No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As An Interesting Riddle
Episode Date: July 13, 2018Live from the Sydney Opera House, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss BBC stock orgies, being buried with a chicken and why you might cycle the Olympic marathon. ...
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Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from the Sydney Opera House.
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, Andy.
My fact is that the BBC has sound effects including indisposed chicken, more or less normal chicken, standard orgy, and comedy orgy.
Now, it would be very remiss if we want to play for you some of these tonight.
Have you got the clips?
I've got clips all right.
So, yeah, they've got a sound off archive of 16,000 effects.
And so here's indispoised chicken.
see playing out sitcoms where
enter indisposed chicken
an indisposed to do
what? I don't know
it's sounding pretty distressed though
so there's also
no we've got standard orgy here just as
a baseline
I think I can hear a few chickens in that
yeah
there's definitely a cock and bill
somewhere
terrible
and here because I know we all want to hear it is comedy orgy
The BBC, ladies and gentlemen
And the amazing thing is
They've made this open to the public
This whole archive, 16,000 effects
And you can download them
And for non-commercial reasons, you can use them
And it's a fantastic archive
It's got such funny stuff
Just on those orgy clips,
the legend at the BBC
Is that they were recorded by a studio manager
In the 1970s
That sounds about right now in the BBC
And it was colleagues during their London
He'd say, come on, you come and have to make some orgy sounds during a lunch break.
Is that right?
Supposedly so, yeah.
God, lunch breaks are more fun in the olden day.
It's very cool, though.
So these are all now free to use for anyone,
hence the reason we're allowed to do that right here right now.
I think you asked special permission that you know.
I did ask special permission, yeah.
In case, you know, we had wanted to use thirsty budgerie gars in shed
or two Siamese cats, one coughing occasionally.
And if you want to play a fight sound effect,
they've got three people brawling,
they've got six people brawling,
and if those aren't enough,
you can do 36 people brawling.
Wow.
Yeah, I spent a long time reading this list.
They have riot in Belfast,
don't they? Riot in Belfast with breaking glass,
rubber bullets, distant cries and chants.
And then they also have riot in Belfast,
more subdued.
We're going to go for another take on the riot, guys.
Could you just keep it down a bit this time, please?
They're so specific though
They've like so they've got Belgian post office brackets busy
I think
Which is
If you want a French post office brackets busy
Do you think that's a disaster
They've only got the Belgian one
There's nothing we can do
Well some it's a really weird mix of things that were recorded specially
Like for example comedy orgy
Orr things that are recording history
So they've got an air raid on Battersea from 1940
During the Battle of Britain
That obviously is not going to happen again
So it's very simple
going to have a comedy air raid on Battersea.
Um,
um,
but doing.
Um,
it's amazing,
isn't it?
When you look into the,
the stories behind
where sounds come from,
as you said,
they were at lunch break and they would come and do a comedy orgy.
Um,
the,
so there's that famous one,
I think it's quite famous,
that in Jurassic Park,
the sound of the
velociraptors
barking,
that's a,
was,
um,
turtles having sex.
That's a,
I don't know if you know that, but you can see footage,
and there's a lot of it online of turtles having sex,
which I highly recommend.
And as they're going at it, there's sort of, there's this like,
ah, kind of, kind of noise.
And that's genuinely what they sampled for the...
How did that turtle get on stage? Where is it?
It's a bit... I didn't even do it right.
It's such a lovely tone.
But I think you've got to be in the mood, you know.
But so the T-Rex is in Jurassic Park.
When you see a T-Rex, it's a mixture of a bunch of different animal sounds.
So the voice itself, for the breathing, they use the sound of a whale.
They use lions, alligators, and tigers for the low frequency of the roaring that was going on.
But for the heavy breathing, the sort of the T-Rex, that's a koala.
No.
An Aussie, yeah, made it into Jurassic Park.
An Aussie legend.
This was so weird today, by the way.
So I was thinking about this fact
and the fact I needed to do some research for it
on the walk to the Sydney Opera House.
And I was thinking about Foley artists.
So this is obviously about Foley artists,
and it's Jack Foley,
the guy who kind of invented sound effects
and made a lot of the sound effects from our films.
And I walked past a street called Foley Street.
As I was thinking about Foley artists, isn't that insane?
That's just a personal story.
And what a story
Thank you
That was such a...
