No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As An Honest Washing Machine

Episode Date: December 28, 2023

In Andy's Mailbag Special, Andy, Dan, James, Anna discuss your facts, including underwater cars, over the top diving, teeth, toilets and Torquay. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live show...s, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:02 Hello and welcome to No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hoban. My name is Andrew Hunter-Murie. I'm joined by James Harkin, Dan Triber and Anna Tijinsky, and this is an upside-down, Christmasy, end-of-yeary episode. Lord of Miss Rule style, I'm in charge. The lunatics have taken over the asylum. Exactly that. And instead of us telling you our facts, you are going to be telling us your facts. No, we will be telling you your facts.
Starting point is 00:00:46 That's it. We will be telling each other your facts, but you are allowed to listen. That's, yeah. You're welcome. Basically, we have this email address, podcast at u.r.com. People ride in with all sorts of stuff. And if you're a member of Clubfish, you'll hear every month. There's the kind of things people write in with on one of our bonus episodes.
Starting point is 00:01:05 but also you send in a huge number of brilliant extra facts. So we have just gathered around here. We have a massive pile of different facts from all of you, some of the absolute best ones that have been sent in over the last year or two. You know, because we can all dip into the inbox. We might have seen a couple of them. A lot of them we'll have never seen before. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:22 So would someone like to begin? I got a fact here. Yeah, go on. All right, this is from Haley Dargan. It says a team in Darwin, Australia, drove a car named mud crab, seven kilometers underwater across the harbor. They got bogged down nearly a dozen times and dealt with the threat of crocodiles. In doing this, they broke two world records, longest underwater drive and the deepest underwater drive.
Starting point is 00:01:46 Wow. Pretty cool. I didn't, sorry, it's a cut, what kind of car? It's called the mud crab, and it's, I guess, amphibious and... Drive sideways. Yep. That's cool that it can drive underwater. Very much, don't try this with your own car, warning, right?
Starting point is 00:02:03 Yeah, this is, I bet there's a few. alterations they've made to their regular car. Are you? I hope so. Yeah. There's an old, I think it's a Mitch Headberg joke. There's something like that, which I will absolutely butcher. But it's something like I went on a date with a girl.
Starting point is 00:02:20 It didn't go very well. She was annoyed that I didn't open the doors for her. And rather I swam straight to the surface. That's a very good joke. That story reminds me of that story we had in one of our books of the year, our books we did about the news of the year. If you want to catch up on the news of 2018, one, you go to Amazon and buy it. But one of the stories was about those two Australian women, I think this is right, who were following their satnav and just, it was
Starting point is 00:02:50 somewhere in Australia and they just followed their sat nav into the ocean. Just get it. The satnav had messed up and they just, I must be right, must be right. And their car got stranded in the sea. Do you remember we mentioned on the podcast, there was a president who had an amphibious car and he used to take... So it wasn't at the White House. It was Johnson. It was Johnson, that's right. And he would take his friends out in the car
Starting point is 00:03:11 and they would go a bit down a hill where there was a lake at the bottom and then he would fake losing control. Oh God, oh God, what are they? And then they would go in the lake but they'd obviously drive on. Brilliant. Very, very cool.
Starting point is 00:03:21 If there's ever a weird, wacky thing a president did fact, it's always LBJ, isn't it? It's amazing. It had time to... Lose the war in Vietnam. Yeah, is where I was going. It's amazing.
Starting point is 00:03:33 In the last, you know, decade or so, We've had such straight down the line presidents, haven't we? Buttoned up. You know? Yeah. In the Addo National Park in South Africa, if you're driving along there, Dung beetles have the right of way. So if you're driving along and a Dung beetle crosses the road,
Starting point is 00:03:51 you have to just sit there and wait for it. How good is everyone's eyesight in this area? Sorry, that's incredible. They are small, but they do push large bowls of Dund. That's a good point. Yeah, fair enough. And there must be a lot of traffic jams with a lot of cars stopping. Is that, can you get out of the car?
Starting point is 00:04:04 check. No, just a normal beetle. Okay, get back in. Or normal poo. Yeah. It's just a poo in the middle. I'm sure. I can't see the beetle, but it must be there. Pretty sure it's not moving. That would be breakups. You hear of breakups there. It was like, why'd they leave you? Why did your boyfriend leave you? He waited five hours. He got five hours because there was a random piece of poo sitting on the road. If you do go like driving in any of these places like I drove in Yellowstone, I think, and a few other places like that, you do have a lot of traffic. jams because as soon as there's an animal there, everyone stops and you just kind of sat there at the
Starting point is 00:04:40 back. And the first two or three people can all see the animal. But of course, then it wanders off and they drive off and everyone else who's in the traffic jam never gets to see it. And the elves, the elves of Iceland, we've spoken about before. Oh yeah. Well, they believe a lot of people in Iceland believe there are elves and they believe they live in rocks. And so if a rock finds its way into the middle of the road and it's a believed home of an elf, you can't move the rock. You have to drive around literally maybe going off road in order to get around it until it's removed safely by the proper authorities
Starting point is 00:05:08 anyway look guys I'm sorry we'll move on to the next fact oh this is actually a bit of a sort of audience feedback one's from Dave Clemer we mentioned the Treaty of Versailles and the rights to champagne or naming champagne were part of the Treaty of Versailles okay yeah so Dave said I didn't know about that but it was not shocking given the presence of two other items I knew about
Starting point is 00:05:26 with the extreme military significance in the Treaty of Versailles one of them was the patent on aspirin which Bayer, the German pharmaceutical firm, was required to give up. The second is the concert pitch for orchestras being standardised such that the A above middle C is 435 hertz.
Starting point is 00:05:43 Yeah. That was in the Treaty of Versailles. I think this is on QI this year, isn't it? Yeah. It's amazing. It might be. It might be on your TV in about 18 months time. But yeah, the British used to tune their instruments to a different...
