No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Clay Valentines Cards
Episode Date: February 13, 2025For a Valentine's Day special, Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss flirting, proclaiming love, getting together, and ignoring one's mother-in-law. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows..., 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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Hey everyone, welcome to this week's episode of Fish.
We've got a very exciting one for you today.
It is our Valentine's Day special.
So yeah, we've collected together some of the sexiest, most romantic facts that we can possibly find for your listening pleasure.
And we'll be getting to that over the course of this episode.
However, before we get into that, I've just got a quick announcement, which is that,
we have a live show coming up in July at the Crossed Wires Festival podcast in Sheffield.
So, the Crossed Wires Podcast Festival is fantastic.
It debuted last year. It was co-created by our good buddy Alice Levine from My Dad wrote a Pornow,
and they are back this year for round two, and really excitingly, she has invited us to be part of it.
So we will be there to record a live episode at the City Hall on the 6th of July at 2pm,
and if you want to come along, you just need to head to no such thing as a fish.com slash live to get your tickets right now.
It's going to be great fun, as I say, a live podcast recording with a bunch of silly extra bits thrown in as well.
And if you get a chance, why not head over to the crossedwires. Live website as well.
That's the address.
So many great shows are going to be there this year.
It's so awesome that these podcast festivals are erupting around the UK.
Do support them.
And do come see us.
We'd love to see you there.
All right.
Well, let's get into this week's episode.
It is our Valentine's Day special.
Enjoy our sexy, sexy facts.
On with the show.
Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish,
a weekly podcast coming to you from the key.
QI offices in Hoburn.
My name is Dan Schreiber.
I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Anna Tashinsky, and Andrew Hunter Murray.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite Valentine's Day facts.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Andy.
My fact is, before flirting with females, young male dolphins practice on their male friends.
Happy Valentine's Day, everyone.
This is an erotic special.
Roses are red
This fact is very blue
It is quite blue actually
Well what do they practice
How blue is it?
Because dolphins are blue
Yeah
They're rude
Are they?
Well they're sort of bluish
Aren't they?
I got kind of name
They're grey
Grey blue
They're grey
Bluey grey
This is a place that actually
Is a friend of the podcast
It's Shark Bay in Australia
Where some research was done
We said it was renamed Safety Beach
Yeah
We did
Yeah
I think that was fake
I think that's a retraction
We need to make
Oh great
Okay
Are we all making that as a group
No just me
Leave it to me
You guys stay unblemished.
So there's a group of dolphins who've been living there
and they've been studied for about 40 years.
They're really, really well,
the best studied group of dolphins in the world.
They have very complicated social relationships with each other.
Scientists find it very useful to kind of keep tabs on them.
And these young males,
they pall up in groups of two or three
and they coordinate their behavior to consort
particular females.
And that, this is where it gets a bit.
Flirting is a very nice way of describing it
because male dolphins sort of coercees.
and Harris
individual females
and try and separate
them from
whichever males
they're hanging out with
but then they do
some displays
of acrobatics
and somersaults
it sounds like
a sort of sea world thing
Uh-huh
You know they do
tricks
they do also bite her
sometimes
Anyway
They're really getting
some mixed signals here
I don't want to get
all rubbing thicky
on your ass
but
it's
Look at the somersaults
look at the somersaults
Yeah so
but they do
they do practice
with each other
and the ones who practice with each other have better success later in life.
Romantically, you know, they father more offspring than the ones that don't.
Do they ever fall in love with each other accidentally?
Oh my God.
Good question.
Flipper 3.
Reminds me a bit of a friend's episode where Joey helps Trigger the janitor to dance.
He's his dance partner and he sort of starts to wish that he was his real dance partner.
I wonder if there are dolphins out there who just like, let's have one more practice.
I think so.
I mean, there's lots of, there are, you occasionally see.
I found a lot of headlines in the mail.
the Daily Mail saying things like
more gay dolphins spotted off Canada
like a lot of concerned for them
yeah they can't be quite agro
can't they
the dolphins
and like but it is sort of their male bonds
are sort of nice
it does seem like this study I think was the first
to reveal that they have a buddy system
and they'll pick a best friend
some of the males not all of the males
they'll pick a best friend and that'll be someone
that they hang out with for their whole life
and sometimes you'll have the two male buddies
who hang out together, and if they're separated for up to decades, I think it is, when they come back
together, their best friend still.
Well, so there's quite a few ways that dolphins can mate.
There's a sort of T-section shape that they do, so the male dolphin goes sort of horizontal
against the vertical of the female dolphin in order to have sex.
There's a few other methods.
One method that gets described for one of the dolphins is having this buddy, the wingman,
come, and at surface level sort of hold for buoyancy reasons.
so they're sort of there just to prop them up
to make sure that sex can happen,
which a lot of NASA scientists are saying
that might be the best way
that humans will have sex inside.
We're not taking dolphins up to Mars.
We're not taking dolphins.
We're just screwing like them.
If sex is happening, there needs to be a third astronaut
to come in and just hold everything together.
Dave, Dave, sex is happening.
Come on, eventually not.
There was a recent report by someone
who's trying to work on the problem of population in space.
A space pervert.
I think dolphins are perverts really
I think by any
Well they have sex often with their mothers
Male dolphins
Oh okay
Yeah
Bottom nose dolphins like to gather around
Grey whales when they're mating
And no one really knows why
But they seem to just enjoy watching
Right
You can't get porn underwater
Where else are gonna go
So their mum's nipples are up their butt
So when they breastfeed
It is
It is
So when they literally burrow their
That can't be true.
Dolphin noses into the anus of their mum.
No, that can't be true.
Is it really?
I didn't just come up with that.
I mean, it's possible I did just come up with that.
Okay, can we bust one myth?
Yeah, sure.