I didn't do my homework
But woe do I have an excuse
I was doing some reading on Foley
No he used to
So he is the sound of the walk
Of a lot of your favourite actors
If you're born in the 1940s actually
But so he's the sound of the walks
Of Lawrence Olivier
Of James Cagney of Marlon Brando
Because he used to watch these people walk
because you couldn't get the sounds recorded
sort of live
because the cameras weren't recording that close up
and he would watch them really carefully
and imitate their walks
and then the sound of his feet hitting the ground
were that.
And they still do that today in nature documentaries a lot.
So actually while I was on this walk
I was listening to an episode of 99% Invisible podcast
and very good show.
And there was a guy interviewed Richard Hinton
who does the sound effects for animals
in a lot of nature documentaries
And he says for walking animals, you always use your hands
because you have much more control over your hands.
And so if you're a lion, then you sort of do it quite lightly.
And then if you're an elephant...
It's amazing.
Yeah, you're a turtle having sex.
Yeah, it's still in the hands.
So speaking of walking, Awesome Wells,
he wanted a specific sound of people walking on sand.
So he had an entire truckload of sand
dumped onto the studio floor for people to walk on.
Unfortunately, it just dampened it and you couldn't hear anything.
Oh, no.
And they used to get amazing things that they were asked,
so they were asked to do the sounds of snowflakes falling on snow,
or the sound of a nude woman sitting on a marble bench.
Was that necessary?
It's all in the hands.
This is amazing.
Bacon sizzling in a pan sounds identical to rain falling.
Wow.
No, you don't think it does, but I did a video on the internet,
and I was tricked two times out of four,
which is exactly no better than average.
It's incredible.
You think you know and you don't.
Really?
Yeah.
I mean, we're full of anecdotes tonight, aren't we?
Do you know the Big Boulder in Indiana Jones,
the one that rolls after India at the beginning of the first film?
The noise of that is a Honda Civic set in neutral
going down a gravel road on a very slight slope.
But it works. It's amazing how your ears can be tricked.
In an fight club, all of the punches are the smacking of slabs of meat with pigs' feet.
But David Fincher thought that this sounded exactly right,
but he was another one who took it really seriously.
In fact, in one of the things in Fight Club,
he asked a stuntman to fall down the stairs 12 times for one scene,
and then he used the first take.
After the first take, he was using the first take,
and the other 11 were just for fun.
I paid for an hour.
We're going to have to move on fairly soonish to the next fact.
All my research is about orgies.
Move us on.
Okay, on the Wikipedia for Orgies, they have a section on Roman Orgies,
and apparently this did happen.
It was an ecstatic form of worship that some cults had.
Sounds alright, actually.
It involved drinking wine.
It doesn't seem to be much sex involved, in fairness.
It was involved drinking wine and dancing.
Oh, it sounds okay.
As well as eating raw meat, which is not quite as good,
and self-castration, which is much less good.
Of course, the self-castration does provide fodder for the raw meat,
so it's two words one stone, isn't it?
It is time for fact number two,
and that is Chisinski.
My fact this week is that
in the first Olympic marathon in 1896,
the same stopwatch was used at the start and finish line,
so it had to be carried from one to the other
ahead of the runners by bicycle.
That's very cool.
This is...
So this is at the first model Olympics, obviously, in Greece.
And, yeah, it was held by a judge
to stopwatch.
It was started by this judge who clicked it,
shoved it in the hand of a bicycle,
and the cyclist had to ride along in foul weather.
It was really awful weather that day,
and the road was very rough,
and then cycle really fast at the finish line
so that the same stopwatch could be there.
Also, presumably cycle without accidentally pressing
any of the buttons on the stopwatch
during the process of cycling.
But you could just have given it to the guy in front
and said,
if anyone overtakes you,
I'll chuck it over, yeah.
Like kind of a relay.
Exactly.
That's a great idea.
I was thinking you could do it by car, but then, obviously not back then.
And actually probably not now, certainly at the London Marathon,
because the average speed in central London at the moment for cars is 7.6 miles an hour,
whereas the average speed for runners in the marathon is 12 miles an hour.
In fairness, the London Marathon is on a Sunday, so the traffic won't be so bad.
That's true.
But bad news, they close all the roads because the marathon's on.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
That was an issue.
This was, this was, the first modern Olympics.
It was very exciting.
This marathon was emulating the great marathon of history that they wanted to do.
Of history.
Of history.
You could at least narrow it down to the country.
Not Australia.
