No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Duck Bill Hickok

Episode Date: September 15, 2022

Live from Edinburgh, Dan, James, Anna, and Andrew discuss stopping scoundrels, squeaky sounds and a seriously suspect citation. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and ...more episodes.  Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

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Starting point is 00:00:02 To another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast. This week, coming to you live from... Dan Schreiber, I'm sitting here with Anna Tashinsky, 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 fact number one, and that is James. Okay. My fact this week is that when Dick Loss, please.
Starting point is 00:00:54 When Dick Loss, the president of the Montana Cowboy Association drove a car for the first time, he crashed it into a fence because instead of using the brake pedal, he pulled back on the steering wheel and yelled, Whoa! Incredible. A lot to unpack. So who was Dick Loss? He was the president of the Montana Cowboy Association. Cool.
Starting point is 00:01:23 A cowboy? He was a cowboy. And I found this because he's just been inducted into the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Montana. Cool. He was a male carrier. Do you keep tabs on the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Montana? Every new person who's inducted, you know about it.
Starting point is 00:01:37 I do. He's got on his phone. He's got one of those notifications that go out. Do you want some other people who are in the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Montana? Bob Fudge. Bob Fudge. Bob Fudge. Oh no.
Starting point is 00:01:49 The Fudge gang are in town. It's just a funny cowboy name. Bob Fudge. Fanny Steele. Fanny Steele. Johnny Flowers, Carl Moss, Spud Kramer.
Starting point is 00:02:02 Spud Kramer, Chief Sitting Bull and the 1904 Fort Shore Indian School Girls Basketball Team. Wow. Did you say... Spud Kramer?
Starting point is 00:02:14 Spud Kramer. These are incredible... It's a great name, that is it. He was incredible. I have to say, because I read all of the, because they have the biographies of all these people, and that's how I read this about Dick Loss. Basically, I found this Hall of Fame, and they had all the names. I don't know what drew me to Dick Kloss, first of all.
Starting point is 00:02:31 I read his biography, and it had this amazing thing. But he was a male carrier. He was a cowboy. He lived in a place called Square Butt. And it's pronounced Square Butte. And every time we say the word butt, it's spelled B-U-T-E, get loads of people writing in from Montana and Wyoming saying, it's pronounced butte.
Starting point is 00:02:52 And I'm like, well, don't spell it like butt then. Yeah, yeah. I was looking up the meaning of whoa. Whoa. Whoa. So there is some, I wouldn't go so far as to call it controversy. But a little bit of debate, I was reading horse journals.com, which is a great site.
Starting point is 00:03:14 If you're into horses, and Jack Ballou, who is, she's a, horse trainer of many years' experience, she wrote a piece about the meaning of, whoa, and her contention is that by and large, it means nothing. It means nothing at all. It's something for humans to say while they try and sort out the horse situation.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Horse doesn't care. But it does have a meaning, doesn't it? Well, it has a meaning, yeah, yeah. If you're running towards me and I say, whoa, you know what I mean. Yeah, but I'm not a horse, and neither are you. So it's... She says, the word, whoa, is used with zero purpose.
Starting point is 00:03:45 This is in general, other than to fill silent air and give our busy human minds something to work over and repeat incessantly. What is this person talking about? We all know that, whoa, means slow down or stop. Is this person illiterate? Who is she? She's a very experienced, professional horse trainer.
Starting point is 00:04:01 She said in some occasions it can really work, if you say it just right. Well, then it fucking works. What is that? But in general, I can't say, I can't believe I'm having to. In general, it means nothing. Ghost don't exist, except that one time when there was a genuine ghost. Jesus, most of the time when horse people say, whoa, they're just saying it for something to say, right?
Starting point is 00:04:22 Let's not talk about this now. We'll take this backstage. Okay. Anyway, that's a distraction. I did a bit of looking into cowboys, and some of the cowboys that I love most are movie cowboys, the sort of John Wayne and the Clint Eastwoods and so on. And some of the cowboys were genuine cowboys
Starting point is 00:04:37 that then became movie stars. So as in, they just found their way into Hollywood in the early days. So there was a guy called Louis Burton, Lindley Jr., and he was a cowboy. who got conscripted into the war, and the only reason he really got into the world of Hollywood was when he enlisted into the war, they said, what is your occupation?
Starting point is 00:04:56 He said, rodeo, and the person went, Radio, okay. And then they put him down, and he did radio throughout the war. And he was like, this is pretty good. After he done rodeo, radio is a very easy to sit on. So after the war, he was like, I really enjoyed that radio stuff, and then he went into movies like blazing saddles and stuff. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:18 Wow. And then there was another guy who was, he wasn't a real cowboy in real life, but James Arnes, and he was a famous actor in a TV show called Gunsmoke, and Gunsmoke was really big. During the war, his thing was, he was a really tall guy,
Starting point is 00:05:32 and so as a result, as the tallest man in the outfit of his platoon, he was always sent down the ramp of a boat first to see how deep the water was. He was the measuring stick, the human measurement. Stick. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:48 You mentioned John Wayne. Middle name Marion, if you didn't know, anyone out there. And didn't like it. Didn't like the fact his middle name was Marion because he liked to get a bit of a macho image. And he said he actually got bullied loads for it at school. His full name was Marion Robert Morris,
Starting point is 00:06:06 John Marion Robert Morrison, I think. Sorry, his real first name was Marion. Even worse. This is a Johnny Cash song, basically. This is a boy named Sue. This is the boy named Marion. Yeah. Is that where Johnny Cash got it from?
