No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Fake Coal

Episode Date: May 18, 2023

Dan, James, Andrew and Alex discuss Swiss subduing, supermarket wrong-doing, model choo-chooing and JR Ewing. 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

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Hey everybody, Dan and Andy here. Just wanted to let you know, our special guests on this week's fish is none other than old friend of the podcast, your friend of mine, Alex Bell. That's right. Alex has returned. I mean, he hasn't been on for ages, but he has been there in the background the whole time. Anytime he heard a song or a noise. Shadowy, the Spider-Master.
Starting point is 00:00:22 But now he's back. He's funnier than ever. We can't wait for you to hear it. He's brilliant. He's going to be great. So now, I guess with no further ado, let's get on with the only podcast. any of us has ever made or will ever make, right, Dan? Ah, actually, I've got a bit of news.
Starting point is 00:00:37 What? Yeah, I don't want this to be a shock, but I've actually launched a new podcast. All right, what's it called? It's called We Can Be Weirdos. Oh, I see. And I guess it's just about solid facts, though, right? It's about stuff with a strong evidential base. Well, let's ignore that question quickly and focus on what the show is about.
Starting point is 00:00:53 So it's a weekly show where I sit down with someone remarkable, and I try and find out all the weird stuff that they believe in, and all the weird stuff they do in their life. So it features everyone from British museum curators like Irving Finkel, who told me stuff about how he sits on buses and stares at the back of people's head, trying to make them turn around. It's got Bexie Cameron, who used to be a part of the Children of God cult, but who escaped and wrote a fascinating memoir about it.
Starting point is 00:01:18 There's Steve Feltham, who is the Guinness World Record for the longest continuous search for the Loch Ness Monster. Dan Aykroyd is coming on. There's so many amazing guests, and it's a weekly show where I have. ask them to tell me about every single weird belief that they have. That's right. And guys, we, the rest of us know how hard Dan's been working on this.
Starting point is 00:01:37 It sounds absolutely great. It's called We Can Be Weirdos. Give it a go wherever you get your podcast now. And we should say it's all based on Dan's book, The Theory of Everything Else, which is out now in the UK and paperback, and it's out in North America on the 27th of June. Louis Theru himself has called it totally compelling and utterly bizarre.
Starting point is 00:01:55 That's right. So it would mean the world to me if you all fish listeners would subscribe to us. follow it, give it a listen, and also pick up a copy in my book. And okay, okay, okay, back to the actual good podcast. Here we go. On with the show. On with the podcast. Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hobern.
Starting point is 00:02:31 My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, James Harkin, and Alex Bell. And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days, and in a particular order, here we go. Starting with fact number one, and that is Alex. My fact this week is that when the founder of the budget supermarket chain Aldi was kidnapped in the 1970s, he successfully negotiated a discount off his own ransom. Brilliant.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Did he claim that he was going off? And that had a yellow sticker on him. That would be such a good idea. So this guy is called Theo Albrecht. He founded Aldi with his brother, Carl. And they've got quite an interesting story in how they founded the supermarket. But in the 1970s, when he was one of the richest people in the world, he was kidnapped at gunpoint by a convicted burglar called Paul Kron.
Starting point is 00:03:27 Diamond Paul. And his crooked lawyer, apparently, who had gambling debts, called Heinz Huachim Olinburg. Wackham. Wackham Diamond, Paul. Home Alone Wet Bandits kind of duo. And yeah, they kidnapped him for 17 days and held him in office. Apparently his... Well, cupboard, wasn't he?
Starting point is 00:03:46 Yeah, he was locked in a cupboard. And apparently his, but his appearance was so nondescript. And he sort of wore quite kind of cheap suits because he was as money pinching as his discount supermarket reputation. They had to ask him for ID to check that they definitely kidnapped a billionaire. The thing was that he didn't do any interviews, did he or anything like that, right? He was really not very well known at a time. I read a US newspaper article from the week when he got kidnapped,
Starting point is 00:04:13 and they described him as West Germany's least known millionaire. Yeah. So, you know, no one knew what he looked like. Yeah. He was just a name. So he was kept for 17 days. He negotiates a cheaper ransom, and they agree to it. A bishop comes and delivers it.
Starting point is 00:04:27 The Bishop of Essen, which is the city that they were from. Yeah. I guess it's where they lived at the time. But I didn't realize that was a bishop's responsibility to do it. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, what a call to get as the bishop. You must never get that.
Starting point is 00:04:39 No. But then he was, didn't he, isn't he the one who left the money? Yes. The actual, yeah, he did the handover. He did. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. But then, and I think Albrecht stayed with him for 24 hours afterwards,
Starting point is 00:04:50 stayed with the bishop. Why? Because the police were kept out of it completely. Wow. Because the family didn't want the police involved because they thought he might be in danger. Right. And the kidnappers said they wanted a 24 hour period to get away. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And so they said, okay, well, he'll stay with the bishop for 24 hours. hours and then after that time we'll let him go and he'll tell the police who he's seen and stuff okay so he gets out the bishop they get these 24 hours and they do they catch them as well and they catch them yeah that's right and they only get half the money back and to the dying day of the two guys they never recovered the missing 3.5 million and they died within a month of each other how weird is that because they were about 20 years different in age that's so romantic six years within a decade six yeah oh yep one was 87 the other was nice Yeah. But no, so after he gets let out, Theo is, goes even more recluse. He goes into total lockdown. No photographs are going to be taken of him evermore. He is, every time he gets into a car, it's an armored car, a different route every single day when he's going into his office. If he's staying somewhere, he goes and he finds the exits immediately. So it's obviously left huge trauma. Yeah, this experience.