So, but what was very exciting about it, I think, particularly for the room that we're in,
is that entering that Olympics that year,
there was an Australian team,
and it was the very first Olympics, yeah,
consisted of one person.
He was a guy called Edwin Flack,
and he actually ran in this marathon.
Was quite far at the front at one point,
but then he, unfortunately, had never run that far before,
and got...
So while he was doing really well,
he suddenly got really delirious, collapsed down,
and one of the spectators came up to help him,
got him up and then Edwin Flack punched him.
The first, yeah, punching of a spectator by an Aussie or any country.
He was, sorry, just on Edwin Flack.
He was one of, I think there were 17 people running and 13 were Greek.
And so he was one of the remainder that were foreigners.
And none of them knew how to long distance run.
And so they all started out ahead.
And all the Greeks had had lots of practice.
And so they all started out behind and they all thought they were winning.
And when Flack started winning, I think he overtook a French guy.
And again, the cyclist was crucial because the cyclist cycled to the finish line to the big stadium and said,
the Aussies winning, the Aussies winning.
And then they were all devastated because they were all Greeks.
And that's what they thought, because there was no way of relaying this information except to have a bloody cyclist there who'd already peddled the stopwatch up to the front line.
So, yeah, they really thought he was going to win.
But the guy who was eventually won by a Greek.
Yes.
So the main medical check for this race was being tapped on the next.
by a doctor and then given two beers.
That was it.
So everyone was a couple of beers in by the time they started.
So the guy who eventually won...
This explains why the Australian did so well.
The guy who eventually won halfway through,
he bumped into his stepfather who was waiting along the route at a little inn,
who gave him some wine.
And then he was getting really tired, this guy.
And he asked someone who was accompanying him for water.
He said, please, have you got any water?
So he was given cognac instead.
So he finished the race completely half cut.
I think he spat out the cognac in disgust.
So the next Olympics, which was in 1900,
the course markings were so poor in the marathon
that confused athletes could be seen
running randomly through the streets of central Paris.
And the absolute worst thing about it for me
is that the winner was a guy called Michel Teatro of France,
but in second place was a guy called
Emil Champion
and in third place was Ernst
Fast.
Oh.
So sad.
It's very sad.
It was really
Teatro's responsibility
to give that game away, wasn't it?
I mean...
Or at least change his name.
Yeah.
To winner or something.
Well, in 1904,
the marathon competitor
who finished 9th,
he should have done better
but he was chased
a mile off course by dogs.
Was that 1904?
Yeah.
Okay. In that same race
there was a Cuban postman
called Andarin Carval
and he arrived at the last minute
and he'd lost all of his money in New Orleans
so he had to hitchhike to St. Louis
and he'd hardly eaten anything
so he stopped off at an orchard on route
to have a snack on some apples
which turned out to be rotten
and so despite having strong stomach cramps
throughout the whole of the race
he ended up finishing fourth.
Wow! I like this
this is many years later
there was a marathon runner called Kanakuri
who he started the marathon
and then he went missing.
And no one ever saw him again.
And yeah, they just lost...
He was so fast.
Yeah. Yeah.
He was missing.
And then it turned out that what happened is
that he lost consciousness
and he was rescued by a family
on the side of the track.
They brought him back to a house.
He regained consciousness later
and was nursed to health
but was so embarrassed about it
he didn't tell anyone.
And so he was listed as missing
by Swedish authorities for over 50 years.
before he finally admitted that that's what happened,
that he had done it.
He should have just sneak back into the end
of one of the marathons they were doing.
Well, well, he did.
You're not going to tell me he did that.
He went back on the 55th anniversary
of the 1912 games to finish the race,
and he holds the longest ever official marathon time
of 54 years, eight months,
six days, five hours, 32 minutes, and 20.3 seconds.
I've got a fact about a marathon,
which I don't know if you guys have heard of.
This is called the Barclay Marathon.
This is the toughest marathon.
Have you guys done it?
Has anyone competed?
No.
No, exactly.
Exactly.
I think you're tough enough.
Oh my goodness, guys.
Okay, get this.
It's in Tennessee.
You have to do five, 20-mile loops all over a mountain, okay?
And you have to finish within 60 hours.
So it's very hard.
You have to do the equivalent of running up and down Mount Everest twice.
it only costs $1.60 to enter.
Thousands of people have entered since it was started.
Sorry.
And a t-shirt?
You have to play last.
It's...
Or an organizer, whatever piece.
Yes.