Starting point is 00:05:58 Actually, everyone came to the British way, did they? I can't remember. Because they won the First World War. I can't remember. It was something like that. That was what really upset the Germans. This is actually the platform on which Hitler built his rise to power was that frequency things. 30 years of Hertz was the slogan you were not, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:06:14 Thank you. Just a quick fact about that. So if you play, I can play the trumpet, for instance. And when you tune to the orchestra, you play a B flat because everyone plays whatever their notes is tuned to. And then it all comes together and you can hear if you're slightly flat or slightly sharp. But B-flat is also the way you tune a Vuvazela. How many orchestras? I think there is one Vuviesela concerto that someone wrote once.
Starting point is 00:06:43 That's incredible. But no. That's so good. That's the sad thing, isn't it? So few professional Vuvizelists get a chance. You know. I wonder when the last time officially an instrument's been allowed into, like, the main orchestra posse. You know.
Starting point is 00:06:57 It's interesting that. It's a good point. One of the sort of later weirder brass instruments, you know. Like, weirder than a French horn. You'll see a barramen, often. But that's not part of a classical orchestra. Yeah, that's quite neat. What's the most?
Starting point is 00:07:11 I remember seeing, I watched a piece once. I can't remember who it was by shame on me, but there was a part for cutlery. Lovely. So the percussionist had a load of cutlery there, and they would either rattle it or they would drop it or whatever. Was it a tuning fork? Brilliant.
Starting point is 00:07:28 There we go. Good grief. You're on fire today. There's another one. Come on. Like, James. I don't think you have done one yet. All right, here we go.
Starting point is 00:07:34 This is from Tom Whitfield. The world record for highest jump into water is held by Rick Charles at 172 feet. Can I ask, was that how high the water was or how high he was before he got in the water? How would highest jump into water? No. I just thought it might be someone. Like, for instance, I've been to Lake Titikarca, which is the highest navigational lake in the world. Right. If I jumped into Lake Titicaca, as I did.
Starting point is 00:08:03 You've broken this record. I see what you're saying. Sorry. It's just a fun bit of whimsy from James, sir. No, I love a fun bit of whimsy. You know me. I get comedy. I just sometimes like it to be expanded on a little bit. So sorry, that's 20 feet higher than the Statue of Liberty. An air had to be pumped into the pool to break the surface tension. Otherwise, he would have gone splat.
Starting point is 00:08:23 That's amazing. I think it's in the 70s or so because there's footage of it. So I follow the YouTube link that Tom put in the email. It's unbelievable because he's basically on a ladder, which is taller than the Statue of Liberty. You just see so far up. That's hard to get up the ladder. I was impressed that he got up the ladder at all. I mean, it's stunning.
Starting point is 00:08:40 We're on the second floor of this building, and I struggle most of me. What's interesting is someone very, very recently, and I've heard the term, the highest jump into a body of water ever, broke the record just a few days ago. So maybe this is an old email, and possibly it was right at the time. Right. And he doesn't have water. It's incredible. You see the footage.
Starting point is 00:09:00 He's standing on the edge of a cliff and he throws something. I don't know what it was. It looks like a giant fish, but I don't think it is. Into the water, and as soon as it hits and breaks the tension, he jumps and goes in
Starting point is 00:09:10 and it's the new world record. Oh, really? Okay, well, it must be my turn to read a fact. I'll take the one closest to me. This is from Sam Cavallaro. And Sam says, I was reading an article about the early human species
Starting point is 00:09:23 that coexisted with Homo sapiens, and they mentioned the estimates of how many Neanderthals were alive, at any one time, giving an upper limit, and my brain immediately decided to find a relatable reference scale and came up with a nearby city that had similar population. So I thought you might not have a sense of what the population of Olympia Washington is. Correct. Absolutely zero frame of reference for that?
Starting point is 00:09:46 I think that's the capital of Washington, isn't it, Olympia? I don't even know whether that's true or not. I had not heard of Olympia Washington before now. It's not the biggest. It's not Seattle. So I looked up a UK comparison. At their estimated most populous, they were as many Neanderthals as modern humans living in Torquay. 52,000. That would be an excellent episode of Faulty towers, wouldn't it?
Starting point is 00:10:10 That's great. Wait, how many was it? 52,000. 52,000, yeah. That is unbelievable. Yeah, that's... Wow. Actually, that would be a cool premise for something.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Like, the Neanderthals are here. They all live in Torquy. And it's about the... Modern-day Torquie. Yeah. Yeah. And it's just like the amusing cultural clashes that you get. Do they remove all of the current population of Turkey, so the population stays at 52,000, or does the population balloon to 104,000?
Starting point is 00:10:37 I think everyone in Turkey is sort of bought out of their homes, and it's like, we need to house exactly this number of people, so where can we put them up? You all go to Exeter. Exactly that. Yeah, yeah. Wow. Yeah. So, yeah, there were also a thousand more Neanderthals in the world at their peak than
Starting point is 00:10:54 there are currently inhabitants of the County of Rutland. Very nice So I mean I reckon that I have more knowledge About the city of Olympia in Washington Than I do about the county of Rutland I know it's as small as county I live very near it
Starting point is 00:11:09 And I can tell you The difference between the people there In Neanderthals Right Oh There we go Ouch, I've got a good sledging
Starting point is 00:11:16 Rutland is a It used to be a proper county And I believe it's now a unitary authority So much like the Neanderthal It's actually sort of faded into the past Wow Really? I thought it was still a county
Starting point is 00:11:28 Actually, interesting, the people of Rutland do bury their dead with flowers and trinkets. They're rumoured to have mastered fire. Wow. And actually, if you get yourself tested, you are between 1% of 3% Rutland. I've got another one here from David Saunders. The British Basketball League is having to change its name as no one can Google it. Because the acronym is shared with a surgical procedure that's become very popular in recent years. Brazilian butt lift.