This is exciting stuff not to blow wide open, but to close down.
And it's a thing we have propagated actually in the past.
So, you know, it's the lap of the rest for us.
It's the blowhole, the blowhole sex myth.
Mm-hmm.
What's the myth that they have sex through their blowholes?
Yeah.
And we've claimed that?
I think so.
Have we?
We're pervert.
Like nine years ago.
I think, you know, we're different people now.
What's the truth then?
I think, well, there's one mention of it in a paper in 1994.
Oh, you shag one blowhole.
And the researcher, a researcher called Justin Gregg, spoke to the person who had authored that 1994 article, who said, and I'm quoting here, with regard to the blowhole, they never inserted the penis entirely.
I don't know whether that stands up in court, Andy, I'm going to say.
What percentage of the penis?
Oh, only 25, that's fine.
But they breathe through it.
It turns out they can breathe through their mouth as well,
which we didn't know until 2016.
It's assumed that they can't breathe
because we've never seen them breathing through their mouth,
but they found one dolphin with a damaged blowhole.
One of a...
Are you being serious?
He had a damaged blowhole?
No word.
Or what did the damage?
But they found that it was breathing through its mouth as a result.
So possibly even dolphins don't know they can breathe through their mouth.
Wow.
Yeah.
And we call them clever.
I feel like everything I've said is a lie.
Where did you get all this stuff from, Dan?
It's just stuff I know.
We've talked a lot in the past about dolphins having military connections.
They've worked with the military a lot.
I don't know this.
There's like the biggest hoard of nuclear weapons.
is in a submarine base in America
and it's protected by military dolphins
so anyone trying to get access to it
has to face a dolphin. Is that amazing?
And what happens?
Sometimes I think you have your own different Google
and the rest of us.
Well, the interesting thing is
if they, so they can't,
it's very hard to monitor an underwater base
with nuclear weapons.
So they need an animal that can just be there
all the time to do it.
Where is this, sorry?
It's near Boston.
U.S.
Yeah, you can't give away
the exact location, I'm sure, Dan.
Yeah, sorry, Seattle.
It's 20 miles.
Oh, Seattle.
5,000 miles from Boston.
It's the world's largest
single location of arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Wow.
It's underwater.
Certainly at the time of writing.
It's underwater, right?
And so they have these military dolphins
and they have this amazing thing
where if someone's swimming
to try and get access to this submarine base
to steal a nuke,
one man, just swimming to get to it,
the dolphins have a metal plate in their mouth
that when they go up,
and rub up against the swimmer,
they can attach like a handcuff,
like a subtle handcuff going to your leg.
What are you talking about?
Honestly, this is what happens.
It goes around the leg or the arm of the person
and then it deploys a boy and floats them,
like just goes whoop?
And they just disappear up to the surface.
Were they get arrested by a police dolphin at the top?
The dolphins are purely underwater base.
So that becomes a human problem when they arrive at the top.
That's either extraordinary or what are you talking about.
That's incredible.
Unbelievable.
This was in 2010, so it's possible the dolphins are retired.
Moved on to poor places now.
Well, they get seals as well, Navy SEALs, but like actual seals.
Oh, yeah, I feel like we have actually mentioned that before.
We can't just laugh at everything, Dan.
From now on now.
Some of it's true.
You've got to start with something more believable, Dan, and then build up to this.
Well, we know that they do this kind of stuff.
It's only Cold War superpowers, isn't it?
It's only America and Russia that we know of.
That we know of, that have trained dolphins.
I thought Israel did.
Oh, yeah, they did.
I'm sure other military powers of experimented
with all that stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, porpoises that you mentioned?
You know, they're the reason that we call tortoises tautuses.
Which I don't think we've mentioned before,
but because poor poise, which is basically a dolphin.
This whole show.
It does feel a bit like it, doesn't it?
No, this is absolutely correct.
Poor poise, etymologically.
It means pig fish, so the poor has the same root as pork
and poise is like poiss-oise fish.
Tortoises were always tortuces.
They ended just in US, probably coming from a word meaning twisted.
But once we started having porpoises, people went, well, since we spell that like that,
should we make it tortoises as well?
Because it sounds similar.
And we think that's the only theory we have for why suddenly, about 500 years ago,
we started spelling tortoise like tortoise.
Someone was writing a poem and they just...
Exactly.
Nothing after poor poise.
That was the main economic activity 500 years ago.
was the sonnet, unfortunately.
And so it was really important.
Can we talk about dolphin vaginas?
Of course.
Quickly.
They have clitorises, and the clitorises are so accessible when they're having sex
that we think they're probably used for pleasure.
Okay.
But the vagina is really, unlike most mammals where it's really just like a straight
tube.
With them, it goes in all sorts of different directions and stuff like that.
And you can tell what species a dolphin is by looking at its vagina.
It's like a labyrinth, so they can decide whether or not they want to be impregnated.
Sorry, do you mean it's like a maze?
Because of course, a labyrinth only has one route, doesn't it?
So that wouldn't fool anyone.
That's true.
Labyrinth is like a spiral.
There's no dead ends in a labyrinth.
Yes, no, it's a maze.
It's like a labyrinth.
Because we'd get a lot of emails if we left it like that.
You're right.
Can I just very quickly mention the basketball player who had a great altercation with a dolphin, Clifford Ray.
Is I still about him?
He became super famous for this in 1978 for a short while.
There was a dolphin called Mr. Spock.
They realized that there was a bolt and a really sharp screw stuck in its stomach and second stomach down.
So quite far in.
The vet says, I can't operate to remove it.
My arm won't reach down its throat enough.
And then they were like, who's got really long arms?
This basketball player, Clifford Ray, famously has arms a three foot nine inches long, which is long.
So they got in touch with Clifford, who was at a premier in, for some reason.
