get close enough that they could puffer it up.
But amazingly, they were positions of real respect in Japan in the Edo period,
so up until 1868.
And they used to wear outfits that looked like normal fireman's outfits on the outside,
so they were quite plain.
But then on the inside of their suit,
they had unbelievable works of art stitched throughout them,
and they had like stories and everything.
It was kind of like manga, that kind of style.
And they became really famous.
and if they were successful and they put out of fire,
they all turned their coats inside out
and they paraded through the streets victoriously.
Wow.
And they often had their bodies tattooed
with the designs on their coats
because, you know, it was such a mark of, you know,
something special.
And, yeah, and also the stories
that were told on the inside of their jackets
became bestsellers in Japan.
So the kind of cartoon strips
that firefighters had became well-known stories
that you tell your children.
There was another thing, which,
speaking of covering yourself completely
in water, to begin,
That was in the early days, one of the things with firefighters,
breathing was very hard, and so in order to get into a fire
and keep your own breath and not suffocate was a hard thing.
So most firefighters used to have a massive beard,
the male firefighters that would go in.
And what they would do is they drench their beard into a bucket of water,
and then they would bite into their beard and hold it over their mouth.
And that's how they would survive the fires,
because they would have this beard mask that stopped the smoke coming through to them.
Is that true?
Yeah.
That's incredible.
Isn't it true that the guy with the longest beard ever
died because there was a fire
and he ran out of his house
and he forgot to put his beard in his pocket
and he tripped over it and fell down the stairs?
Yes.
Should have just wet it.
Should have just dipped it in the bath before he left.
That doesn't start you tripping over it.
If anything, it makes it more rope-like,
makes it likely a trip over.
Just lock it up.
Have you guys heard about the firefighting goats
of San Francisco?
No, but I get the feeling we're about to.
Sure thing.
San Francisco has firefighting goats.
That's great.
Yeah.
Right, moving on.
Time for fact number four.
Do you want to say it?
Yeah, sure.
Well, they're kind of pre-firefighting goats,
so they're let loose around San Francisco
to eat bits of dry scrublin
that would otherwise be a massive fire risk.
Oh, that's clever.
But they've been introduced,
and it's helped massively
with the problems of firebreaking out in the summer.
That's really clever.
It's not as kind of rock and roll
when you explain it.
No, it's not.
When the goat goes home to his wife,
and he's like, I'm a firefighter.
What did you do today, darling?
I just ate some more grass.
Save some lives.
Should we move on to our final facts?
Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show,
and that is Andy.
My fact is that mere cats can turn their bottoms inside out.
So do they do it on purpose?
They do it on purpose.
They do it to socialize.
They've all got a party trick,
and it's all turning the bottoms inside out.
So they have what's called an anal pouch
and it's under their tails
and they produce this kind of paste inside it
and they, it's nature.
You can't go, ugh, it's nature.
And they smear it on plants and rocks
to mark territory as their own.
And they even sometimes smear it on other meerkats.
I read that this paste comes out of them
a lot like when Play-Doh is extruded
from one of those dolls heads.
I believe so.
From a doll's head?
Yeah, you know those things?
Yeah, you remember.
It was like an old kind of toy from the...
Probably, you're too young, I guess.
But you used to have Play-Doh, and you used to squeeze it,
and then you had these little dolls,
and it would come out of their hair,
and their hair would end up looking at the line.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And scientists do squeeze it, didn't they?
So when they're trying to study the makeup of this paste,
that's how they get at it.
When they've extruded their pouches,
the scientists literally grab it and they squeeze it,
and you can actually get it out like that.
Yeah.
That, I think, is a worse job.
than being the crisp
tester at Walker's
hanging outside of Mirat's nest
with a cotton bud just waiting.
But this came to light,
I think probably Andy, you read this,
they've done a new study
about the bacteria in Mirat Bottoms.
And they've found that
it's the bacteria that makes up
the different smells,
which means they can kind of say
whose anal paste it is.
Yeah, so the smell
comes not from the Mirat.
It comes from,
the bacteria, but the meerkats used
the bacteria to judge
what's going on socially. And so they
swabbed these anal pouches
couldn't they, and to get the bacteria.
And I read an article
in popular science, and they were
talking about these guys who were doing the swabbing,
and they said, these pouches are wide open.
They're almost asking to be swabbed.