Starting point is 00:12:02 That's brilliant. The league's new logo looks more like it's advertising the surgery than the basketball. It's true. I've seen the new logo and it's a big, it's a big bulb as big. I'll put it that way.
Starting point is 00:12:12 It looks a bit like a bum that's been lifted. That's cool. Do you think having a big Brazilian butt would help you in the basketball? I don't know. Of course. You're spacehoppering your way along the court on that thing.
Starting point is 00:12:27 Yeah. You don't even bounce on your ass in basketball. I think that's a travel violation, yeah. But do you think, like, if Kobe Bryant was jumping and doing a basket, he might say to someone, can you smell my ass? That was a thing, right? That was a, yeah, yeah. Tell me how my ass tastes.
Starting point is 00:12:49 Sorry. Granddad, Christ. Because you're a. up your bums with the other guy's face, right? What was the story? It was like Shaquillo Neal and Kirby Bright. That's like, I just had such a flashback to when I was a kid,
Starting point is 00:13:08 you know, when you used to get so embarrassed, your mum, singing along the really wrong words to modern songs. And I just felt that shiver hearing you say that. You know what? It was in the same episode that we mentioned that as the darts players where one of them farted and put the other one off. So that's why I'm conflating.
Starting point is 00:13:25 Yeah, yeah. I think that's a good, I think that's, Don't listen to these guys, James. I think that's a really good, like, punk line for you in whatever sport you are. Can you smell my eyes? When I'm playing Scrabble over Christmas, I can't stay in to my hit laws. You spell my ass.
Starting point is 00:13:47 Oh my God. Brilliant. Here's one. Ludwig Umair. In Cuban and other cigar factories, it used to be common to have a person to read aloud to the cigar rollers while they worked. Oh yes.
Starting point is 00:14:04 And the Monte Cristo cigar brand got its name because the Count of Monte Cristo was an extremely popular choice for the workers to listen to. That's incredible. I heard the story one, I think. I think we told that on the show at one point. Oh, did we? Sorry, okay.
Starting point is 00:14:17 But that's a great extra detail. Yeah, that's the bit that I think is amazing, really, the Monte Cristo bit. It's such a long book. It is long, yeah. You could roll so many cigars while listening to that. It's long, but quite exciting. And also, it's not very, I would say,
Starting point is 00:14:29 you don't really need to remember what happened at the start. so you could like swoop in and swoop out a bit, because it's just him and his adventures, isn't it? It almost feels like the second half as a bit like a comic book. There's like a 300-page digression in Paris in the middle bit. Yeah, I know, but that's... But you don't need to know what's happened before.
Starting point is 00:14:42 It's just like there's his rich dude having a bloody whale of a time. Yeah. On Cuba, Fidel Castro once ate 18 bowls of ice cream and a single sitting. Okay. Yeah, he just liked ice cream. As like, oh, that wasn't a challenge. It wasn't a challenge. He really liked ice cream.
Starting point is 00:14:57 There was a big thing in Cuba, which we might have mentioned before about milk and stuff like that. and being able to feed the country with amazing cows and stuff like that. So it was partly an advertising thing about how great our milk is, but it was also partly he just loved ice cream. Right. His sister died this year. His sister passed away. Yeah, really?
Starting point is 00:15:15 Yeah. She was a double agent, basically. She, to begin with, loved Castro. And then when he took over, and then he continued to sort of go in a direction that was bad. She went, hang on a second. I thought you were going to be good when you got into power, and he wasn't. And so she left Cuba. I can't remember where she went.
Starting point is 00:15:30 and, yeah, became a spy and was really a big part in his downfall. Sorry, he didn't have a downfall. Sorry, sorry. He famously outlasted 10 US presidents. Sorry. She was the worst spy ever. I guess that's where the double agent bit comes in.
Starting point is 00:15:47 She's actually doing a four-keeper. Yeah, I'll make sure I bring him down. Next week, honestly, he's coming down. One of the first facts I remember discovering for QI was in a cigar magazine about Kennedy when he placed the embargo on Cuba, his last move before that was to order a couple of suitcases of Cuban cigars, wasn't it? When you were having sent over to him and then the gates came down. I love that that they would discover that fact in Cuba while someone's reading out of biography of JFK as part of the rolling system.
Starting point is 00:16:17 Yes. He did what? The factory workers. Shall I take another? Yeah, yeah. From the middle. Okay, again, this is the closest to me. So Rebecca from Ottawa, I think not the band, probably the,
Starting point is 00:16:29 Province. We don't, but everyone will find out, I guess. What did Ottawa sing? Final Camp, no, not Final Candand. Something really famous, they say. Sorry, I don't know. Final Canaan was the one they're called Europe. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:42 Ottawa. Ottawa, not Ottawa. They did D-I-S-C-O. D-I-S-O. But unfortunately, slightly different name, so renders that whole bit. So Rebecca, who is a person who lives in Ottawa, an Ottawa, you might say. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:02 Do you think there's a shop in Ottawa? Ottoman, like a furniture shop? Yeah. There should be, shouldn't there? There should be, yeah. Ottawa, Rebecca, writes, thought you might enjoy this new story from Canada about a sad goat. She goes on to put the headline,
Starting point is 00:17:19 which is, mysterious screams on BC Island, British Columbia, I imagine, turn out to be from a sad goat, royal Canadian mounted police say. And yeah, there was basically a lot of sounds off in the bottom of a ravine in British Columbia in Quadra Island. And the Mounties say it didn't come from a person in distress, but rather a sad goat. It sounded apparently a bit like, help, help. Oh, that's great.
Starting point is 00:17:49 Do we know why the goat was so sad? Yes. We, the mama goats babies had been removed and she was calling for them. Oh. Been removed? That is sad. That has taken a sad turn. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:59 Yeah, I'm now, yeah, I'm now siding with her. Could have been just removed temporarily to go to nursery. Yes. Do you think, do you think that's what it was? It's hard to sell. Thankfully, officers confirmed,
Starting point is 00:18:14 oh, was well and nobody, besides the mama goat, was in any kind of distress. Hmm. Huh. Poor old, poor mama goat. I don't know how much we did enjoy that, actually, looking around everyone's faces.