And he rocked. He was taking a premiere and waiting to go to a game.
And he rocked up and he was guided by speakerphone by an expert in retrieving stuff from the insides of dolphins
while he inserted his three foot nine inch long arm into the dolphin.
And he's like, it's like a labyrinth in the other end, the other end.
Why am I holding a nipple?
Wait, sorry, why was he on speaker phone?
Because he wasn't there.
No, no, he, sorry, the basketball player was there.
The vet was...
The vet?
Who needed to guide them?
The expert vet.
You're not going to turn up to the most interesting
dolphin-based event of your life?
He was staying in a holiday inn after in the next town.
It was too good to me.
My God.
They didn't have much time.
Right, right, right.
And they said, as soon, once his arm was in, it was three minutes.
And after that, the dolphin would suffocate.
And he had to get all the way down weave his arm down.
What?
He's got a polehole.
It would be damaged.
This poor dolphin.
Turns out there's just one dolphin in the world.
It's this guy.
Can I ask a question?
If they're short on time,
the dolphin is obviously in one place.
They immediately go,
who's got long arms in the immediate vicinity?
Yeah.
And he happens to be in town.
Well, he's from California,
so it was the same state.
Okay, right.
And they needed really long arms.
Right.
Like, not just like you're a bit tall.
Mr. Tickle was embossed.
He did it.
He did it. He did it with only...
And when there were 15 seconds to spare,
he says he just remembers the vet on the other end of the...
Did they have a big basketball clock ticking down?
Come on.
Time out.
What if he didn't?
He would die.
Would have suffocated, yeah.
And did Mr. Spock live long and prosper?
There we go.
A gentle end to a very upsetting story.
Okay.
It is time for fact number two.
and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that the adult
who's come closest to freezing to death
and being brought back to life
got together with the person who resuscitated her.
Was it Anna from Frozen?
It should have been,
maybe that's who Anna from Frozen was named after.
It is nice.
She is called Anna.
Isn't it?
Yes.
Anna Bagenholm.
Anna Bagenholm, who's Swedish,
but she was in Norway at the time.
I don't know why I'm speaking like that.
But this was 1999 and she was skiing with two colleagues.
And it's just the most amazing story.
So I'll do a short version and then we'll probably do a long version.
Basically, she's skiing.
She plunges headfirst through a massive layer of ice.
And she's stuck there for ages and ages.
And she gets very bad hypothermia.
Her heart stops beating.
Her breathing stops.
She's dead.
She's completely dead.
And then eventually she gets extracted from the ice.
And the crucial thing that happens as soon as she's extracted,
and very important to remember this for any hypothermia sufferers
is that she received CPR straight away from her two colleagues
who've been skiing with her.
One of whom was a chap called Torvind Nysheim
who gave her CPR
and it seemed to have absolutely no effect at the time.
The other one's going, let it go.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
James is poised to use that as possible.
Have you got that out of your system?
Yeah, no more famous lyrics than that?
I don't know any of this.
Okay, good.
I think that's a relief for everyone.
Anyway, it's thought that CPR probably saved her life,
along with a bunch of other incredible doctors.
When she got to hospital, there were over 100 doctors in the room,
or medical staff in the room with her.
And she did live.
And then a few years later, she got together with this chap.
And I believe as of 2022, they were still together.
Oh, lovely.
But really, this was a way of crowbarring this amazing story into a Valentine special.
Yeah, it is an amazing story.
And at that time, they thought, no way she's coming back.
For all the doctors, she was literally, this was medicine into the unknown, right?
It was, that's a Frozen 2 song, just a few all that.
Was it?
Into the unknown.
Oh, into the unknown.
Sorry, medicine, into the unknown.
Frozen 2, she becomes a GP.
There's a polar bear who swallowed a plastic bag and we need the world's best curling team to go and get it out.
This was a phenomenal thing.
They thought, no way is she going to survive, except they seem to have a phrase there.
they're the doctors, which is something like you're not dead until we warm you up first.
So no one who's cold can be declared dead. You've got to bring them back to warm.
I think that's true around the world. And it's a really crucial thing about being that cold.
Because again, this is what a lot of hypothermia sites say.
They're like, don't assume they're dead. No heart rate, no breathing.
Pallid skin, why is a sheet? But it could be that once you warm them up again, come back to life.
It's like a goldfish, isn't it? If your goldfish is floating upside down, it might not be dead.
It might just have a swim bladder problem.
Is that so?
Yeah, so don't flush it down the tightlet.
That's really good advice.
And in the same way with these people.
Yeah, don't flush them down as they do.
Ignorey when they're done.
So this accident she had, she was skiing, she had a fall,
she went through a hole in the ice.
Eight inches of ice, thick ice.
Yeah.
And she was trapped under the water.
Her clothes are immediately soaked,
therefore they're very heavy.
The shock paralyzes your muscles so you can't move, right?
So her friends catch up with her.
And they can only see her feet and ski.
They can only see her feet.
They cannot pull her out, just the position she's in.
And also, just this is, because she's in the water, she's submerged.
It's a random air pocket that her face happens to be next to that allows for her to keep breathing.
It's stunning.
So she's breathing for seven minutes, but she's in the water for 40 minutes.
A team of rescuers arrive.
They can't get her out with a rope or a snow shovel.
It's not thick enough to get through the eyes.
So she's there, I think, another 30 or 40 minutes.
Another 40 minutes, yeah.
And then a team arrives with a pointy shovel, which they used to dig through the eyes.
the eyes and get her out. So she's been in the water for 80 minutes freezing. She's white,
she's cold, nothing, nothing is happening. It's just extraordinary. It's amazing. Well, she's dead.
She's dead. She's dead. Except she's not. Well, I mean, what's a definition of death?
Exactly. Is she warm? I don't think so, guys. Good point, good point. She had no heartbeat for
four hours between when her head went through the ice and when her heart rate came back.