So meerkats
are kind of bastards, aren't they?
Sure. Are they?
Yeah, they really are. They actually did a
study recently looking at the most
murderous mammals and
meerkats came out on top and they're looking at
how many of their deaths are caused
by members of their own species and with mere cats
is 20% so
20% of mere cat deaths are caused by
other mere cats which is amazing
they're always killing each other. They kill their own
babies, they kill their mates babies
I love killing babies
and I read that study as well and it
also said that sea lions are more
murderous than actual lions
oh wow
That's quite a good fact, isn't it?
And humans are not very murderous, are we, according to what we should be.
Apparently, we should be about 200 times more murderous than we actually are.
Should be, according to the rules laid out 100 million years ago, pinned to a tree.
That's really nice that we've kind of mastered our worst instincts.
Yeah, it kind of goes off a few times when there's wars and shit.
Sometimes when they're fighting, they latch on to their enemy.
So I think basically the tension in mere cat colonies
is caused by the fact that they'll have colonies of up to 50 mere cats
and there's basically one mating couple isn't there?
And no one else is really allowed to have kids.
And if someone else has kids, then the lead couple kills those kids.
And also, who's the dominant couple?
It's all decided on based on the size and their weight and their age.
And so everyone's always looking at each other
and working out who's going to be bigger, who's going to be the next in line.
and they are literally, as one article pointed out,
all the meerkats are comparing the meerkats.
That's what they're doing.
That's very good.
Just on Compare the Miracat,
did you know that in 2010,
remember the lead Miracat, OLAV?
Yeah.
He released an autobiography that year.
Do you remember?
No, I don't remember.
No.
You should have, because it was one of the biggest selling books of that year.
That was the year.
that Tony Blair released his memoirs.
I do remember that one.
Yeah.
There were more pre-orders on the Mirkats book
than were on Tony Blair's memoirs,
Russell Brand's book, on David Beckham's book,
then Cheryl Cole's book.
This guy outsold everyone.
No way.
Yeah.
Did you have any big reveals?
No.
The fortune...
Yeah, he started the Iraq war.
Yes, yeah.
I knew it.
But, no, actually, I read...
Here's one odd reveal.
It's not in the book,
but the voice of the Miracat's
is, and this is very niche, but this is for anyone who's watched
Alan Partridge, the second series of Alan Partridge, when he's staying in the hotel,
it's the guy who fixes everything. You know that guy?
Michael? Yeah, Michael is the voice of...
Michael, the Jordy Exaltor guy. Yes, yeah.
He's the voice of... I was watching Alan Partridge this afternoon,
so this is an amazing fact for me.
You were saying about comparing the mere cats,
this study, I think you were talking about,
it's a guy called Clutton Brock,
and he did these experiments where they fed extra food
to some of the meerkats that weren't the main meerkats.
And when they got fatter, the main meerkats got fatter as well.
And so they found that basically when you're comparing with the other meerkats,
if someone gets bigger than you,
you immediately eat a load of pizza or whatever they eat
and then just try and get bigger than them
because you always want to be the biggest one
because it's the biggest one who's the most important.
So you're always looking around and it goes,
oh, he's looking, you know, Barry's looking a bit fat today.
I think someone compared it to something that gobi fish do,
which is almost the opposite, but it's quite interesting,
is that goby fish go on diets.
And it's for the same kind of peer pressure reasons,
like the biggest goby fish is the one who's dominant,
and they don't want to cause conflict.
And so if they see a big goby fish,
they make themselves less big, they eat a bit less,
because they're like, oh, I don't want to start a fight with that guy.
I'll just go on a little diet, be small,
which is quite sweet, isn't it?
But me and cats are much more like up in your face.
If you're going to get big,
I'm going to get big.
I'll race you to the top kind of attitude.
Yep, true.
And meerkats, when they sleep,
is quite interesting what they do.
They pile on top of one another to keep warm.
Adorable.
Yeah.
So, like, in summer, when it's hotter,
they kind of spread out a lot.
And in winter, when it's cold,
they kind of grab another meerkat on top
and kind of snuggle in.
Quickly murder them.
They all have meerkat rugs in their homes.
I have some stuff on anuses, if that's...
Yes.
So this fact is about they can turn their bottoms inside out.
I didn't realize I was reading a BBC article.