You're absolutely bang on, but it's more efficient if I do it.
No, you're right, you're right, you're right.
The guy who set it up, he requests that you bring him t-shirts
because he doesn't like shopping for clothes.
So it might be socks or t-shirts, whatever.
You have to get in, you have to email a secret email address
on the right minute at the right day
with an essay titled, Why I Should Be Allowed to Run in the Barclay.
There's no path, so they leave 13 books trailed around the course,
and as you go around, you have to take a page from each book
to finish each loop.
You have to sign a disclaimer saying,
if I'm stupid enough to attempt the Barclay,
I deserve to be held responsible for any result of that attempt,
be it financial, physical, mental, or anything else.
you don't get a medal, by the way, if you finish.
It's horrific.
Do you get a T-shirt?
You get nothing.
It started in 1986.
Nobody finished it until 1995.
Wow.
So, I'm just back on timers.
In the 2012 Olympics in London,
they invented a timer which could measure accuracy
to a millionth of a second.
But no one really figured out what to do with it.
Because obviously,
such a small amount of time.
In that amount of time,
Usain Bolt can travel
0.0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,01 metres,
which is about the size of a bacteria.
Yeah, so more accurate
timing devices are useless at Olympics,
and this is a serious problem.
People keep having ties,
because you only measure them
to 100th of a second,
and after that it's kind of unfair,
so I think there have been a lot of ties
in the swimming since 1984,
because in
1972 there was a tie
when they measured it to hundreds
of a second
so they went to thousands
and one guy beat the other
by two thousandths of a second
which is much much fast
in the blink of an eye
and the thickness of coat
on the swimming pool
could easily massively override that
by a long long way
and so they realized it was completely unfair
so they just have loads of ties these days
in 2012 there was one where it went down
to a coin toss or a runoff
and then one of them just seeded to the other
swimming.
That was a sprinting race.
We're just going to have to wait for this to freeze.
Could you let your fingernails grow enough
until you would win that race?
Yeah, that's a really good.
I think if your fingers were 50 metres long,
you could just go.
I'd bet you'd have bigger problems, wouldn't you?
Okay, it is time for fact number three,
and that is James.
Okay, my fact is swimming.
is that in first century Denmark, if you were really rich, you were buried with a chicken.
If you were really, really rich, you were buried with a goose.
So this is a thing that happened. Basically, it was the Romans, had started to get up to there in Scandinavia,
and goosees were extremely rare.
I think we say geese, just FYI.
And I'm the editor of this podcast, and...
And geese were really rare.
And also geese, they represented the goddess Juno,
and they found that not only have these people who are buried with chicken and geese,
they're obviously kind of high status because they have loads of other Roman goods as well.
So yeah, that's a thing that happened.
Just wondering, you said that some people were buried with a chicken.
Do we have any idea what it might sound like if the chicken was, say, indisposed before...
I'm a feeling of glue.
thought of mine.
On being buried with things,
there are ancient Peruvian shark fisherman graves
which have been excavated recently
and it turns out that they were buried with extra legs.
What? Sorry?
What?
Are we sure that they just didn't have extra legs?
I suppose we're not 100% sure.
They had extra legs buried with them
so two extra legs were left in one grave.
I'm pretty sure this guy.
Has anyone guessed why that might have been the case?
Or whose legs they were?
I think they were the legs of, I suppose,
other Peruvian shark fishermen
who hadn't had quite as long and happier career
as the main guys in the grave.
Are there a lot of legless torsos buried nearby?
I don't think we've found any yet.
Again, this is research in its early stages, so...
I really like that in America,
there were incidences of corpses being stolen
for scientific purposes.
from graveyards during the US Civil War times by quite a lot.
So someone invented a coffin torpedo.
And yeah, so the coffin torpedo was if you were digging a grave,
it would lob, it would blow up, basically,
from the inside of the coffin when you were trying to steal the body
and kill the person who was trying to steal you.
What?
Or steal the person, yeah.
And then there was one that was put on top of the coffin as well,
so it didn't harm the actual interior of the coffin as well.
And that was a big thing.
They used to do things like put cages on top of graves
to make sure that no one could steal.
There was also, and this sounds really weird to me,
the graveyards used to at one point
have at the bottom of the, so you have the tombstone
and right at the bottom, there would be a shotgun just pointed up.
And if anyone came, and you might just be visiting.
So I don't know how it worked, but you'd be killed.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah, that is harsh.