Extraordinary. And it was like nine hours and they say like hundreds of doctors and nurses.
who were just working on her the entire time,
just trying to bring her back.
And they did it.
And when they did, she was paralysed to begin with
and pissed off.
So why did you bring me back?
Why did you make me become alive again?
I now have to live a life where I'm not going to be the person
that I wanted to be.
And she eventually calmed down.
Well, after she realized she wasn't paralyzed.
It took a long time, though,
for that hurt to get her body completely back to normal.
I think it was within not too long, actually.
And then she did apologise.
So, yeah, not the romantic reunion initially
with poor old Nishim,
who's like, oh, she's going to fall in love with me now in her eyes.
And then her heart melted.
It's Valentine's Day.
I love it.
The thing I find nuts is she's skied again.
Absolutely.
She's really into downhill skiing.
Six years later, she's skiing again.
Just extraordinary.
Did she stay on pieced from now on?
I don't know.
She just went to the cafe bit.
I believe she's really into extreme skiing still.
Because people are insane.
Can we say what she got down to?
Yeah.
So normally you're calling.
Your core temperature is 37 degrees, right?
If your core goes down below 35, you're officially in hypothermia.
Her temperature, her core temperature went down to 13.7 degrees Celsius.
And then a bit later, there was a kid who went to 13, who's the coldest anyone has ever been.
Yeah.
And apparently this is more common to work in children.
This idea of sort of freezing yourself and then coming back to life.
And it's because you have a greater surface area compared to your volume,
which means that you cool down a lot quicker.
Oh, of course.
And you want to do that quick freezing at the start.
That's kind of how it works.
So that's why you need to keep babies warm at night because they cool them faster.
So the thing is when you get really, really cold,
the oxygen demand of your brain lowers drastically.
And if you're cold enough before your heart stops, that's the key.
That's why doing the CPR is so important.
Then the cell death, which normally happens when you don't.
of any circulation, it doesn't happen.
So her brain needed no oxygen.
I think it had 10% of the oxygen requirements of your brain normally.
Sorry, go on.
Well, just to say that because this happened,
they're now using the idea of freezing people down.
You know, if people have had a stroke or, you know,
if they've had liver failure or something like that.
The idea now is get people really, really, really cold
and they might survive.
Yes.
And in fact, even though it's quite standard now,
or it's done a lot,
but we actually don't know why it works.
And they think that actually it's not about the effects of your heart stopping,
which deprives your brain of oxygen.
It's actually about when your heart starts again.
And I didn't know this, but if you have a heart attack or if your heart stops,
one of the really common ways that you die is when your heart starts again.
And it's this thing called reperfusion.
And it means that if your heart's been stopped for long enough,
then all the chemistry in your brain has changed so much in ways they don't quite understand.
If blood suddenly floods back in there,
it completely messes it up and you die
and so in this way
I think it allows that to happen much more
gradually or it slows the brain down
allows it to be a bit more controlled
Is the word reaper a deliberate use there
of the danger? Reaper fusion
I see it's not that
perfusion with a re on the front
The standard prefix re
interesting
It should be they should put the A in though
Did you guys read about the two things
that happen when you have hypothermia
that are most bizarre?
Oh yeah, yes.
If someone has died of hypothermia, you shouldn't just look on the floor.
Look in all the crevices and look in all the like the shelving units because they might be
curled up in there because it's a reaction.
Terminal burrowing.
Yeah.
That was interesting.
The other one is taking a clothes off, isn't it?
Yes.
And it seems to happen a lot.
There was one study that was done that looked at, I think, about 70 people who died of
hypothermia.
And it found almost all of them did this thing called terminal borrowing, which as you say,
is where you sort of crawl under a bed
or behind a cupboard or onto a shelf.
And it just feels like, you know,
when you have a cat who's dying,
it crawls to the very corner under a bed.
It's like the last protective hibernation.
It's like a really deep instinct, basically.
Yes, deep.
And the other thing that a quarter of the people did
was this thing called paradoxical undressing,
which, again, people who've had hypothermia
often found completely naked.
And that's because at first,
you know, you have vasodilation
where all your veins in your extremities constrict
to try and flood blood to your internal organs
to keep you warm when you've got hypothermia.
But then that takes loads and loads of effort for your muscles
and your body just gives up,
all the blood floods back to your extremities.
So suddenly you're like,
God, bizarrely, I'm really hot,
and you take off all your clothes.
So odd.
So maybe the song it's getting hot in here
is actually the last throes
of someone who's suffering severe hypothermia.
That's what it's about, yeah.
Yeah, the lyric is from Scott's diary, isn't it?
Okay, it is time for fact number three,
and that is Jane.
Okay, my fact this week is that if ancient Mesopotamia had Valentine's cards,
they would probably contain pictures of knees.
So we've had the flirting.
We've now got together with Torvind, and now we're sending each other Valentine's cards.
Now we're on our knees.
We should have done the other way around, shouldn't we?
You don't send a Valentine's card once you got together with someone.
Anna, this is exactly what I said to these guys before we came on air.
And I disagree, Anna.
I think it's much more common.
I think most Valentine's cards are bought by people joylessly on the 13th of February,
in a train station.
You're right.
I thought you always put like from anonymous on your Valentine's cards.
That's the whole point of them.
I put anonymous on all the ones I send apart from the one to my wife.
Should I explain the fact?
Yeah.
So this is a new study about they looked at a load of cuneiform texts.
This is some scientists at the University of Finland.
And they looked at loads of phrases that are about emotions.
and they looked at what parts of the body were used in those phrases.
And they found that happiness is mostly felt in the liver, for instance.
Shadenfreude, mostly in the lip.
Amazing that Shardin Freud was on their list of what was really basic.