Starting point is 00:06:19 No. Okay. But he changed his name and he's actually credited in some films as Duke and he's often called Duke as a nickname and that was after his family dog and it was because he had this giant dog,
Starting point is 00:06:32 this Airdale who used to walk him to school every day when he was a boy and they'd stop at the local fire station and the fireman called him Little Duke and his dog Big Duke and so he had the name stuck. That's very cool. Can I give you some Montana and Cal people.
Starting point is 00:06:49 Hilda Red Wing is recently in the Hall of Fame in Montana. She took part in a rodeo at the age of 90. And during the rodeo, one of her friends who was running it, his horse ran into her and broke her leg, and she carried on doing the rodeo with a broken leg at the age of 90. Isn't that amazing? Was she riding a, you know, a... bull or anything? No, it's like a relatively calm horse.
Starting point is 00:07:20 Okay, okay. Still, still amazing. And I mentioned the 1904 Fort Shore Indian School Girls Basketball Team. Yes. They went to the St. Louis World Fair, and they spent five months there as part of the anthropological exhibit that they did at that same time, where they brought lots of Native Americans in to do stuff. And during that, they started playing basketball against all comers, and they beat anyone who came,
Starting point is 00:07:46 and so they were named champions of the world. Wow. And why does that get you into the Cowboy Hall of Fame? I think really they were short of people. Yeah. Tough year. They didn't, you know, they weren't in a shoot-up, were they? They didn't win a duel.
Starting point is 00:08:03 Have you guys heard, in Alaska, there are cowboys who ride helicopters instead of horses. That's cool. When you say ride. Well, they don't, obviously... They're not spinning around. on the... Definitely looking at some dick loss there, aren't you?
Starting point is 00:08:21 No, they round their cows up with helicopters. But I didn't even know they were Alaskan cowboys. And Hawaiian cowboys as well, which is a very famous thing in America. Yeah, they're bloody everywhere, aren't they? And in fact, American, US cowboys really nicked all of their gear, all of their cliches, all of their hats, their coats, everything,
Starting point is 00:08:42 from Mexico. So they're based on Mexican vacueros. And in fact, the word Buccaroo, I didn't know, comes from vacero. Oh, really? Yeah. And we get so many words all come from those Mexican cowboys. So lasso, bronco, chaps, as in, you're wearing chaps, not high chaps. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:03 And gauchos as well, the Argentinian version, which I always think of the coolest. The thing I like about gauchos, so Argentinian and Uruguayan cowboys, is that they, again, just like really cool cattle herders. It seems like if you're in the Americas and you're herding cattle, you become really cool. And they were really fussy about the color of their horses. And if you're a proper gaucho, all of your horses have to be perfectly color matched.
Starting point is 00:09:26 And so you get piebald horses, like white with black splodges, but you want the black splodges as perfectly matched as possible to each other. Really? Yeah, it's cool. Apparently it was so that if your herds got mixed up, you could tell which ones were yours. Wow, says. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:41 That's very cool. I think like a quarter of the cowboys, what we would call them now, were not white, right? Yeah. In the time of the cowboy, basically, in the post-Civil War time. And actually, the word cowboy would be mostly used for African-American cowhands. Like, the white people would be called cowhands, and it was kind of a bit of a slur to say boy. Do you know what I mean? It was kind of diminutive.
Starting point is 00:10:05 Yeah, exactly, yeah. Wow, interesting. I didn't realize how short the Wild West was. after the Civil War before about 1900. That was it. It was a really brief period. Here's a mind-blowing thing. Cowboys basically invented dust in America.
Starting point is 00:10:19 The reason that America is dusty is because of cowboys. Really? Yeah. So there's this guy, Jason Neff, he's a geochemist, I hadn't heard of that. He studied the sediments laid down in various mountains in Colorado, and he looked at the sediments
Starting point is 00:10:31 that had been laid down in the lakes and things like that. And he found there was basically no dust in America for 5,000 years, and the soil had this, vegetation had this crust, this nice thick crust on it, right? Yeah. No dust blowing around. 1860, the rates suddenly shoot up of dust in the atmosphere,
Starting point is 00:10:48 and it's because the cows had arrived, they stripped the grass, and then their feet, their big clumping hooves, broke through this gorgeous crust. And as a result... It must have been nice where you first go through that crust, like breaking into a creme brulee. That's the least cowboy thing you've ever said. Bloody hell. But we have dust, like, I get dust in my house, right?
Starting point is 00:11:14 That's nothing to do with the Cowboys. You're right. That's pre-existing dust. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I just mean that the reason America is... So basically, apart from that one example, this is true. Yeah. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:11:27 Just on names, Dick Loss, a friend of mine, who's actually in the crowd tonight, Shona, sent this ridiculous fact. I can't believe that it's true. any fact that comes from a friend of yours no offense, show no, but there's some skepticism in the room. So, Wild Bill Hickok, right? So the name Wild Bill, this really kick-ass name, Scare people, he was just like this beautiful,
Starting point is 00:11:51 amazing cowboy. Supposedly, the reason he got it is not because he was this incredible cowboy who could do dangerous things is because his face, his nose and mouth looks slightly like a duck. No. And Wild Bill is the bill of a duck. but and so he was sort of bullied
Starting point is 00:12:08 this is shown as fact he was sort of bullied by his buddies and then he changed it to be like no I'm really I'm really cool and wild his brother was called tame Bill Hickok wasn't he so did he have a face that looked like a normal duck speak
Starting point is 00:12:24 I will bet a decent number of de bloons that that is not true okay using a pirate currency apparently now Pirate currency apparently now Pirate's Cowboys. Sorry, what's the typical cowboy currency? Like gold nuggets.