You might just want to say one last goodbye.
Yeah.
Although if it's a family grave, just plop them in, I guess.
This is, so that would go down extremely badly in Madagascar, where they have a tradition of disinterring the dead every few years.
So this is this, I think, really cool Malagasy tradition.
It's in the Famadihana people.
And it's called the Turning of Bones.
It happens every five to seven years.
And you go to where your ancestors are buried or where your grandma's buried.
dig them up. You can change their clothes
because they've been wearing the same clothes for ages
and you then
walk them around the village, sort of give them a tour
of the village. Show them what you're
not between your shoulders pretending they're still
fine. Yeah, yeah, that's exactly what you do.
You walk them around here, you go, oh look there's a co-op
there, didn't used to be there, that kind of thing.
You won't remember that.
They dance with them, so
they dance around the graveyard within the cemetery.
They hold the bodies above their heads, and then they spray them
with perfume and they bathe them in wine.
and they often rearrange the bodies
into more human shapes
when sometimes time has taken its toll
and they just have, it's a really fun
banquet really with the dead
if you're into that kind of thing.
So in China
it is illegal to be buried with a picture of a
supergirl.
A supergirl?
I will come to that. Thank you.
So I think
people mostly
probably know that in China they do this thing
where they have like paper offerings.
So they might put bits of fake money
in your tomb or whatever
and it's like things that you loved in life
or whatever. I mean that would be so annoying
in the afterlife if you got to the counter
and you wanted to buy all your stuff at the afterlife
and they were like, this is all fake sir.
I'm sorry. Yeah, but...
This is all counterfeit.
If you're a fan of playing Monopoly
in the afterlife, that stuff will be very handy.
You can't bring your own fake money
to a monopoly board.
Oh, yeah. I've got a new currency.
I'd just like to pop in.
That's rules, mate.
I want a lot of games with that extra stash.
The Murray Millions.
I'll take everything.
So, as well as
they do have this kind of money, but they banned
the practice of vulgar offerings.
So that's such things as
luxury villas, sedan cars,
Viagra, you're not allowed to,
and then simulated models
of Supergirls. And that is based
on the hit TV contest,
Mongolian cow yogurt,
Supergirl.
Please don't give away the ending of the latest series
because I'm only halfway through.
I've actually heard of Supergirl
now that I think about it. That was the TV show.
It's kind of like X Factor where it's all about singing.
Yeah, and I think they said
this is what I read in a newspaper, but I've not
double-checked to verify it.
And it was a big British tabloid.
It said that in China, so many
people voted for the winner of the first series of
Supergirl that if you took all those votes,
applied it to every other voting that has happened
on planet Earth, it is the biggest collection
of single votes for one thing that
the Earth has ever witnessed.
More than any election, more than anything else.
Because I don't really have elections there.
Dan, how dare you?
The elections in China are free and fair
and extremely
concentrated on a single result.
Sorry, just on China quickly as well.
Not so much burials, but funerals.
Just very recently, the Chinese Ministry
of culture have announced that they're planning to eliminate strippers from going to funerals.
And this is a custom that happens in China and Taiwan, whereby they like to make it a big party.
And again, go online and you can see this.
And dignitaries will have this.
It will be girls on the top of cars pole dancing and stripping.
It's a big thing.
In some cases, there will be 50 car processions, all of which will have a pole dancing
stripper on top of it.
Yeah, and they're trying to get that out.
Although you should specify that strippers aren't not allowed to go to funerals.
It's not like if your job happens to be a stripper, but your mom dies, you're not allowed to attend a funeral.
You're just not supposed to strip assing.
You just can't take your clothes off, yeah.
Yeah.
But that's the thing that genuinely happens.
What is the purpose of it?
It's just a celebration thing, and I think they tied it in with...
With the fake money, where you put it in the...
I was looking at animals being buried.
Because pets being buried is more and more of a talked about and rich.
written about thing and pets, cemeteries and stuff, and people really want to be buried with their pets now.
And there are actually a couple of really bizarre cases where people who are dying request that their pets be put down so that they can be buried together.
What?
Yeah, yeah, an American and his Yorkshire Terrier.
Look it up.
So, it's very weird.
But there's this debate in the US.
So in New York, for instance, you are now allowed to bury animal remains in human cemeteries with the human, but only if they're buried.
at the same time.
So you're not allowed to just have a pet funeral.
But, yeah, it's a big deal.