It was like happy, sad, anger, Shardinfreude.
Oh, you're right, actually.
On the lip. On the lip, yeah.
You kind of curl your lip.
And they found that love was in order in the knee, liver, heart, back, and male genitalia.
Sounds about right
That's like that song
My neck, my back
It's like head
My knee
My liver
Like head shoulders
Knee's knees and toes
Knee
Liver hearted back
Genitalia
I do
I would struggle
To pinpoint where my liver was
As in if I wouldn't know where to say
If I was feeling time in my liver
The reason that that is a thing
Is that when you open up a body
After someone's died
The liver is so big
Compared to everything else
You would naturally think
That was a really important
Part of the body
Yeah
I'm just really impressed
that they had that knowledge of, as in like that knowledge was widespread, that that was a phrase.
Well, they didn't know where it was, I suppose, necessarily if you're an ordinary guy.
You'd just say, like in the same way, I'd say my heart bleeds for you.
And that would, I guess, show sympathy.
And you'd say it's associated with the heart.
You might say, oh, my liver erupts with rage.
But it is true, the liver seems to have been the heart for hundreds and hundreds of years and loads of civilizations.
And they had, it was so important that they thought that gods imprinted their desires on livers.
So, and this is in ancient Mesopotamia, but when you sacrifice a sheep, let's say,
its liver would then be taken out
and they used to make clay liver models
of the exact shape of the liver
that that sheep had had inside it
and then they would analyse the models
like you'd read a palm
and that would tell them in the future
because they thought the God
will have put their desire
and the future onto the liver shape of this sheep.
But how do you know you've got the right sheep?
It just feels like a very inefficient system.
I think God knows,
I think maybe God changes the shape
as it's being sacrificed.
So God sees that you're sacrificing that sheep
and then quickly moulds the liver into that shape.
I'm not sure exactly that,
No, we shouldn't. We shouldn't try.
Where is Mr. Potamia again? Is it Turkey?
Iraq. Iraq. Okay. Yeah.
And we're talking 2,500 BC-ish.
Yeah. Long time ago.
Yeah, it's a very long time ago.
But this is...
Start of civilization. It sort of is. It's our oldest writing these cuneiform tablets.
And so we keep finding out more and more about it because more are found.
They've survived the test of time, these amazing clay tablets that are found in their hundreds and thousands in hordes.
It's because they're made of clay, right?
Exactly. Yeah. It was very clever.
It was not like Valentine's cards.
Exactly.
For all we know, there were millions of those.
It was a huge trade back then.
Because it was thought up until recently that 1,500 BC was when we started kissing.
You mean the oldest depiction we found?
Yeah.
We actually found a couple locked in.
No, the oldest depiction of it.
But actually, we now have records via Cuneiform that show us that back then they were
very romantic and they were kissing and not just within marriage.
They were also kissing as dates and socially and so on.
And there's only one other major contestant to say that it's all.
older, which is a kiss that may have happened between a Neanderthal and a human over 100,000
years ago.
And they know this because they found a microbe inside on the skull of a human, but you would
only get it from a neanderthal.
So they know that a bit of tonsill hockey was going on.
Or they were playing that game where you pass an egg, pass an egg?
An egg?
What you pass on?
Is it not an egg from one mouth of the next?
What did you think it was?
It must have a big mouth.
It was quite big.
You could do it with a quail's egg.
But again, that's quite socially restricted.
Like scrambled or poached?
What kind of egg or soy?
I'm thinking it in shell.
I'm sure we did it with eggs.
I mean, you can fit an egg in your mouth, but it is a choking hazard, I would say.
Oh, yeah.
It's not sexy, I think.
It's locked behind my teeth.
I've misunderstood the rules.
That's very funny.
Yeah.
We say I go weak at the knees.
Yes, exactly.
I was thinking that.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think knees would be in our list of things.
The weird thing I found was under sexual attraction,
which was one of the simple emotions they had.
The six body parts, was it five, five body parts associated with that,
well, what would you guess was in there?
Eyes, you would think, right?
I would have thought firstly, genitals.
I mean, genitals feature so much in so many other emotions,
like kind of distress or contempt.
Sexual attraction, genitals and penis aren't in there.
Okay.
It's head, knee, neck, hand and ankle.
Head, knee, neck, neck, yeah.
Neck and ankle.
Ankle's a bit of an odd one, isn't it?
Well, like Victorians, like chiselbe.
Yeah, if you've got restrictive sort of social practices.
What period are we talking about?
This is the same study.
This is ancient Mesopotamia.
Oh, right.
Because there's a whole subcategory now of celebrity spotting on celebrities' knees.
Not in that period.
We're not looking at that period.
Is it like Wikine knees or something.
No, it's like how, if you look at a sort of photo of Megan Markle, you'll see Casper the Friendly Ghost's face on her knee.
Oh, there was a thing where, oh, no, I'm getting it wrong.
I thought Sandy Tuxwig.
might have been on someone's knees.
She was, exactly.
Yeah, yeah.
There's a lot of faces
that are appearing on knees recently.
I would presume it's normally,
I mean, no disrespect to the glorious Sandy.
It's normally people with quite wrinkly faces
who are being spotted in other people's knees.
No.
Surely it's very rarely, because knees are knobbly, you know, wrinkly.
Winkly, my knees are perfectly smooth.
Yeah.
Casper the friendly ghost doesn't have a real estate.
Anna, you've been having routine knee Botox.
Knees, they have a lot of nerve endings,
so they are known as an erogenous.
zone and that's because you have nerves that go through your knee that do everything in your
feet and up at the top of your thighs as well basically all the nerves that are in your leg have
to go through your knees so they have lots of nerves that's good and the attraction to knees
the parapheria of that is called genufelia oh like genuflecting exactly yeah you want some
more of those by the way yes please um alvin oligna is the attraction to alvin a chipmunk
Okay.