Starting point is 00:12:38 Gold nuggets. There you go. That's what I'll bet. I'm sorry. You'd wager your parrot on it, wouldn't you, Anna? I would. I'm going to have to move us on in a sec, guys. We've got to move on. The Cowboys all went on strike in 1883, which I think is a very funny. Wow. Okay?
Starting point is 00:12:57 There was a cowboy strike in 1883. Well, they had very good unions at the Cowboys. Right. And, guys. He had to let Jeremy Carbid in. Yeah. If you're equating the striking bin men with these cowboys, that's very flattering to them.
Starting point is 00:13:12 But we're all about the cowboys here, and their unions. And pirates. Don't forget the unions. And pirates, also very strong unions. They were called the turtles. They were the original turtles, cowboy unions. The original turtles. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:28 How were they called turtles? They were called turtles. It was the rodeos union. And so it was in response to like, mad pay and stuff, and they were called turtles because the idea is they're, I don't know why they're proud of this, but they're slow to organise, but once they do, they're unafraid to stick their neck out.
Starting point is 00:13:44 That's good. I don't know if that's what you want. It's kind of good. I thought that when turtles were afraid, they didn't stick their neck out. I think that might be true as well. I don't know how much they knew about naturalism for the cowboys. It is time for fact number two, and that is
Starting point is 00:14:06 Anna. My fact this week is that until the 19th If someone shouted, stop thief, you had no choice but to try and stop the thief. You were legally obliged on pain of being arrested and facing a penalty to chase the thief. But with the crowd who were trying to stop the thief, if you didn't join in, does some of the crowd then start chasing you? Oh, yeah. Yeah, good point.
Starting point is 00:14:37 Stop non-thief stopper. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Well, there was a time in, this was in 1760, there was a Jewish secondhand clothes dealer, and he followed this, what was known as Hugh and Cry, and he was faster than everyone else,
Starting point is 00:14:51 so he got at the front of the group, and then they thought that he was the one who was... And so they grabbed him and arrested him. Oh, God. That's like a scene out of life of Brian. Yeah, it is. But that's a really good point. What was the policing of that situation?
Starting point is 00:15:07 Because you've suddenly got potentially, one criminal and then 30 criminals. Yes, so I do think the crime of not stopping the thief wasn't as large as the crime of being the thief. So your priority is still to chase the thief, but I think after you'd given chase and you'd caught the thief, you can mention to the constable, by the way, old Angela, who lives next door,
Starting point is 00:15:25 didn't even give chase. One reason was if you didn't chase them and they got away, you became liable for the robbery, so you might have to pay money for the person who got stolen. If I just don't chase, because I'm halfway through doing something. I'm liable for the stuff. Like a Sudoku or something.
Starting point is 00:15:42 Yeah, I'll have to do my Sudoku. And then I don't join the Hugh and cry. I'm then on the hook for the theft. You wouldn't go to prison for the theft, but you might have to pay some recompense to the person. Well, I refuse to pay. That's outrageous. Well, then you are going to prison. Then I'll maybe have a bit of peace and bloody quiet
Starting point is 00:15:57 to do my Sudoku. Everyone's one. Wow. Go to shopping must have been so stressful back in the day. Yeah. Well, this is what if it makes you guys, feel better, Dan and Andy, because I can see you're having trouble with this, there were also penalties for raising a false hue and cry for exactly this reason, because it was acknowledged that
Starting point is 00:16:16 people would be busy working in the farms or doing Sudoku, and so it could interrupt the village economy every time you shouted stop thief. So you did get in trouble for doing it falsely. As some people did, I think there was one person who raised a hue and cry on his dog, I believe. I think this is in the 15th century, and it was found his dog was chasing some sheep, and so he did the stop thief, or you know, the stop, done my dogs chasing sheep, Hugh and cry. Right. And he was fined for that.
Starting point is 00:16:44 You know the descendants of Sigmund Freud, Lucien Freud, Clement Freud, big broadcaster and artist, when they were younger, they were going through a park and they decided to challenge each other who could run faster to the destination they were getting to. They both convinced that they were going to be the person that could do it. So they started running, and as they were going,
Starting point is 00:17:04 Clement took over, was going much faster. and so Lucien went, Stop! Thief! He's taking my money! And he was grabbed by Passer-Beyes, who stopped him, and Clement was so pissed off with him that the two of them barely spoke for the rest of their life.
Starting point is 00:17:21 That was the incident. I knew they hated each other, but I didn't know. Lucian didn't even go to his funeral. No way. Because of that. And that was the biggie. That's what everyone says, well, it all comes back down to the stop thief moment.
Starting point is 00:17:33 When he did that, he said, I should have made his tombstone, boy, you've stopped now, haven't you? Nice. That would be good. You didn't always have to shout stop thief. There are a few other things you should shout. In Scotland, sometimes you would shout,
Starting point is 00:17:47 O-ie! In Wales, you might shout, hubbub. And in Gloucestershire, you might shout, U-Testies. As in it, like, you pair of bullocks, you've nicked my purse? It's U-T-E-S-T-E-S. You testes. Okay.
Starting point is 00:18:08 Sounds like a Greek philosopher, doesn't it? Utestis. You just bounced out a lot of bollocks all the time, yeah. It's really interesting. I think that, so there was this thing. There was a magazine, the magazine is putting it a bit strong. It was a kind of a one-sheet thing in the 1770s that was run by the Bow Street magistrate in London. And it was full of unsolved crimes and details of criminals.