That's amazing, because I remember reading somewhere ages ago
that the first pet cemeteries were open in Paris,
I think at the turn of the century,
because they explicitly made it illegal
to throw dead animals into the river.
And so they were like, well, now we need something else to do with them.
When will the cult of health and safety let go of poor innocent Parisians?
Well, Frederick the Great of Prussia
wanted to be buried with his dogs
because he was obsessed with them
and the court said
you should be buried next to your wife and father
in the Royal Cemetery
and so he was, they disobeyed his wishes
that was in the 1780s
and in the 1990s
they respected his wishes
and buried him with his greyhounds instead
so that's quite happy
I'm sure that, yeah
well
you know
Bella Lugosi, who played Dracula.
Yeah. He was buried in his
Dracula cape. Cool. Yeah.
Which would be a hell of a shock, wouldn't it, if you were
digging him up, you know.
But
there was a report in 1930 a few years before he died saying he hopes to escape
the shackles of the role, and clearly he did not. It's quite sad, actually.
Yeah. That's bad.
That sounds like it was an argument with his wife for last minute.
He also, he had a guest book at his funeral, which I rather like.
I think that's a cool thing to have.
Yeah.
Okay.
I found a really odd thing, which is King Richard III is buried in a casket that was made by his great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, grand nephew.
Yeah.
Great.
So he was, he was, I should add, I wasn't sure how many grades it was, so I kept going, and you can edit in the rub of the amount.
I'm going to put so many in that.
And you're just going to sound like you're having a stroke of stuff.
Wow, the podcast is two and a half hours long this week.
How would that be?
Is that so how did that occur?
Is that someone enough grace to get up to the present day?
And this is when he was reburied?
He was, remember, King Richard III was found underneath the car park.
In fact, it was in our very first episode, one of the headline facts that we mentioned.
And they had to prove who he was using the DNA via a living relative.
and there was one guy called Michael Ibson
who they were able to track it down
I've met him really nice guy
they used his DNA
they proved it and he happened to be a carpenter
and so he said can I make the coffin
that he's going to be re-buried in
that's really nice
yeah although of course
after a certain distance we are genuinely
all related to certain people
so it's about at the Genghis Khan
level we are all directly descended from them
and he's not far from that so
it's not very we're probably
all his great, great, great, great, great.
So are you telling me I'm Genghis Khan's
great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, so.
In case, I've got a, I've got a riddle for you guys.
Okay, got a lot. My mother abandoned me.
Oh, I'm sorry to hear that.
Okay.
Let's do the riddle, buddy.
Strange time to break it up.
Look, man.
Mom, if you're listening, and I know you don't.
I don't feel abandoned by you.
Here's the riddle.
My mother abandoned me.
I was found by a man who cut off my head,
scooped out my heart,
and gave me something to drink.
Then I began speaking.
What am I?
Okay.
So, anyone?
It's going to be something to do with burials.
Something to do with the main fact, actually.
Maybe not to do you burials.
Are you a goose?
Are you a chicken?
I'm a goose.
Are you from Denmark?
I'm a bit of a goose.
What?
Are you foie gras?
I'm not foie gras. I'm a quill pen.
Okay.
My mother abandoned me.
I was found by a man who cut off my head,
scooped out my heart and gave me something to drink.
Then I began speaking.
It's very clever.
I'm not surprised your bum doesn't speak to you anymore.
Don't invite him over for Christmas, honey.
He's going to do his fucking riddles again.
It's going to be...
I think we found the answer tonight to the question of,
why did riddles go out in the 16th century?
Why did his mother abandon it?
Because the mother is the goose that gave it up
when the man plucked the feather out.
Right.
Okay, it's the feather, not the goose.
Yeah, it's the quill pen.
Yeah, sorry.
Oh, okay.
Still, room for a few hundred more greats
where that bit was.
We need to move on very shortly.
I've got one last thing, actually, which I quite like.
There is a company, should you...
Because when you're buried, you can decide.
either you go in a coffin or you have many other options, cremation and so on.
There's a company that actually will take the ashes of someone
and they will grind them and heat them down to a sort of diamond,
which they then put in a ring.
So that is an option that you can get,
and their tagline is diamonds and grandma are forever.
So if you want that, that's...
I mean, I guess if you're proposing to someone,
you could say, my granny would have wanted you to have this ring.
It was her. It was her.
Don't you mean it was hers?
No.