Starting point is 00:18:25 It is de-dressing. It was I. Okay, never mind. It was a nice idea for a joke. I got one here, which is from Iva Cardus. And it's from Chapter 5 of a Very British Murder by Lucy Walsley. And so this is an extract, I think, word for word. During the First World War, trainee soldiers were frequently set the initiative test of hiding and spending the night in Madam to Sword's Chamber of Horrors.
Starting point is 00:18:50 This caused such inconvenience that Madam to Swords was forced officially to ask the war office to stop the practice. How many soldiers would fit? in Madame Tissau's Chamber of Horrors before it became unmanageably... Yeah. Like before it's just a military training ground at that point. What is the Chamber of Horrors? Is it one room? Is it a whole building?
Starting point is 00:19:07 No, it's a sort of labyrinthine basement full of, you know, spooky people. It's relatively small, though. It's tight, isn't it? The corridor. Yeah, yeah. People jump out at you, people grab you. Yeah, I actually really don't like those when actors are jumping out at you. I get why people do, but I just find them really too years.
Starting point is 00:19:24 But you love horror films? Yeah. But it's like a live horror film, isn't it? It's not really. it's just people trying to scare you. That actually, now you say it, that is quite like... I don't like it because I find both of them equally scary, you know. I don't like ghost rides, all things like that,
Starting point is 00:19:41 because I have such high hopes and they're always disappointed because they're never scary enough, except the ghost ride at Alton Towers. I'm absolutely terrified in all of them. I'm shouting to the people behind me in the ghost train. Can you smell my ass? You know, I'm really. Oh, dear.
Starting point is 00:19:57 In the after World War I, came World War II. In World War II, would Kitchener have been? No, not Kitchener. Who was it? An American. Who's an American? General. Generalish.
Starting point is 00:20:12 I can't remember who it was. My big am with Kay. Anyway, an American goes back to France, and he sees that there's a war grave that the locals have been looking after for years and years and years. and what he doesn't have the guts to tell them is actually they'd mistaken it. It wasn't a war grave, it was a toilet. And they'd had this kind of latrine, which all the soldiers had used.
Starting point is 00:20:39 And they'd put something on there to kind of say, this is the latrine. And the locals, when they came back, saw it and thought it was a grain. And for 25 years, they were putting flowers down and leaving, yeah, yeah, yeah. Do they put a headstone down to mark the latrine? Because that would be a weird thing. It wasn't that. It was more like, you know, you put a stick
Starting point is 00:20:59 so the people would know that it was a latrine. Oh, no. And it was in, whoever it was in his memoirs that he went back there 25 years later and this is what they were doing. Why did he go back to the toilet? I want to have one final poo to remind me of the good old days.
Starting point is 00:21:16 Back to the area where he was stationed. What's awful is that if you squatted and took a poo there, you'd probably be arrested for desecration. I'm such a holy moly. And yet you're the only one doing the right thing. Yes.
Starting point is 00:21:28 Which out as they dragged you away in chains. Yeah. That's a great story. Anna, you go. Here's one from Matilda H. In 2018, IKEA released an advert designed to be urinated on. I think we might have said this. Yes, I remember this.
Starting point is 00:21:42 We did do this. It was a pregnancy test. It was. Yes. And it got you a discount on... Your baby. Well, I don't know. Give you a free baby.
Starting point is 00:21:53 You got a crib. discount on the crib. Yes, it's baby furniture, but I mean, not how much furniture a baby needs be on the crib. They don't need a writing desk or a new often. A baby shays long. She's short, yeah. Yeah, it said a positive pregnancy reading would get you a discount of 50%. And according to the agency, getting the technological aspect of the ad took some work. However, they quote in this email, the pregnancy test strip was used as a starting point. That makes sense, which relies on antibodies that bind to the pregnancy hormone, HG, resulting in the colour change.
Starting point is 00:22:27 And did you have to take along the now quite urinary magazine or whatever it was? Yeah, I don't know. Were they waterproof posters that they put up? I guess. It's not a poster. You can't have people going around peeing on the posters. Just as released an advert. Don't know what woman came in.
Starting point is 00:22:40 Yeah, doesn't take a couple of the TV. People drinking in a pissy telly. So many people were electrocuted by this campaign that they had to end it. Oh, that's great. That's a great fact. Here's a good one. I like this. This is from Haley Inslee. Mass-produced tomatoes in cans. They're all familiar with those.
Starting point is 00:23:00 Yeah. O their existence to Galapagos tortoises. Is it a riddle me this? Yeah, that is a riddle me this, isn't it? What is it? Would you like to have a riddle? Is there any chance we can get it? No. Oh.
Starting point is 00:23:10 So, famously on the beagle, all the giant tortoises that were brought back were eaten as food, right? So you've got a giant turtle that's been eaten, but you've not got the turtle, but you've got the shell. Is it possible that any of the fruit and veg that was on the boat was then stored inside the empty shells and it kind of kept them fresh enough that they thought, oh, we should be storing this? That is really good. That's really good. That's very plausible. Can I have another guess assuming that that's not right?