Starting point is 00:18:33 And it was called General Hugh and Cry. and it was distributed across the country and it was a way of catching criminals it was basically like an extremely long distance hue and cry. You'd say this person had stolen this and they look like this so if you see them please pick them up and it worked even in the 1770s
Starting point is 00:18:48 people were being picked up hundreds of miles away for crimes they committed. It just feels like being a civilian was a full-time job in those days. You had to constantly because again it wasn't just that you had to give chase when people cried you had to if you read it in the magazine and also by the 17th century
Starting point is 00:19:04 Sorry, what do you mean if you read it in the magazine? No, you didn't have to chase when you read it in the magazine. People desperately tried not to look at magazines because then they're legally obliged. I made it very hard to do the Sudoku, didn't it? But warrants would be passed from parish to parish. So let's say you're looking for a thief, then you go to the next parish
Starting point is 00:19:24 and you give them a picture, a drawing of the criminal, and a description of them, and you say, can you spread this around your parish? And then everyone in that parish is obliged to keep an eye out for them. So, I mean, I don't know how anyone held down a judge. job. They had delayed Hugh and Cry in the Scottish borders as well. Oh really? The reason being that you would have a lot of people from England coming over and trying to steal people's sheep and belongings and stuff like that. And often what you would do is because they were armed these people,
Starting point is 00:19:50 it's a bit the Wild West really. And so you might kind of hide in your hedge or kind of just try and get all of your really expensive belongings and go there. In the hedge. In the hedge. In the hedge. Yeah. Anywhere really. All your sheep in the hedge. Entire log of sheep, one hedge. And then someone comes out with a hedge trimmer. You're like, oh, no! No, you would hide often because they were armed. And so there's a special border law where you were allowed to do a counter-raid
Starting point is 00:20:16 as long as it was within six days. You still had to shout Hugh and cry as you went, and you had to carry a lighted torch so that everyone knew you were on a legitimate return mission. That's amazing. Wow. And then they had to join you on that? No, that was just you getting your own back
Starting point is 00:20:33 from the Cumbrian... Got it, fair enough. And these days, if you shout stop thief, you can get in trouble. There's quite a few people who have sued, like, shop security because they've shouted stop thief. And they're like, well, I'm not a thief. And everyone's heard that, and everyone's going to think that now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:52 There was a guy in Dublin, he was 28 years old, and he claimed that he'd been wrongly accused of shoplifting a toy duck from a toy store. Okay. He basically said he was deeply embarrassed and ashamed when a security guard approached me and said where is the duck? I know you have it. And the best part about it was
Starting point is 00:21:16 they went to court and they brought out the duck as evidence and it was a talking duck and they couldn't turn it off. All the way through the cart case this carcum duck was just talking all the way through. Are you sure it was a talking? talking duck and not wild Bill Hickok you're hitting in the court.
Starting point is 00:21:35 I've heard they're identical. Do you guys know the bloody code? No. It was like a penal code and you could be effectively executed for lots and lots and lots of crimes. It's pretty much, yeah, dropping your handkerchief, yeah, yeah. This is in England, so Scotland tended
Starting point is 00:21:53 to have a bit of a more, we might say better, we might say more lenient legal system in sort of later medieval time, where you didn't get the death penalty for everything. But in England, there was the bloody code, which was the English legal system from like the 17th, the early 19th century. And I hadn't realized how many crimes you could be killed for. So there were over 200 crimes that were added to this code. Crimes you could be executed for included damaging orchards or gardens,
Starting point is 00:22:22 cutting down trees on an avenue, destroying a turnpike road, wrecking a fish pond. I'm, I've got to say, Anna. I'm agreeing with all of this at the moment. If I owned a fish pond, I would... You're very so proprietary about your garden, aren't you? Wow, but there was this thing where if you were done for a crime and the jury thought,
Starting point is 00:22:47 oh, we don't really want this person to be literally hanged to death, they would return up what was called a partial verdict and then say he's guilty but not as guilty as the judge is trying to make out. So there was this thing called grand larceny. If you stole something worth more than a shilling, that was the death penalty for you. Right.
Starting point is 00:23:06 So a shilling is not a huge amount of money even then. But what juries would sometimes do is they would return a verdict of not grand larceny, but petty larceny. Got it. So in 751, for example, there was a crime where the accused had stolen a pound and seven shillings and sixpence, definitely way above the barrier for being hanged. But the jury said, we think those coins were actually only worth seven pence. So as a result, you get off. So that meant fewer executions.
Starting point is 00:23:33 What you say, Anna, about them being a bit more lenient in Scotland is mostly true, but then after the Reformation, the law was sort of done by the Kirk, by the church. And they started bringing in laws for quite a lot of things that we would be surprised about today. So there was a statute of 1661 in Scotland that said that if a child beat or cursed, either their father or mother,
Starting point is 00:23:55 they shall be put to death without mercy. Oh. Yeah. If you were found guilty of the vice of, this is the exact words, filthy fornication, you would get a fine of 40 pounds, 40 Scottish pounds,
Starting point is 00:24:11 which in those days was absolutely enormous. And in 1697, as late as then, there was a guy in Edinburgh called Thomas Aikenhead, he was hanged for declaring that theology was a rhapsody of ill-invented nonsense. He was hanged for that. Yeah, it wasn't, you know, the Norwegian today legal system, but it was slightly more lenient.
Starting point is 00:24:32 I was reading about, there's a classic book that was written by a guy called Havelock Ellis, and it's all about the study of what a criminal, the makeup of a criminal, and this was during Victorian times. Like the face was supposed to look different if you were a criminal. Exactly, yeah, exactly. So there was a guy called Sol Solto, who was someone who paid particular attention
Starting point is 00:24:51 to different bits of the body to see if that, and he found, he believes, that you're more likely to be a criminal as a woman if you have a hairy anus. All right, so from a show of hands, ladies... She said hands. That is a terrible episode of crime watch, isn't it? We've done a recreation of the crime.