It's the midriff.
Okay.
The belly button and tummy and stuff.
Nice.
Bromidophilia.
Bro.
Yeah.
It's like podcasters.
It's the attraction to body odor.
Oh, wow.
And matiaphelia.
This is tough.
It's the attraction to non-normal looking eyes.
And it comes from the Greek term for the evil eye.
Huh.
Like those dogs that have one eye of different colors.
Like David Bowie,
I guess.
Quite a few of those.
I would think are not sort of unnatural attractions.
Like midrifts, you know,
are traditionally a slightly sexy thing.
Yeah.
It's interesting because a parapheria,
by definition,
should be attraction to something atypical.
But then when you look at the list,
there was one which is normal philia,
which is the attraction to normal things.
Right.
So is that normal things to be attracted to
or normal things like a table.
That is unusual.
That is unusual.
I read one earlier today,
weirdly,
about being sexually attracted to people falling downstairs.
What?
And that's why you always sit down to watch an episode of You Be Framed, isn't it?
His pants around his ankles.
Sending my family out the room, right?
Everyone out.
If you've got any videos of yourself falling downstairs,
then send them to that and it'll give you £250.
All right, here's a little micro-quiz.
Which of these phrases is the oldest?
I'm going to give you three.
To have someone over your knee.
Like to spank them kind of thing.
That's the implication.
Right, got it.
A knee slapper.
That's a joke.
It's a joke.
And upon the knees of the gods.
Oh, I don't know what that one means.
So that's why I would say that would be the oldest because I've never heard of it.
Do you mean thigh slapper?
I've never heard of a knee slapper.
A knee slapper, is the phrase.
Is it?
Yeah.
I think thigh slapper, too.
Depends on how funny the joke is.
Cool.
Or how long your legs were.
And what you're wearing?
For that basketball player, it was an ankle slapper
Okay, James is saying upon the knees of the gods is oldest
Probably knee slapper, I reckon
Yeah, I'm going to say knee slapper as well because
Oh no, I'll do the third one just for the sake of having a full house
To have someone over your knee
Yeah
Upon the knees of the gods
Is ancient Greek
What does it mean?
Well, that's what one would have guessed
Yeah, that was the obvious one Andy
Yeah, well James got there first
So maybe you two should buck up your ideas a bit next time
You'd be great in a quiz, Dan
It's like, what is the capital of France?
Paris.
Oh, that was the obvious answer, guys.
We knew that as well, actually.
It did feel like I can't even be pulling some sort of rug up front of our feet
rather than just going...
No, I'm a nice guy.
I leave the rug under your feet.
Right, okay.
It's the one you're thinking of is the title of my quiz format.
It's an ancient Greek phrase,
Theon en Gunasi, which means it's beyond human control.
It's like it's in the lap of the gods, actually.
But it's all the knees of the gods.
Okay, a knee slapper is from 195.
And to have someone over your knee,
1866, which is quite something, because someone used that phrase on me recently.
Say the phrase again?
To have someone over your knee.
And someone used that on you?
Yeah.
It was a removals guy the last time I was moving house.
Yeah.
I'd left something at the bottom of a staircase, right?
Because I was moving.
So they'd fall down the stairs.
You haven't sent me that video yet, by the way.
I'd pay good money for that.
I'd put like a glass picture frame at the bottom of the stairs,
and I hadn't moved it out to the van or whatever.
Yeah.
And he said, I'd have you a...
over my knee if you were one of my boys.
It was cool. It was really
it was much nicer than the way he made it sound.
I also think that this whole quiz is leading
up to that anecdote.
Yeah. How could you think that?
When the anecdote was so bad.
Unless there's one extra bit you're not telling us.
Nope. Okay. That's the
subtitle of the quiz. That's all there is
too. That's all there is do it.
Here's a song from Chicago,
which I won't sing, but I'll read you the lyrics.
The band, Chicago.
or the musical Chicago.
The musical.
Not the town, the city.
That's in Boston, isn't it?
The pizza company.
Okay, so it's from the musical.
Why don't we paint the town and all that jazz?
I'm going to rouge my knees and roll my stockings down.
Yep.
That's weird, isn't it?
Yes, why do they?
I've never questioned that before.
I'm going to rouge my knees.
Hmm.
Carpet burn.
It's not carpet burn, Dan.
Like, why would you, what you'd be deliberately faking a carpet burn on your knee?
or do you?
Well, that's pretty sexy, isn't it?
Yeah.
You want to know how I got these knees?
I'll never tell.
So, yeah, Rouge as in makeup, red makeup.
And this was a popular thing in the flapper period,
which was to put makeup on your knees.
Like a little face?
In actual fact, sometimes they part.
There are some images of young women with quite short skirts
and with little faces on their knees.
Is that one of people that sick?
It's a sound detoxic on foot.
That's good flirting.
I think that's really good flirting.
If you're opposite someone on a train, for example,
you just, you hoik up your skirt a little bit.
There's your winking face on your knee.
And then you, you know, you see if they notice.
Yeah.
It's good.
Isn't that good?
I'm sorry, that's creative flirting.
If you're pulling up your kilt and saying it's winking at you.
I know.
That's no sporren.
But yeah, this was a thing.
It was women had started to be able to show their knees.
and they decided, well, we're going to make the most of it.
And so they started putting makeup on.
So poor men were suddenly going around saying,
did you know women's knees have smiley faces on them?
That's amazing.
That's great.
Only animal with four knees.
Dogs, cats, elephants.
Quadruped.
Any quadruped.
No, no.
They don't have countless knees on the back.
No animals have four knees.
Zero.
But one animal has four kneecaps.
Yeah.
And it only has two legs.
I know the answer.
Are we still playing Andy's quiz
because I can get it if yes.