Starting point is 00:23:39 Tomatoes you get in a tin are a very special species. They're not the normal tomatoes you get because they work better in tins. And these species of tomatoes where the seeds went through a turtle and in the turtle's poo and grew out of turtle poop. Do you know, James is actually closest here. Oh, wow. I'm going to give James the point. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:58 So, okay, I'll tell you what it is. It's sort of a bit like that. Okay, when you pick a, oh, and you should all have been saying tortoises throughout. Sorry. Not at this point. When you pick a tomato, that short section of stem that comes with it,
Starting point is 00:24:11 you know, that little spidery bit, is the calyx, and there's a tiny bit of stem breaking off from a joint, which is called the pedicel, right? So for many years, these sharp stubs meant you couldn't put them into automatic harvesting bins
Starting point is 00:24:22 because you'd end up with sharp stubs in the can, right? But an American botanist called Charles Rick, two first names, discovered a tomato plant with jointless pedicels but he couldn't get them to germinate. The only solution he found as the last ditch was to feed the seeds to some tortoises. The seeds then germinated quickly.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Wow. Within a couple of years, all mass-produced tint tomatoes could be machine harvested. Wow. So I think James was amazing. But also Charles Rick, what amazing lateral thing? going the only way I can do this is to feed it through an animal.
Starting point is 00:24:54 He must have tried various different things. Yeah, even different animals before then I would think. Yeah, that's incredible. No, you're right. I got one here from Jeff Houghton. Check out a guy by the name of Francis Wharton, a backwoodsman, I think. British Columbia, who in the... Backwoods rather than backwards, right?
Starting point is 00:25:11 From the backwards, not... He's a little bit. Yeah. British Columbia, who in the 1960s shot a deer, used its teeth to make his own dentures, then use them to eat the deer with its own teeth. Wow. P.M.E. That's incredible, if true.
Starting point is 00:25:29 I've got a question. Yeah. Do deer have canine teeth? You wouldn't have thought so, would you? I would have thought they're mostly molar-based for all the plants they eat. They don't want to eat sort of live prey. But you can sharpen, right? Presumably that's what he was doing.
Starting point is 00:25:41 He'd probably shaved them to size. Yeah. Which animal's teeth would you most like to have in your mouth? Great question. Well, what about the sheep's head fish that we mentioned the other day, which has the teeth of human teeth. I wouldn't want those. I would want...
Starting point is 00:25:54 I mean, shark's teeth were they growing on a conveyor belt? Sorry, just on Anna's point. I guess the question is, are you doing it to improve yourself or has some evil demon come to you saying, you must have another animal's teeth?
Starting point is 00:26:08 In which case, Anna's idea is quite clever because you're like, well, basically, I'm just getting human teeth back. You're tricking the demon though. Yeah. I think the demon will say it can't be the sheep's head fish. Nice tried. That wasn't in the contract.
Starting point is 00:26:20 I want, you know how Blue Whales have that sort of... Baleen? Yeah. No, no. There's huge plates of... Baleen. Baleen, yeah. The system whereby you can only get krill through.
Starting point is 00:26:33 Yeah, because of the... It's called Baleen. Yeah, there we go. I'd go Baleen. Oh, what's that? It's what Blue Whales have. That's a nice idea. Yeah, so then every meal, every dinner party I go to,
Starting point is 00:26:44 it's, oh, the guy who can only eat krills coming. We've got a... Kater hundreds of thousands of krill for him. Got one vegetarian. one vegan and the krill guys and there's nothing that'll please all of them guys Dan I just realised I don't think you have any canines
Starting point is 00:26:59 Oh really? Holy moly Look at that Holy moly So normally you've got two in the middle Two on the sides Then two canines right Where are your third teeth out
Starting point is 00:27:11 They're completely flat Dan whoa You're the newly evolved human Because we don't need our canines anymore Because we have cut three So well done I'll find it's greener hard to bite things these days. Yeah, you can see Anna's canines right there. No, honestly,
Starting point is 00:27:24 this is incredible. So, you know, when you go to the pub and you buy a pack of crisps and often you want to open it up so that everyone can eat it, you might bite into it. For years I could do that and then suddenly, five years ago, I can't bite. I can't get through. Someone's come and shaved your teeth in the night. Well, there you go. We've learned an interesting fact today. And here's another one from Jeff Partica, who opens with an ambition. He says, I may have a fact-sharing problem. Thanks for letting us know, but I'd be remiss if I didn't share at least one. I myself do not hunt, with this fact being one good reason.
Starting point is 00:27:58 In any given year, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Pennsylvania combined to issue over 2.5 million deer hunting licenses, which, if an organised group, would be the largest standing army in the world. Knowing some hunters, though, generally speaking, organized would not be the word I'd use for them. Isn't that the idea of Americans being able to bear arms? Certainly is. In case the government goes rogue, there is automatically a standing army there.
Starting point is 00:28:27 Right. I think that's one of the arguments, isn't it? Yeah, yeah. Or in case the deer finally get their act together and rebel en masse. Yeah, yeah. Claim back their teeth. I haven't done one for a while. Yeah, go, can I read this?
Starting point is 00:28:38 This is from Noah de Kuhneng, from the Netherlands. Today I found out that the timer on your washing machine doesn't just feel wrong. it often is. The timer on your washing machine is an estimation based on the weight of your laundry or, inverted commas, load sense, and it adjusts itself as it goes. It's incredible.
Starting point is 00:28:58 Oh my God. Is it Noah? Noah, you've saved the world for the second time today because that is... My mind is blown. I've wandered this for years, haven't we all? Because how often have we looked at the last minutes of the washing machine,
Starting point is 00:29:14 especially, when you're desperate, It's just before you go to bed and you're desperate to take it out. And apparently, because I did see this one, I looked into it, the last minutes are specifically the ones where the timing messes up quite a lot. Is it because there's less water, so they're less heavy maybe? It's because the cycle, what's happening in the cycle in the last minutes is they're spinning it around. So it is to do with water. It's trying to shed the excess water.
Starting point is 00:29:37 So depending on the density of your wash, the water can be like much greater than the washing machine is estimated at the end. So yes, it'll spin for longer and longer. And that's why they're agonizing. Well, you go in it's eight minutes. You go in eight minutes later, it's saying seven minutes, whatever. It was really annoying. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:50 That's a great fact. Thank you, Dan. Incredible. Yeah. Go to say, Dan has lined up loads of facts before him. Like, he's sort of doing monopoly money collection over here. No, they just happen to be facing me. Oh, I mean, arguably, see all those bits of paper in front of you.