Starting point is 00:25:21 Is that part of the search? Like, who's the criminal? Let's, yeah. Has everyone shaved their anus before we commit this crime? We don't want anyone caught. So he found it basically in seven out of 40 women that he studied. Seven out of 40? Who were criminals.
Starting point is 00:25:36 Right. Had a hairy anus. But not a huge... Well, it's not a huge proportion. It's enough that it made him write it down. Did he study 40 non-criminals as well? Was there any control group in this experiment? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Oh, right, okay. Do we know the proportion of women that have, under normal circumstances, according to him, hairy anuses? That's what I'm saying. And, you know, do we know what counts as a hairy anus? anus? Yeah, where's the anosometer of,
Starting point is 00:26:01 you know? How rigorous was this study? Was it peer reviewed? It sounds like he wasn't a proper scientist at all. This is in Victorian London. Oh, Victorian London.
Starting point is 00:26:15 Fine. Okay. There was no science. I kept reading it because it's a lot about hair. Like, does hair mean you're a criminal? I'm a really hairy guy. You can probably see from the audience. We can't see all of you.
Starting point is 00:26:30 But I am a really hairy guy and so I was reading on and it said it's worthwhile pointing out that there are frequent anomalies in the development of hair among idiots. It's the hair. That's what it is.
Starting point is 00:26:47 But yeah, so any hairy anist women out there? Stop. We're watching you. Stop jumping. My God. Good grief. It is time for fact number three, and that is Andy.
Starting point is 00:27:11 My fact is that in 2016, scientists found a pocket of helium so big that it could make everyone on the planet sound squeaky for 20 minutes. I mean, what great use of that helium. Incredible. We'd have had such a good time. And then actually, later on, they upgraded the estimate they thought, and it would have been 40 minutes. We could all have been squeaky for 40 minutes, everyone.
Starting point is 00:27:36 I'm sure that would have had quite serious health consequences for everybody, breathing non-oxygen for 40 minutes. But nonetheless, this massive, massive amount. And this is the thing of helium. We're always running out of it, and then suddenly always discovering more. Yeah. And it's just this constant sea saw. Where is this pocket that can make us all?
Starting point is 00:27:54 Okay, under the ground, presumably. It's in an area called Rukwai in Tanzania. And Rukwai is also the place which has the largest number of crockers. in the whole of Tanzania. And the interesting thing about that is, if you give a crocodile helium, its voice doesn't go higher, it goes lower. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:14 Oh, really? I remember we did it on QI, and it's weird because the same thing is happening to, I think, is it the timbre of your voice that helium changes rather than the pitch? Exactly. I think it is. So you'd think that a crocodile sounded like us,
Starting point is 00:28:28 like it's going higher, but when the timbre of a crocodile's voice gets higher, it sounds to us deeper, so they sound more sexy. I don't think I've ever heard... Even more sexy. I feel that. Even more? I can feel that.
Starting point is 00:28:41 Hard to believe. Yeah. Crocodile hunter was a very sexy show, wasn't it? Steve Irwin was... Is that what he was doing to those crocodiles? I've never heard a crocodile make any kind of noise. They kind of growl, they grunt, yeah. Do they? Okay.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Okay. That was hot. Okay, so the growlers. Okay, cool. And the other interesting thing, I suppose, is that on this whole thing is that we were running out of helium, and it was a big problem because we use it for MRI machines, we use it for all sorts of important stuff, not just balloons,
Starting point is 00:29:18 and we were running out of it, and the price was getting higher and higher and higher. And this was the first time we'd ever really looked for it, and they started looking, and they found shitloads of it. And so they think that maybe if we keep looking, we might find a lot more. and in fact in 2017, some scientists at the University of Edinburgh found a huge amount of helium in the middle of Scotland as well.
Starting point is 00:29:39 Oh, really? Yeah. Oh, thank God. The parties are saved. No, it is. Parties are saved. It's really, it's weird. It's the second most abundant element in the entire universe,
Starting point is 00:29:50 but it's incredibly hard to keep here. That's crazy. When you find deposits of it, they're mostly deposits of rock that are capped with some impermeable rock. So it's basically in a cave that you're looking for it. Yeah. Yeah. Do you know the biggest amount of helium you can currently buy? This is quite exciting. This is new this week. This is really thrilling.
Starting point is 00:30:08 Well, you would say they would come in those kind of canisters, right? A big one of those might be. It's even bigger than that. By weight? Because... Well, I'm going to tell you by volume and by length. Okay. So we can work out the width of the depth from that. This is GCSE math. And you've just got a GCSE math.
Starting point is 00:30:30 No, the USA have just announced, this is really thrilling stuff, they are just announcing, they are selling off the entire federal helium system because they nationalized it really early on, like in the 1920 or so, because they needed airships. So they said we have to,
Starting point is 00:30:44 the government has to control the global supply, but we can now get in on it. That's great news. So why have they decided, oh, we don't really need airships anymore, so I don't know. That was, the Hindenburg wasn't able to use helium because of that global monopoly, wasn't it?
Starting point is 00:30:58 Exactly. Yeah. Exactly that. Sorry, Andy, do you tell us the size of this? Actually didn't, thank you very much, James. So... I could just tell that everyone in the room was like, but Andy, what is the length and the volume? It includes, thank you James,
Starting point is 00:31:12 700 kilometres of helium pipelines, which are spread across Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, but I'm sure they can move them for an extra fee. There's the Bush Dome Helium Storage Reservoir, a 4,000 hectare rock formation, capped, you'll be glad to know, by two layers of non-porous calcium and hydrogen, and it is likely to contain 65 million cubic meters of federally owned crude helium.