Okay, we need to move on to our final fact of the show,
and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that before magician P.T. Selbit
invented the famous sawing a woman in half illusion,
his big trick was called the Mighty Cheese,
which saw him daring members of the audience
onto the stage to try and push over his massive block of cheese.
That was, this is the guy who became.
a legend. That was his initial trick.
That's a good trick.
Yeah. So what it was is he would walk on stage
and he would have a giant wheel of cheese
and it was red and it was covered
in wax. So it was like a big baby bell
basically that he had and he would
say, who would dare come onto stage
and push over my cheese? Who has the might?
And it was a great illusion because inside this big
block of cheese, this big wheel of cheese,
there was a sort of gyroscope thing
so it made it impossible to actually do it.
So I guess like all magic
It was...
Yeah, every time you try to push it or pull it
It would kind of jerk off in another direction
And throw you to the ground
Yes
And he had a couple of stooges
Who would kind of deliberately fall over and whatever
And he would always find the strongest looking people in the audience
And then try and make fun of them about how weak they were
And then get them to try and do it
And they'd be thrown everywhere
Yeah
It sounds awesome to me
It sounds like the cut in the lady in half is fine
But we've seen that a million times
But apparently it was not at all awesome
No one liked it.
And he sold it to people and they kept reporting back going,
I've lost all my audiences.
I don't know why I thought pushing over a cheese would be interesting, but...
Did we say who this guy was?
P.T. Selbit.
He was born Percy Thomas Tibbles.
But he took the name Selbit by reversing his surname
and subtracting one of the bees.
You know, Penn and Teller, the famous modern now magicians,
they tried the same trick.
they did a version of it on stage
and they got a mixed martial arts fighter
to try and wrestle the cheese
and because it is a trick cheese
he failed. God, Conno McGregor's getting desperate these days
isn't he? After he failed
the martial arts fighter said, I'm going to go home and cry now
I can't beat a cheese.
This thing is selling tricks though
I didn't quite realise this was a thing
even amongst the great legends
so PT Selbit himself
had a big argument with Houdini
at the time because Houdini
said that he'd stolen his walking through the wall trick.
Oh no, he said Houdini had stolen his walking through the wall trick.
And Selbert said he'd actually bought the trick from another magician.
But they were just buying tricks from each other.
Houdini was buying tricks from people.
Yeah.
He wasn't coming up with anything.
And just to put P.T. Selbert in context,
this was a person who his name has disappeared to the layman, but...
Magic.
I'm going to make my name disappear.
We can all perform that kind.
of trick in a long term.
I think after tonight show, we might have done that.
But yeah, he was a hugely important, interesting guy.
So the Big Cheese was sort of a minor bit of his career.
The sawing a woman in half absolutely revolutionized.
It's still used to this day to the standard that he did it.
He effectively introduced the magician's assistant
when he had his assistant, Betty, I think her name was,
come and do the sawing in half for the first time.
That revolutionized still going today.
He did a trick in front of Arthur Conan Doyle,
which convinced Arthur Conan Doyle of the spirit world.
Spirit was a massive thing to Arthur Conan Doyle,
that believed in the afterlife and fairies and so on,
and that was P.T. Selby.
Yeah, so he was a huge point.
He believed in the spirit world.
He was the most gullible man we've ever researched.
He would have believed a donkey who told him the spirit world was a thing.
But yeah, he did show him his relations, didn't he, his dead relations?
Yeah.
Did he dig them up and carry them around?
This is your great.
Great, great, great.
And then Selbit struggled, didn't he,
to kind of do anything after the
Sawing the Lady in half.
His later tricks were known as
destroying a girl, stretching a lady,
and crushing a woman.
Wow, so he really had a type, didn't he?
One of the things he did to promote the show
was to have stagehands pour buckets of blood
into the gutters outside the theatre.
Wow.
And it was all, it was all, so 1920s-ish,
in 1910s and 20s, it was all kind of due to anxiety over suffragettes and women's liberation.
And he once invited Christabel Pankhurst to be sawn in half on stage for 20 pounds a week.
She said no.
But just the thing you said, Dan, of inventing the magician's assistant.
It was kind of only made possible by the change of women's fashion.
Because before that, you had very bulky clothes, you had a lot of petticoats.
It would have been very hard to fit the woman into the box.
in the first place because of what she was wearing.
Yes. And even then, she's running so many courses that is unlikely you could saw her in half, even if you wanted to.