Starting point is 00:30:03 We can all throw stones. Can I read out of a fact? What? That was just about to. I've got 20 lined up to me. Oh, you've done loads. You've done loads. Like, here's one from Dominic Brown.
Starting point is 00:30:12 I don't know, it's a pretty intense host, this guy. It's about how someone started cracking the whip. No, I love this. This is from Dominic Brown. The US Navy has an army which has an Air Force. That's great. I was looking this up to try and find out a bit more about it. It turns out that the US Army also has its own Navy.
Starting point is 00:30:33 They've got, I can't remember, it's called Army Watercraft Systems, and they have got 130 boats or ships or vessels or whatever it is. Right. It must be quite confused. I got one here, Chelsea Pyle. My husband told me this... Sounds like a very expensive house. It does.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Isn't it? My husband told me this interesting fact, and I found an article to explain it. When Mount St. Helens erupted in 1980, the sound of the explosion could be heard as far away as Canada. So we kind of all know that, right? Like, it sort of went... Where's Mounts and Helen? They're quite near Canada, I thought. I mean, it is, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:31:06 It's in the north-west. Of the USA? Yeah. Oh, okay. Okay. It's in Washington. Okay. Oh, that's next door.
Starting point is 00:31:14 There's still a distance, though, right? The point of the next sentence... Several hundred miles away that you can hear this eruption. Yeah, right. There you go. The sound of the explosion could be heard as far away as Canada. But to those closest to the epicenter, it made no sound at all. Oh, I see.
Starting point is 00:31:28 What? That's pretty amazing. Is this like a trick because they were underwater or something? How is that possible? They were in a mud crab vehicle setting a world record. Is that... How? Is it like being in the eye of a storm, I guess?
Starting point is 00:31:42 so right yeah oh no sorry i was just saying yes is it like that i wasn't saying yes it is um because yeah because it's weird because sound i don't feel like sound acts like the eye of a storm i guess which is where it's whirling around you it's not like james talks and if i'm sounding right in front of him i can't hear it but if i stepped at the side and now james is miming at me for the listeners at home that's a really good video okay that was great um if fan sound gets too loud it creates a shockwave rather than a sound wave. Oh, is that it? Maybe it's that.
Starting point is 00:32:18 That's very good. Do you not have the reason? No, I mean, I'm clicking the link here with my finger on this bit of paper, but it's not opening. Sorry, that's my fluff. I should have, uh... Oh, dear. Someone else, we do you know? This is from Hannah Killen or Kylin?
Starting point is 00:32:32 Kylan, I think. Kylan, okay. This is from Hannah Kylan. During the World Wars, spies mainly women were discovered because what would have given them away? So they trained in language, they trained in culture and manner. What would have given them away? Specifically, something specifically female? You know what?
Starting point is 00:32:50 I thought it was going to be at first. There was a woman who was arrested because they had some weird writing on their buttocks. And what had happened was they'd sat on a train and they were worried about the dirty seats. So I'd put some newspaper underneath their bum. And then the print had gone onto their bum cheeks. And it had been like backwards writing. So they didn't really know what it said. So they assume that she'd been dispatched into the country
Starting point is 00:33:12 with a secret message for the resistance. Exactly. Written on her bum. And it just said, can you smell my ass? Was it they ordered pints instead? And in Germany, you don't order pints. No, I guess, like, famous examples are a spy once was outed when she was giving birth,
Starting point is 00:33:30 and she started swearing in her actual language, that kind of stuff. No, we talked about the spies, the German spies, who were caught in the UK, because didn't they have a load of, was it sausages in the back? And then the French spies were given away because they smelled of garlic or something. Do you remember that? No, it's too crude.
Starting point is 00:33:48 Yeah, there was an Australian spy who was throwing a boomerang. There was a Mexican spy with a big sombrero. It's so juby. There was one amazing story where a guy they thought he was a spy and they just couldn't get him. They kept trying to interrogating, doing all the tricks to get him to do.
Starting point is 00:34:02 And he was just flawless. And then supposedly one day when crossing a road, one of the people who was trying to out him was behind him and went, watch out a car! and he looked the wrong way. Brilliant. But like you need a lot of witnesses.
Starting point is 00:34:14 Like how does that hold off in court? Yeah. Everything else is. Anyway, the answer here is that they knitted wrong. So this is from a book by Debbie Stoller called Stitch and Bitch. And the idea is that Americans knit in a very cumbersome, time-consuming way. These are Hannah's words. Feels like, yes.
Starting point is 00:34:34 Where they let go of the yarn and then loop it around the needle, whereas Europeans never let go of the yarn. the yarn and can make the stitches much faster. So they would be outed for their knitting style. So this is American spies in France, presumably, or in Germany or whatever. Wow. Great fact. Because in this thing, people used to knit codes in various wars, didn't they?
Starting point is 00:34:54 Like Morse code into knitting, you'd have specific lumps in your knitware. I don't know how much it was done and how much there was a lot of fear mongering around. Oh my God, is that person wearing a jumper actually transmitting Morse code to their friend? But you could definitely knit code into stuff. Remember that also that where they used to shave people's heads and tattoo them? Yes. This is back in like, the agent. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:16 And your hair would grow back. Exactly. There's a problem with that and with the pregnancy one. Yeah. Is you have to wait quite a long time between setting it up and getting the pay off. The message will be out of date by the time. You would think so. You would think so.