Starting point is 00:31:35 Are they going to deliver this in convenient packages, or do they just say it's there and get it yourself? Because you can't come, and you know, like if you go to a supermarket and they say you do want a bag and you're like, well, I think I can fit it in these pockets? You can't do that with that much helium? No, no, no. I'm not sure who's going to buy it or what for. Well, we might for helium airships because, bizarrely, the UK has just decided to start investing in them again. Really? Yeah, after a bit of a hiatus.
Starting point is 00:32:01 And it's Air Nostrum. It's a sister airline of BA, and it's just put in a massive order for some helium airships. And in fact, this venture is backed by Iron Maiden Bruntman Bruce Dickinson. Oh, yeah. Who I think he's pretty into flying, isn't he? He's a pilot, yeah. There you go.
Starting point is 00:32:21 He's into flying. So he's into this idea, and the idea is that it slashes a lot of carbon use, because we could use them instead of airplanes. it'll slash carbon use by 90%. I liked the fact that Quasi Qa Teng, the business secretary said this is proof of how the UK's
Starting point is 00:32:35 businesses are embracing new technology. Anyway, a prototype crash landed in 2016 on its second test, but it is going to be great, we're told. Wow, that's so good. Who would win, this is an open question, in a conflict between an airship
Starting point is 00:32:56 and a submarine? Well, it depends where the conflict takes place. Fair play. Let's make it a neutral territory. Let's make it above water. You've got all the environments there apart from land. It's not on land. Because this has happened.
Starting point is 00:33:16 Oh, has it? Yeah. Specifically, though, as in they were pitted against each other. No, it was during the Second World War. There wasn't time to set up fun... It wasn't like robot war. It wasn't pay-per-view. Airship versus submarine.
Starting point is 00:33:32 Okay, so... So, there were loads of US ships near the coast which were sunk by German submarines during the war, and there were ships which went in convoys that were protected by airships. You've got a ship on the sea, then an airship above it protecting, because they can see when a submarine is approaching,
Starting point is 00:33:48 they can detect it, and then drop depth charges. You ordinarily wouldn't hit one, but it would just force the submarine to go lower and not use its torpedoes. And of the 90,000 ships that were in convoys escorted by airships, only one of them was ever sunk. But in 1943, a submarine fought a U-boat and the submarine won. Really?
Starting point is 00:34:07 Yeah. Sorry, a submarine fought a U-boat, do you say? Yep, I got that wrong. That would have been a completely ordinary thing to happen in 1948. It's not the best fact you've ever had. Did a submarine fight against an airship? Yes. How did they shoot it?
Starting point is 00:34:28 Like torpedoes wouldn't go in the air, right? The account is quite vague on the method used. I'm sure it wasn't a torpedo, but I think they might have been firing from the surface. Because I think I might have had surface guns. I can't believe you don't know the answers. I do know who won. I just don't have a fucking match report.
Starting point is 00:34:44 You know. I'm sorry not to know. If you take some helium and freeze it down to pretty much absolute zero just above it, and you put it in a teacup, and you start staring it, and you go away, and you come back a million years later, it will still be staring. What?
Starting point is 00:35:04 That's so spooky. I know. It has no friction, doesn't it? It's like this amazing capacity, but only when it's right near absolute zero. It's because it doesn't go, like most things, as they get colder, if you remember from your GCSE chemistry, they kind of, they turn into solids. Helium doesn't turn into a solid, no matter how cold it gets, unless you put it under loads and loads of pressure.
Starting point is 00:35:24 And so it just has these amazing properties like a superconductor would. It also, if you leave it in a glass and you bring it right down, A, it'll fall through the glass. So, like, because it doesn't undergo friction at all, every tiny molecule-sized hole in your glass, like I'm holding a glass now,
Starting point is 00:35:45 there are molecule-sized holes in it. Most liquids stay in that, because friction's holding them in. Helium, when it's liquid, will just slip through. And it will climb up the sides of the glass. Because gravity doesn't work the same way. Gravity's not strong enough to hold it down. Yeah, that's amazing.
Starting point is 00:36:00 Can I quickly tell you my favorite helium story I've ever read? Oh, yeah, okay. 1999, headline was, helium blew woman up like a balloon. She was fine, by the way. I just heard of this. Oh, she wasn't fine. She had a bad day.
Starting point is 00:36:16 She was called... I'm fine. She was called Samantha Munn's. She was called Samantha Munn's. She owned a toy shop. she was standing on a step-bladder in her toy shop. She slipped off and she was speared by the metal spike, which was in a helium tank.
Starting point is 00:36:32 Where did it spear her? In her left thigh. Thank God for that. And she looked down and she saw her left thigh and her stomach inflate like a balloon. They managed to get her to a hospital where they extracted her from the helium tank. Did she just kind of got...
Starting point is 00:36:50 Around the room. We don't have any beds for this patient. We'll just rubber against your head and stick it to the wall. Wouldn't it be great as well, because this was in a toy shop where they sell balloons, just some random kid went, can I get this, Mom? For an hour, she's been walked around the shopping mall.