It's like this is a horrible riddle in a cave in ancient Greece.
It's ridiculous.
Sorry,
what you're saying is that all animals,
all quadrupeds,
they have arms and legs rather,
they may walk around on all fours,
but their skeletal structure is.
They have elbows and knees.
They don't have four knees.
Exactly.
Sorry,
there's one bipedal one that has four knees.
We should just let Dan answer.
Well, two knees are hidden under a coat of feathers.
Oh, they're all hidden.
Are we talking about the same animal here?
Yeah, we are. I think you just haven't looked at the diagrams closely enough.
Okay, if it's two-legged and feathered and ostrich.
Yes, James. That's very good, actually.
Well, it was either that or an e-mew or a cassowary.
Whose quiz is better? Like mine, where it's to get me into a dull anecdote,
or Anna's where it's a mental shit show.
I haven't worked out the format, but I think the kernel of an idea is there.
This is really interesting. We only found out recently that ostriches have four.
kneecaps. Everything else has two and they is and sort of four knees. So if you look at birds like
ostriches, the thing that you might think is a knee if you're an idiot, is actually the ankle, right?
Because if you look at those birds. The knees are up inside. The knees are up inside the feathers.
You've got really long feet bones. Exactly. It's like our horses, like the lower half of their
leg is actually their middle toe. Precisely, all animals like that. But up there, under their feathers,
they've seemed to have two sets of knees. We really don't know why. Two sets of knees, two sets of kneecaps.
And who knows why, but cassowaries and emus don't have any.
The end.
Dan, back me up on this.
It's true.
Yeah.
Great quiz with the host says, back me up, Dan.
Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that once married, some Australian aboriginals spend the rest of their lives actively avoiding their mother-in-law.
Hey, I didn't know why I was an Australian Aboriginal.
I actually think my mother-in-law's brilliant.
So this is a thing that's called avoidance speech.
And a lot of Native Australians have this as part of their culture, where once they're
married, the idea of talking to their in-laws is suddenly something that's seen as taboo.
And you never do.
And there's quite a few examples of modern-day marriages where this is still adhered to.
So I was reading a blog by a guy who was saying that with his parents-in-laws, he can't hand food
directly to them either, as well as not talking to them.
It must make the egg game very difficult.
You can't look at them directly.
If he has something that he needs to ask them,
he needs to ask them through the wife,
so she goes and gets their permission
or finds out something for them.
And it's seen as something that's a mark of respect
in these families.
And the same person who is writing this blog,
who did that with his wife,
now has that with his relationship
with his daughter's husband.
And then your language gets changed as well.
So they won't say the name.
They'll say my mother-in-law and father-in-law.
They won't use their actual name.
And if they're in a room with them and they're watching TV,
let's say the son-in-law's in the room, he'll face the wall away, you know,
so he's not acknowledging them.
Why are they watching TV?
That's a very antisocial thing to do.
So annoying.
What's happening now?
And what's happening now?
No, no, no.
Please, I want my wife to tell me what's happening now, not you.
Why do these taboos exist?
That's what I'm really baffled by.
Well, they are around the world, aren't they?
It's extraordinary.
Like Native America, across Africa, Australian Aboriginal's white.
And I haven't read an explanation.
I did read that.
It's potentially a respect thing.
It might be a way of preventing any hanky-panky.
I think it's got to be shagging.
There was a big article I read called the Mother-in-Law taboo by AEMJ Pans,
which is one of the main papers on this subject.
And he reckons that basically is to indicate publicly that the son-in-law and the mother-in-law
are not having sex with each other.
But it makes me think they are.
It's always in the office,
it's always the two people
who are completely pretending
they don't know each other exist
who turn out to have been having a torrid affair, is it?
Exactly what I thought.
And also it will make you fancy them.
The more you're told you're not allowed to speak with someone
or stick your tongue down their throat,
the more you want to, don't you?
A bit of fruit.
Yes.
Also, why was that bad?
Why is it bad?
Why is it bad?
So the reason is there happens more in matrilineal cultures.
So, and it's like this taboo.
This taboo.
It does happen.
and that's true.
And it tends to be that the women have very particular roles that they have.
And the idea is that your mother-in-law is not taking over the job of what your wife is supposed to do.
I see.
So there might be lots of different things that a wife is supposed to do in this culture, one of which is sleeping with the husband.
But they're trying to show that this definitely isn't happening and that the generation has moved on to the next generation.
That's the idea.
And I suppose that's the other woman that you would see most often.
So if you were going to shagg anyone else, it would probably be a wife's mom.
and I think sometimes mother-in-law's taboos
also apply to like your mother-in-law's mate
sometimes mother-in-law can be a bit of a broader term
so it can be a few women who are also really close to you
yeah we should say these taboos
they vary a lot between different groups
so in some cases it's completely avoiding them physically
in some it's using a particular
like a different language to address them
and in some it's using a subset of language
so there's a group called Dearbell is a language
and the main language is called Guil
and the language for your mother-in-law is Diangi.
I'm trying to pronounce it wrong.
But it's like it's missing particular words
that might be erotic flashpoints.
Oh, loads.
Erotic flashpoints.
Like ankle.
I mean, there are loads there.
Pubic hair, sweaty smell.
You don't want to mention that in case things just pop off suddenly.
So you're saying you don't say that those words
in front of your mother-in-law either.
I'd have to have a really good reason
to talk about pubic hair in front of my.
mother-in-law. Exactly. I think anyone. But that's the thing. It's not mad to have a taboo against
sleeping with your mother-in-law. I read one thing. This is by a US historian called Hampton Sides.
And the reason I'm saying it's by him is because I don't believe it. But he wrote that in the
Navajo people, husbands are not allowed to look at their mother-in-laws. And it's so important
that the mother-in-laws would wear little bells on their clothes so that he could hear them coming.