Starting point is 00:35:30 Wait, what was pregnancy one? Well, like, for instance, the idea that Dan mentioned which was, when a woman gives birth, she'll swear in her own language. Sorry, yes. If you weren't sure someone. was an agent and you had to wait for them to get pregnant and then wake nine months and then yes yeah yeah and how are you going to impregnate them as well probably the normal way she got pregnant in a peculiarly British way all right this is from Jeremy at
Starting point is 00:36:05 Karekhan and he says my hometown Rochester New York forgot it had a nuclear reactor and it found out when they're about to tear it down. The wrecking ball has just swung back. I've just thought of something. And there's some more detail on this, and it's amazing, actually. I'll just read it to you. So Kodak may be a sinking ship, Kodak the company, a humorously written piece here,
Starting point is 00:36:33 but apparently it's a nuclear sinking ship. For more than 30 years, the company kept a small reactor running in its basement in Rochester, and it was used for research. and powered by 3.5 pounds of uranium. Kodak, the... I think the camera... The camera people.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Had their own nuclear? Believe so. That's amazing. And it's the kind they make bombs from. Apparently, they took precautions. The reactor was locked away in a concrete bunker. It never leaked. And I'm just going to skip through and try to find out why Kodak would keep a nuclear reactor.
Starting point is 00:37:06 Was that originally what photo bombing was? It was much more dangerous, yeah. So good. So, start. Starting decades ago, Kodak had an interest in neutrons, subatomic particles that can be used to determine the makeup of a given material or create an image of it without damaging it. Okay, so you can fire neutrons at something and get an image of it. And to do that, you need to create a nuclear reactor in order to generate a bunch of neutrons, I guess. Wow.
Starting point is 00:37:32 How else are you going to do it? Can I do one? Yeah. Elizabeth Royce writes, there's a bridge in West Virginia, which was only fixed after the Soviet Union intervened. this is great so I sort of looked up what was going on here and basically it was an article about it on the Blue Ridge Country website
Starting point is 00:37:48 it's called Vulcan this place this tiny town very few people living there they had no safe way to drive out of town because there was a bridge that collapsed in 1974 the only way you could get in and out was to drive up the Kentucky side of the tug which I guess is the river and walk across
Starting point is 00:38:03 a narrow swinging bridge children had to crawl under parked railroad cars at the railroad's bridge to get to school one child lost a leg doing that So just like horrible situation and, you know, just a nightmare. They can't get in and out of town. And this guy called John Robinette, who was the self-appointed mayor, apparently, wrote to the Soviet embassy in 1977 in Washington, D.C., describing Vulcan's plight and requesting foreign aid for a bridge.
Starting point is 00:38:27 And the Soviets dispatched a journalist who reported back saying, yes, of course we'll fund your bridge. If America can't do this, we will pay for it. Nice. Because of the PR, PR coup. Within hours of that journalist visiting. word came down from the governor saying, yeah, we'll build a bridge, we'll build a bridge. And there we go. They kept the promise,
Starting point is 00:38:46 and eventually the bridge was delivered. According to news reports, vodka residents celebrated with illegally imported Russian vodka. Nice. The American flag hung high. That's a good story. Mia Tappin says, a lone word is a word borrowed from another language.
Starting point is 00:39:00 A calque is a direct translation of one word into another language. See, subtle difference. Remember that. The word calc, and bear in mind my misspelling this, C.A. L-Q-U-E. The word calque is an example of a loan word
Starting point is 00:39:14 because it comes from the French word calc and the word loan word is an example of a calc because it's directly translated from German's lean word meaning loan word. That's super. So good. I love that.
Starting point is 00:39:28 Yeah, that's amazing. Here's a fun one. This is from Dan Maynard. Hey, I have a fun fact about Ozzy Osbourne. I tried sending it to James on Instagram but not sure if he'll see it. Sorry, that's not the fact. I don't really know how Instagram works, I'll be honest. I am on it. No such thing as James Harkin.
Starting point is 00:39:46 He is, I can prove that because I watch him post stuff from At Shriverland. Jesus, gosh. The self-plugging is off the chasmus. Anna, anything you want to? I've got nothing, thanks. Well, Dan Wright. If you don't already know the story, in 1972, Black Sabbath were recording volume four in a mansion in Bel Air.
Starting point is 00:40:02 Ozzy went and adjusted the thermostat and continued on with the day. next thing the cops turn up sirens blaring and here everyone thinks it's a drug raid in the house and proceeded to flush away and snort as many drugs as possible it turns out Ozzie had not adjusted the thermostat he had in fact hit the emergency call button and alerted the local police and they were just there to check if everything was okay we're fine we're fine we're fine we're
Starting point is 00:40:28 I suppose there's no crime there's no criminal offense of having taken drugs even like five minutes ago that's really interesting and I think no one's ever properly tried that in court because I think that is in theory that is true but it's difficult to say that something's never been in your possession if you've taken it, especially as it's in your body.
Starting point is 00:40:46 But if you've taken every bit of it and it's just fizzing around your nervous system, is that still possession? Possession is illegal and if it's in your stomach, arguably you're possessing it. And it's very difficult to say it's in my stomach but at no stage did I ever possess it. This is quite a fun one. Chuck Norris wants helped deliver a baby on a helicopter? No, he didn't.
Starting point is 00:41:06 This is from James Wetter. It happened in 2013. There was a woman in, you know, The Isles of Silly? Yes. When you're pregnant and you're about to give birth, you go to the mainland. Yeah. But she went into, she went into Labor and then gave birth in midair on the helicopter. Okay.
Starting point is 00:41:23 And Chuck Norris happened to be on that helicopter flight? On board the helicopter was Lieutenant Commander Chuck Norris, who was the observer on board of the helicopter. Come on. And, yeah, the baby. was born mid-air and they took off with seven passengers on board and landed with eight. It's so cool. And then in 2022 it happened again.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Chuck Norris again? No, don't think so. I'm not down. Here's one for you, Andy. If you're in a certain town in Switzerland, whose name escapes me, once a year you can get a helicopter ride for
Starting point is 00:41:59 six euros 50. Riddle me this. Normally, of course, it would cost you a lot of money to Right, right, okay. And where is it again? It's in Switzerland somewhere. And is this for me because I'm cheap? No, no, it's because you like infrastructure. Oh.