Starting point is 00:37:17 This is just the kind of joke she dreaded happening after this story. She's fine now, right? She's fine. They said adopt. to x-rayed her left thigh, which showed that it was about twice the size of her right, which I would argue you could tell without an x-ray. Time for our final fact for the show, and that is my fact. My fact this week is if you look up humor on Wikipedia,
Starting point is 00:37:46 the first thing you'll see is a picture of my face. And this is something that's as of the... 21st of August, 22, someone changed the photo on the article for humor, and very randomly, they don't know who I am, they've made that very clear in their comment going, I have no idea who this person is. If anyone's got a better picture, please replace it. But it hasn't been replaced, and I now find myself the global face of humor. And in the photo, in the photo, it's not just me, there's someone else. So the wording, the caption underneath is, a viewer,
Starting point is 00:38:36 bracket, Jimmy Wales, left, laughing at a comedian, Dan Schreiber Wright, performing stand-up comedian. If you don't know who Jimmy Wales is, Jimmy Wales is the creator of Wikipedia, which is basically like making God laugh, right? So
Starting point is 00:38:51 this is a very exciting development. I imagine God's laughing a lot when he's looking over at you. Now, that is That is really cool. I don't know. If you ever needed evidence
Starting point is 00:39:05 that Wikipedia's an unreliable source, I think you're looking at it. I think I was, wasn't I there on this day, Dan? You were, so... So why are you not in the picture, Andy? I don't know, but I did look up the Wikipedia for Wanker recently, and very upsettingly.
Starting point is 00:39:22 No, no, no, but this was a thing called Wikimania, where they sort of have an annual conference all about Wikipedia and Wikipedians, and, you know, they have seminars, and they have fun quizzes, and yeah, this was... You did the... Andy and I were actually at the Edinburgh Fringe when it was on.
Starting point is 00:39:35 It was down in London, and I had this idea called Wikipedia The Missing Bits, and the idea was to do a stand-up show where a comedian would come up and present a set on a missing page on Wikipedia and their pitch for what should be involved in it. And Jimmy Wales came up,
Starting point is 00:39:51 and actually Jimmy came on stage with you, Andy, and did a quiz. Yeah, yeah, no one apparently took a fucking photo. Didn't you try to edit Wikipedia on the way down to say something about yourself? No, there was a comedian who was on the show that day called Steve Cross who was complaining that he doesn't have a Wikipedia page. So I created a page where I could put his name on,
Starting point is 00:40:11 which was people who don't have Wikipedia pages, and he was the first on the list. But it got taken down immediately. It was within a minute or something. It was amazingly fast editing by the people at Wikipedia. All the four of us have Wikipedia pages, right? And I had a quick look at the editing online, because there's been a few times where comments that have been made on this show...
Starting point is 00:40:29 Shit. Yeah. have made their way onto my Wikipedia. And I've had to go in, and I've complained about it, and no one changes it. So I've had to physically edit my change into it. And I'm now banned from Wikipedia. Yeah, before editing my own page for factual accuracy.
Starting point is 00:40:48 So one of the things was, someone changed my name on it to Daniel, Indiana, Craig Schreiber, because I once said that I almost changed my name to Daniel, Indiana, to Indiana as my middle name. So for a while on Wikipedia, it was Daniel, Indiana, Craig Schreiber, brackets, dicks, which is what James said on the podcast, as was what you made it on. Then, a few years later, I had to change that.
Starting point is 00:41:16 A few years later, Andy makes a joke, and it's a joke that I have an interest in sort of we were talking about Nazism and stuff like that. You're an avid collector. Daniel Indiana Craig Schreiber, aka Dix, is a radio producer living in the United Kingdom. Others have claimed him to have an extreme fascination and an expertise in Nazism and Nazi sacred myths. I hate to think what it's going to say about herianuses after tonight's show. And then some other dick, put this on.
Starting point is 00:41:55 I found this because this was in an edit. removed incorrect statement, Schreiber is not particularly noted for this catchphrase. And then what originally was put into my account was, Schreiber is famous for his hilarious catchphrase, yep. Which he uses after Twitter handles are announced on no such thing as a fish. It's such a good catchphrase, though. You've called it like, that's a biggie. That's a huge word.
Starting point is 00:42:27 Yep. Oh my God. That's so good. On Wikipedia pages, often it says, like, notable people. So if you had Bolton, for instance, it might be notable people from Bolton. I thought I'd check where we are, if any of those things. So this is all that I could find.
Starting point is 00:42:44 I am mentioned in notable people with Afantasia. Really? Because I don't have a, yeah, I don't have, like, a mind's eye, so I'm in that. So James can't picture your face. If you leave, he can't remember your face. Your anus, on the other hand? Photographic. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:43:01 Dan is mentioned as a notable Australian in the United Kingdom. And Anna is a notable person in the Poles in the United Kingdom, as in people from Poland. And? Andy Murray is a notable tennis player. Wow.
Starting point is 00:43:21 I'm not joking. I genuinely searched, and I didn't find that phrase. Thank you for looking. There was a thing. So the editing can be used for good and for ill, as we've clearly seen from Dan's extensive list of grievances that he just read out.
Starting point is 00:43:37 But a couple of years ago, there was a bloke in Australia who was a really big fan of a band called Peeking Duck. He was a bloke called David Spargo, and he was going to see them at a gig, and he really wanted to get backstage to see them. And so he chained to the Wikipedia page of the band Peeking Duck, creating an entry for family and listing himself as a family member.
Starting point is 00:43:59 And then when he got to the backstage bit of the gig, he said to the guys, no, no, no, I'm their stepbrother or cousin or whatever, showed that to the security guys who let him in. Genius. And the band just gave him a beer and said, Fair Play, that's a very funny thing you've done. They said, I love this so much, they said, he wasn't creepy at all,
Starting point is 00:44:19 and was actually much more relaxed and cool than we would have expected from someone who went to those lengths. That's so good. The band hasn't been seen since then, does it? You know in Wikipedia how there are multiple language wikipedias, and so there may be a translation of no such thing as a fish into, I don't know, Mandarin, for example, or whatever languages there are?