And then it was like, I guess, flapper fashion was it?
Yeah, and then, yeah, flapper fashion comes in and suddenly people fit in the box.
Although I do have bad news for you, Andy.
What?
I don't think that they were actually sawing the woman in half.
Don't spoiler it for me.
I've got tickets to the circus next week.
Do you know that in Queensland, uh, uh,
Australia,
that you're not
allowed to own pet rabbits.
There's obviously
huge problems with rabbits in the country.
So in Queensland you're not allowed to own it.
Unless you're a magician.
Yeah, there's a magician
called Mr. Britt. There's only 34
magicians in Queensland who are permitted to have
this thing where they're allowed a rabbit.
And Mr. Britt is one. The rabbit's called
Mr. Fluffy Bum. And Mr. Fluffy Bum
is one of the only privately owned
rabbits in Queensland. I have a fact about
pulling rabbits out of hats, which is the
guy who, it's pretty vague who
actually invented pulling a rabbit out of a hat, but
a lot of people think it was a magician called Louis
Comte, who was, I think a French
magician. He did so in 1814.
But, I believe,
the first time he did it, sources are pretty
few on this. The first time he did it,
he also simultaneously pulled his
infant son out of the hat.
What? What was he holding
the rabbit? I don't think he was holding the rabbit.
He said, what have we got in here? Oh, we've got a rabbit.
and a baby.
It's weird that the rabbit one's stuck around, isn't it?
Do you not think?
I think it's more impressive
to pull a baby out of that.
I think it's not impressive,
but it's harder to get a baby.
That's why it's more impressive.
Oh yeah, it's so good.
Yeah, I do see that.
Yeah.
Do you know, the original pulling your rabbit out of a hat,
I think, is pulling an omelet out of a hat.
So I was looking for this,
because it is very controversial.
what it is. And most people say, we definitely
know that 1840s is the first time we pulled
a rabbit out of a hat collectively. But
I did find something in the Leeds Intelligensa
in 1823. It was this court case. It was a report for a court case.
A man was suing a magician for the cost of a new hat
because he said that he'd spoke to the magician and the
magician has said, if you imitate me and
break an egg into your hat,
then you'll get an omelette out of it. Just imitate
my movements exactly. And so he'd upturned
his top hat as out the magician. And the
magician had broken an egg into his hat
flipped it up and an omelet had come straight out of it
whereas the guy had done it
flipped it up and he got his entire suit
covered in raw egg
and...
That's a bit of an assholes trick, isn't it?
That's pretty bad. It's like, right,
if you do exactly what I do, I'm going to saw this lady in half.
You saw your wife.
Guys, we're going to have to wrap up shortly.
I've got a fact about magic tricks going wrong.
Yeah. Do you remember when
Secret of Roy, who did the magic with the tigers,
Roy Horn of Seekhrewood and Roy,
but he was grabbed by the throat by a tiger in 2003.
Now, the good news is he made a great recovery,
and doctors said he would never walk a talk again.
He absolutely did.
He made a fantastic recovery.
But I didn't know the story
that they have agreed on
for the version of events, which is this.
Both Broi and Siegfried
insisted that the tiger had sensed
that Horn was having a stroke
and was dragging him to safety.
Where could the tiger go
that it would think would be safe?
Horn, now 74, said,
I will forever believe it was his concern
for my safety and well-being
that caused him to act as he did.
That's amazing.
Just one little thing on magic words.
Yeah.
So the magic word expeleamus
is from Harry Potter, I think, isn't it?
Yeah.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary,
it comes from the Latin,
ex-spell-array, meaning to drive or force out,
and armour, which means weapon.
But unfortunately, armour was also a new
euphemism for penis.
So Harry Potter
is probably saying something like,
penis begone!
Does that mean the first line of
Virgil Zaneer is, I sing of penis
and the man?
I think a lot more people got the Harry Potter
reference.
I'm trying to get why your mom is not interested in it.
Oh, come on, mate!
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you.
About the things that we have said over the course of this podcast.
We can be found on our Twitter accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland. Andy.
At Andrew Hunter M. James.
At James Harkin.
And Chazinski.
You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yep.
Or you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing.
Or you can go to our Facebook page, No Such Thing as a Fish.
Or a website.
No Such Thing as a Fish.com.
Just put No Such Thing as a Fish in the Internet.
You'll find us.
We will be back again next week with another episode.
Guys, thank you so much.
Good night.
Thank you.