Starting point is 00:42:14 And, you know, vehicles and stuff like that. So are you hitching a lift on... I've given too much away. You hitching a lift because it's flying under a... What do I like? To a funicular railway. It's made of moss and everyone is refusing to get in it. So price is a vote.
Starting point is 00:42:28 Think finicular's, that's a link here. Okay. So rather than a finicular helicopter whereby it's attached to a tower and the rotors provide the power to lift it rather than... But you're going by helicopter. I've got it. I think I've got it. Is it like a rail replacement bus service
Starting point is 00:42:45 except it's a finicular replacement helicopter? Exactly. And they're not allowed to charge more than the funicular? Precisely. So once a year they have to put their finicular into maintenance but they still need to get to their village and so the government puts on a rail replacement helicopter and of course they can only charge you
Starting point is 00:43:04 the amount that you would charge if it was a train. That is so incredible. I would just wait at the bottom. No, thank you. I don't need to get home. I'll just wait for the funicular to be back in service, please. There's a fact I said ages ago, and when I say fact, it's something I said out loud
Starting point is 00:43:20 that I'd love to confirm, and I still haven't confirmed it. And I promise I've been looking, which is that there was a story that Chuck Norris, the actual Chuck Norris actor, as opposed to the helicopter pilot. All his movies are, arguably, I think a bit B-movie-ish, not very good. You'd watch it for the fighting, right?
Starting point is 00:43:36 He's got kids. He doesn't want his kids to watch his movies because it has fighting. So the story is that Chuck Norris edits out the fighting scenes from his movies and then lets his kids just watch the shitty extra bits. That's a whole movie. That's so funny. Chuck Norris.
Starting point is 00:43:52 But I read it in an interview with him once and I can't find it anywhere. So I'm still looking. I'm still on the hunt. Wow. That's a great fact. This is a good one from Dylan Difford. in May 2005, the British Department of Trade and Industry
Starting point is 00:44:06 was briefly renamed the Department of Productivity, Energy and Industry but the name was reverted after one week when it was suggested that this made Minister Alan Johnson, if you remember him, the Productivity Energy and Industry Secretary or penis. I can't imagine Mr Johnson had any fun of them. No, indeed. Very good.
Starting point is 00:44:29 I think this is the shortest one we've got. from Stuart Marsh. The company that makes square fire extinguishers is called Oval. What? I've never seen a square fire extinguisher. I think I looked it up when that fact came into the inbox and it's... What an odd thing to have. They're real.
Starting point is 00:44:47 They're real. Do we know why? Okay, here's an idea. You put them on a ship and then they won't roll away. Yeah. Brilliant. Very good. They fall over. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:58 Nice. That is the only reason I can possibly think of. easier to stack in the warehouse. Yeah. If I was shopping for a square fire extinguisher and I was a ship captain, I wouldn't open up the website that was oval extinguishes.com. This is from Amy Apple and apparently was also sent in by John Turbo. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:21 Turbo is my nickname when I was younger. It was. And John's your brother's name. So is there some sort of... The fact is that a few. years ago, Nicholas Faisal, a biology at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland and his colleagues, developed a fascination with the penises of seretine bats, which is a species found in woodlands and the attics of old buildings. Seratine bats sport abnormally long penises with wide,
Starting point is 00:45:48 heart-shaped heads. When erect, the members are around seven times longer than the female's vagina, and their bulbous heads are seven times wider than the vaginal opening. God, it's a lot of detail, isn't it? Anyway, Faisal wondered, as you would, how does this work? How can they use that for copulation? Long and short of it, as it were. The long and white.
Starting point is 00:46:10 Basically, they hang upside down. The male climbs onto the female's back and gets her neck, as bats do. But then he uses his erect penis to push the female's tail membrane to the side, locates a vulva, and then he just puts his penis on her vagina and copulate there.
Starting point is 00:46:28 So it's more of a... It's more like a cloacal kiss. It's a cloacal kiss. Yes, it's a nice way of putting it. God, they do have massive penises, bats. Do you remember I showed you a photo? I got sent... No.
Starting point is 00:46:41 I got sent a picture by Colonel John Blashford-Snell when he was out on his expedition. He said, look at this big bat, and I opened it. It was a bat that strung up with this giant flopping penis. It was huge. It was huge. Wow. It's still, like, burnt.
Starting point is 00:46:55 in my memory is a terrifying image. Holy dick pick, bad man. Okay, that's it. That's all of your facts. Thank you very much for listening. And thank you for sending them in. If you would like to get in contact with us about the things that you have said
Starting point is 00:47:16 over the course of this podcast via us your mouthpieces, you can get in contact with us online. I'm at Andrew Hunter-Rem, James. I'm on threads at no such thing as James Harkin, but I haven't. done any threading.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Okay. Exciting. No threads. I'm on Instagram on at Shreiberland. And Anna, if people want to contact us, yes, you can contact
Starting point is 00:47:39 the podcast by going to at no such thing on Twitter or by emailing podcast at qI.com. That's right. Or you can go to No Such Thing as a Fish.com
Starting point is 00:47:47 where we have lots of stuff. We have merch. We have various a few other endeavors that we're up to. We also have a portal there to Clubfish, the exclusive
Starting point is 00:47:57 members lounge. which is a really fun place to be, isn't that right, guys? It sure is. If you liked what you just heard for the last 40 minutes or so, every month or so we do a drop as a line, which is of a similar bent. Yeah, yeah. There's bonus stuff.
Starting point is 00:48:14 There are ad-free episodes. There's a thriving fan community called Discord. It's on a thing called Discord. I know what Discord is. Don't write in. It's the place where you would probably find out first about new gigs that we're doing. There's some tempting shmachmish. matter on display at Clubfish. So go to no such things of fish.com. Thanks very much. We'll see you
Starting point is 00:48:33 next time. Goodbye.

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