Starting point is 00:44:41 So there's a list of the articles where people and things have been the most translated. So it's the leaderboard of that. So in terms of humans that are on that leaderboard, the top people are, the most translations is for Jesus. Second is for Michael Jackson Third is for Barack Obama Fourth is for Donald Trump
Starting point is 00:45:01 Fifth is for Adolf Hitler Sixth is for Albert Einstein Who do you think is seventh? Is Andy? Please I need this then I would have like someone like Harry Potter perhaps
Starting point is 00:45:17 It's got to be a real person Mr Bean? Oh Rowan Ackinson Oh Rowan Atkinson Same answer yeah Is it another world leader No, it's a guy called Corbin Blue, B-L-E-U, who was initially at the time a supporting actor from the movie High School Musical, who one enthusiastic fan translated his account into every single language that he could as using like Google Translate and stuff like that,
Starting point is 00:45:48 giving him over 200 different languages of translation. and so he's just behind Albert Einstein, Julia Caesar's behind him, but it's, yeah, that's the, and it's the theory that it's one person who's been doing that. So we don't, we just think, because it sounds like that person is in tonight,
Starting point is 00:46:06 if we do want to ask. God, people have a lot of time. So on languages on Wikipedia, actually, there is a Scots-language Wikipedia section. It's got 41,000 articles, as in Scots, the sort of language Robbie Burns, some people say it's a dialect of English, some people
Starting point is 00:46:25 say it's its own language, but you know the one. Anyway, people started to notice that some of the Scots language articles were not entirely correct in terms of not really being written in the Scots language, they were really written in a parody version of it, or what someone who didn't actually speak the language
Starting point is 00:46:41 might guess that it sounded like. And it turned out it's because almost half of the articles had been written by a teenager in North Carolina who did not speak a word of Scots. It's the most odd story. And he started off doing it. He was 12, I think, when he started doing it.
Starting point is 00:46:59 What a strange kid. And they started at the top, all with the warning, The Scots that was oozed in this article was written be a body that's mither tongue, is now Scots. Please improve this article, Giniy can, which I think is translated as, this is all bollocks, please improve it. But then he took that away.
Starting point is 00:47:25 And it was only a couple of years ago, it was revealed that it was just this boy in North Carolina. Poor kid. I know, because then he got... He felt bad about it. He felt so bad about it. He hasn't been named, I think, which is good. No, we know his Wikipedia name.
Starting point is 00:47:37 Oh, God. Which is Amarillis Gardner, but I don't know if you can track him down with that. Okay. And very sweetly, because a lot of people said we should scrap the whole Scots-Language page. The Michael Dempster, who's director of the Scots Language Centre,
Starting point is 00:47:49 said, look, this kid's put in an incredible amount of work. It's a great resource, but it does need people who are literate in Scots to edit it now. So get on it. The editing of Wikipedia is such a hotly contested area to behind the scenes of it is just constant fights going on. One of the famous ones, which probably a lot of people here know about,
Starting point is 00:48:14 is there is a page for a guy who's called Guy Standing, and in the photo, Guy Standing is sitting. So, so the caption reads, Guy Standing, sitting. Beautiful. That's great.
Starting point is 00:48:31 It's great, except it's a very contentious photo, which has now been edited away, brought back, because people are saying, you're making fun. This is an obvious joke, and we're not about jokes here. We're about information. So if you want jokes, head over to Dan Schreiber on the human page.
Starting point is 00:48:47 I just have one of two things about stock photos. Okay. This is a stock photo, this is a public use photo, but the stock photo libraries that exist, they lead to all sorts of weird quirks and tangents. So, for example, in 2019, the New Zealand budget featured stock photos, a stock photo model on the front of it. And it turned out to be a woman called Vicki Freeman, who just had the picture taken and, you know, just sold the rights to it. Anyway, she had moved to Australia because she could no longer afford to live in New Zealand and was on the front page of the New Zealand budget document all about making life affordable.
Starting point is 00:49:22 And you don't really have many options normally. You can sometimes say, I don't want to be used to advertise an extreme political view or whatever, but you often just have no rights at all. So in 2014, a woman called Samantha Ovens had years before done a photo shoot
Starting point is 00:49:37 for colds and illnesses. You know, there's those sort of cold remedy photos where you just have to pinch your brow and look a bit pained or look a bit... Yeah. Like you're having a slightly... Oh, I've got a bit of a cold. or a headache or whatever. Anyway, that then got used as the lead on a Guardian article,
Starting point is 00:49:53 a confessional article headlined, I fantasize about group sex with old obese men. And she just found people started contacting her saying, you're right, Samantha. A lot of old men getting in touch. Honestly, Sam, it's your dance mate. I'm going to have to wrap us up very shortly, guys. I know, we're nearing the end.
Starting point is 00:50:14 Could I tell you one funny thing that I saw? which is that following one of the Football World Cups, SEP Blatter, who was the FIFA president, he was awarded this beautiful award, the Order of Companions of O.R. Tambo for his contribution to the World Cup, and to announce it, the South African government put it on their webpage. But unfortunately, they took his name and details
Starting point is 00:50:40 from his Wikipedia page, which had just been vandalized. And so what they announced on their website was an award for, Joseph Sepp Belland Blatter. That is it, that is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you would like to get in contact
Starting point is 00:51:06 with any of us about the things that we've said about this podcast, you can get us on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland. Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. James. James Harkin. And Anna. You can email podcast at QI.com.
Starting point is 00:51:18 Yep. Or you can go to our group account, which is at No Such Thing or our website. No Such Thing as a Fish.com. All of our previous episodes are up there. Do check them out. Also check out the option of going club fish. Club Fish, very sexy place where there's no adverts.
Starting point is 00:51:32 Check it out. Very quickly. Thank you so much, Edinburgh. That was awesome. It's always so much fun being here. We love being here. We will be back again. And we'll also be back again next week for another episode.
Starting point is 00:51:44 We'll see you then. Goodbye.

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