Apparently, to chart the evolution and history of anuses is really hard
because a lot of species have a bum,
and then they suddenly don't have a bum,
and then they have a bum again.
And so there's this, like, missing link of anuses
that...
Really?
Yeah, so you can't,
you can't through the fossils
chart it properly
because suddenly it's just out of nowhere,
no bum.
And then thousands of years later,
suddenly there's a bum again.
That's so odd.
Do we have examples of...
Well, there's...
Bumbed, then unbumbed creatures.
I can't remember any,
but there is a thing
called having a transient anus.
A transient anus, yes.
Oh, God.
But I think I might be in the lifetime
of an individual.
You have a bum,
and then you don't have a bum.
Exactly.
No, that's...
So that's a very short-term example
of...
the long-term thing I was mentioned.
So we've covered the sea cucumber before.
Oh, yeah.
Which is a little...
It's not a cucumber, but it does live in the sea.
It's a kind of, what is it?
It's a kind of fishy organism.
It's not a fish.
They're really weird.
They look like odd cucumbers underwater.
But we've said before,
they can self-eviserate
when they're threatened by a predator.
They distract the predator
by squirting their own intestines out of themselves.
And that distracts the predator
because he thinks,
what's this? And then
they slowly leave. But the other incredible thing is
they can turn solid or mushy on command, on self-command.
So they can turn their body into a mush
and then climb through a tiny crack
and then re-solidify into lumps
so they can't be got out through the crack by a predator.
They're nuts. They're so nuts.
And then it's not only for self-de-fense that they self-oiserate,
it's a seasonal thing.
in autumn they just reabsorb all their intestines into their body
and they just become a solid lump of flesh basically
so fishermen in the Caribbean they harvest them in October
because they know they're not going to have to gut them
because they have no guts anymore
oh wow yeah and then in spring they regrow all their organs
and they continue like that that's insane
they're so weird
the one thing I know about the anus of a sea cucumber
is that there's a fish that lives in there isn't there
is called a slender pearl fish
and it lives inside the anus of a sea cucumber
and the funny thing about them is
whenever they want to go into a sea cucumber's anus
they kind of do a little knock
on the anus and the anus opens up
Oh my God
like they're entering a German trench or something
Really
And is it a secret knock or is it just a normal
Oh you think it's like
Yeah
It's the pearlfish again
What a slang term for the anus by the way
The German trench
that we've kind of guessed over there.
Guys, we need to wrap up.
Do you have anything before we do?
There are a dragonfire larvae eats via its anus.
What they do, this is really cool.
They draw water in through the anus.
They clench and then they compress their abdomen
and the muscles in their thorax
against the water filled in their rectum
and then they can raise the pressure in their body
and it fires out their mouth and then they can eat.
What?
Isn't that cool?
You're drawing water in, you're squeezing,
and then your mouth comes out and you eat.
Wow.
That's so awesome.
What?
I'm glad I don't do that.
But I'm happy that someone else has found me a little ability to do that.
Was that on Blue Planet?
Or is...
It was on Brown Planet, actually.
Okay, that's it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we have said during the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shreiberland.
Andy at Andrew Hunter M. James
At James Harkin and Chisinski
You can email podcast at QI.com
Yep or you can go to our group account
which is at no such thing or you can
go to our website no such thing as a fish
dot com where we have all of our previous episodes
We have a link as well to our book
Which is out now and guys at the end of the show
We're going to be out there
We've got a bunch of copies so if you want to buy a copy and say hi
We can sign a few for Christmas or whatever
And we have pre-signed copies as well
If you can't be asked to line up
or if you don't want to speak to us,
if you actively dislike us.
Or you can just go home.
You can't go home.
You don't need to.
We can't force you.
Yeah.
And we're going to end this show, aren't we?
With a fact.
Yes, we have a fact that you guys sent in at the beginning of this show.
We're going to give away one of our books to one of you.
And Anna, you have that fact.
Yep.
So this is our favorite fact that you guys sent in.
And it's from, I don't know if I can read my own writing, but Victor Jegger Nathan.
Are you in?
You in?
Oh, it's such a good fact.
This fact is that guide runners for sight impaired runners can't use elasticated tethers at the Paralympics anymore
after the Chinese started catapulting their runners across the finish line at the last minute.
That's amazing.
Awesome. We'll be out the back guys. Thank you so much for coming. We'll see you later on last year.