I just can't believe it's true. But it's true. But it's so it.
He's a proper historian.
I think that's true.
I think he's a bird and they're the cat.
Exactly.
I think there was a first-hand account.
And it's similar to the Coralai people in West Papua
who shout when they're going around corners
for exactly the same reason.
The mother-in-law, son-in-law taboo,
they'll shout to make clear if the son-in-law's there go away.
And also if the son-in-law's friends see the mum coming,
they'll run and find the sun and say,
she's coming, she's coming.
That's interesting.
That's like working in a restaurant.
Whenever you go around the corner, you go,
corner!
Oh, nice.
People coming in the other direction don't hit you
and you drop all the food.
Is that when you're going in and out of the kitchen as well?
You shout something like that.
At any time when you're going in a blind corner.
Well,
and like did your grandparents always use to honk the horn
going around any corner driving?
No.
Didn't they?
It was so embarrassing.
Oh my God.
That time we went to that labyrinth,
it was a nightmare.
I used to hate it so much.
Every corner gamma honked her horn.
It was just awful.
Really?
Yeah.
It was true.
Mortifying.
That's so funny.
Sometimes I think you have to concentrate really hard to keep these taboos going.
So there's one in a similar mother-in-nor, son-in-nor Tabu in southwestern Ethiopia,
and it's a practice called Balisha.
And it's basically that married women can't speak the name of their husband's mother or father,
but they also can't speak any word beginning with the same syllable as their husband or father's name.
So if my mother-in-law was called Pat, I couldn't say, what's the word beginning of Pat?
Pat the dog.
Yeah, right.
You can ask the dog.
Can you stroke the dog instead?
What is the name of that World War II general from America?
Eisenhower.
That's the name of that postman.
That's interesting.
You'd have to concentrate so much.
But apparently in those cultures where that's the case, you're taught another language so that if you're in that situation, not only will you be able to know what to do, but you will say words everyone else will know as well.
And some of them you do have another language.
yeah and then in some they're just like come up with another word say stroke which isn't the same as patting so you know
postman stroke um incest taboos oh yeah are from around the world including anglo-saxon i wanted to see if it existed in this country
and according to the penitential of theodore which is from the seventh century uh if a brother commits
fornication with his brother he has to do penance for 15 years so that's 15 years without eating meat or drinking wine
if you have sex with your brother.
Okay.
Blimey.
That's a lot.
That's a lot.
Not worth it.
It's not worth it.
What you said?
Well, there was a thing in old England,
the Schweister sun,
which is where you,
that's your sister's son, right?
So it's a nephew.
Yeah, exactly.
But it's specifically with your sister,
your sister's son,
because your sister's son,
your nephew,
is definitely related to you by blood.
Because you and your sister
have both come from the same mother,
so you are definitely ready to by blood,
and she has given birth to her son.
Yeah, so even if there was hanky-panky going on in any of these situations,
you're still related.
Right.
Like, if my wife has cheated on me, my son might not be my own,
but my sister's son is definitely related to me with blood.
So that is a sort of rock-solid relationship to fall.
Yeah, that should be more inheritance goes.
I'm surprised that's not where inheritance works more often.
Yeah, because it's the one you can trust, as you say.
Yeah, yeah.
You can't trust anyone.
We should change the rules.
Mothers-in-law?
Yeah.
I just found some famous mothers-in-law.
Okay.
Would you remember last time we talked about El Frank Baum's mother-in-law?
We did.
Oh, yeah.
So I thought I'd try to find any more notable mothers-in-law.
Yeah.
The mother-in-law of the Marquis de Sard
Oh, yeah.
Was really annoyed with him.
Oh, is she?
Yeah.
Well, a lot of people were.
Yeah.
He ran off to Italy with his wife's younger sister.
Yeah.
So she was furious about that.
Also, she's still her mother.
She's the same mother-in-law.
You don't need to explain that.
I think that's...
Why is that?
You'd be flattered.
It's like you don't fancy one of my daughters.
You fancy both of them.
Yeah.
Well, she got him arrested.
She helped the authorities hunt him down.
And he spent most of the rest of his life in prison or in asylum.
But he had also been committing horrible crimes.
Yeah.
Jumping back to the L. Framp Baum very quickly, the tin man in the movie, he had a son.
Do you know who his mother-in-law was?
The tin man's wife?
The actor, the actor who plays the tin man has a son.
Who's his mother-in-law in real life?
Well, will it be his wife?
His wife's mum
So he got married to someone
who had a notable mother
Who became his mother-in-law
Dance quiz feels like the least good of all
This is not guessable
It's got the best reveal
It was Judy Garland
Because Dorothy
That's cool
Had a daughter
Liza Manelli
Liza Manelli
Married the Tin Man's son
Did not know that
That's cool
Yeah
That is cool
There you go
That is quite a good quiz
Where the questions are completely stupid
All over the place
But the answers are absolutely amazing
Isn't that what QI is?
Okay, that's it.
That's all of our sexy romantic facts.
If you'd like to get in contact with any one of us or send us a Valentine.
Hope you weren't listening with your mother-in-law.
We can all be found on our various social media accounts.
I'm on at Shriverland on Instagram, James.
My Instagram is no such thing as James Harkin.
Andy.
I'm on Blue Sky at Andrew Hunter.
And Anna, if they want to get to us as a group.
You can email podcast.uI.com or tweet at no such thing or Instagram at no such thing as a fish.
That's right. Yep. Or you can go to our website, no such thing as a fish.com. All of the previous episodes are up there.
There's bits of merchandise that you can check out as well. And there is Clubfish, which is our secret club where we put up a lot of bonus episodes and so on.
It's really fun. Join today if you haven't. Otherwise, just come back next week. We'll be back with another episode and we'll see you then. Goodbye.