Starting point is 00:06:02 But he also, sorry, I know one thing that will make you interested in him, especially Dan. Yeah. Which is that for, for, describes the brothers, the Albrecht brothers, Theo and Carl, who co-founded Aldi, described them as more elusive than the Yeti. Ooh. I'm pretty sure that the Yeti doesn't have like a business trail, like a paper trail. It's not registered with company's house. Also, that doesn't make me more interesting. If he was a Yeti hunter, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:06:32 Just saying the word Yeti in a sentence doesn't immediately mean. You've got a higher threshold for interesting. I do. I think my favorite bit of this whole story was that after the whole ordeal, Orbrecht went to court to try and claim the money that was paid as the ransom as a tax deductible business expense, which is brilliant. I don't think he was successful, but like, that's so cool. I think you can still do that, certainly in some places.
Starting point is 00:06:58 If you have a good accountant. Because I think it's in America, it's been done. In America, for sure. Yeah. Famously Getty. I guess it's, it is a business expense, isn't it? Or is it? If the person who is abducted is the CEO of the company, then it's to do with the company. I think that's the argument.
Starting point is 00:07:15 His brother, Carl, stumped up a lot of money for that as well, the ransom. He was part of it. But yeah, I love how much the Oldbrick brothers were really sort of stingy with their cash. They're brilliant. I think Theo was the one who they used to approve all the designs for all the shops. And there was one way he was given the plans. And he said the plans are fine. paper you've printed it on it's too thick.
Starting point is 00:07:38 Print it on thin or cheaper paper. He used to famously use pencils right down to the end. You see people with the pencil meets the rubber. He would be using pencils like that. And if he walked into the office of the Aldi offices and he saw that the lights were on, but he could see that you could see in a room without the lights, he'd go around turning off all the lights. It's so scruiting, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:07:56 Yeah. I did read one article that said he and his brother were the first people to ever turn off the lights in the room because they were worried that they were waste in electricity. What I think to invent. I was thinking like being a dad yeah exactly he invented being a dad
Starting point is 00:08:11 yeah the timing almost works that's really funny I think their story is very interesting because they founded it together didn't they they found it all they together yeah their mother ran a shop like I mean like they took over the shop as part of their journey
Starting point is 00:08:24 but she was the one who really started there I think she does a little bit of credit yeah you're right that's a good point and then actually they were drugend into helping their mum because their father he'd been a coal miner and he got emphysema so he couldn't really work so they had to support the family but anyway they fell out over whether or not they should sell cigarettes in their shops
Starting point is 00:08:41 and I think Theo said we should and Carl said we shouldn't and I think it was for shoplifting reasons yeah they weren't I think yeah they wouldn't care about the health reasons so was it stinginess as well despite their their father having emphysema they were it was that's so interesting okay and then they had this thing the Aldi equator I'm sure you get that when they divided Germany top to bottom and north was Theo's but not with any kind of wall we should say like so many people died crossing the Aldi Equator. People were desperately trying to get to those.
Starting point is 00:09:11 Because they did. So this was in the, this was 1961 and they had about 300 Aldis all over the country. And that's what got split up between them. And if you look at the logos, they are different colors across the, the Aldi equator. And so they are definitely two different operations that are going on. Ironically, if you were kidnapped in Germany, you could use that to work out which half of the country you were in. Yes. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:09:32 Yeah. What a brilliant idea. There's still different companies now, aren't they? Aldi Nord and Aldi Sud. Yeah, that's right. And I think which ones do we have? We have Aldi Nord. No, we have Aldi Sudd, don't we?
Starting point is 00:09:47 And in America they have them both, but one of them's called Trader Joe's. Wow. Yeah, that's what Trader Joe is. I never really, yeah. And Aldi itself is the name Aldi. We said it's a poor mantra of Albrecht discount. Discount. I was trying to remember what the German version was.
Starting point is 00:10:03 His brother came up with that, didn't he? They're like, Diss-stingy-kunt. The two businesses are called Discund and that group, right? Imagine like big billboards with them kind of over the border. I'm with this could.
Starting point is 00:10:23 I think they liked each other. They got on perfectly well. They just disagreed over this. I think it was amicable. I think it was amicable, yeah. Yeah, yeah. I've never read it to Aldi. before. I've been to LD many times. God damn it, I love it so much. I don't want to like treat this as an
Starting point is 00:10:40 advert, but what an operation. Well, okay, so for example, they don't stock as many items as a regular supermarket will, and they've never compromised on that. It's grown ever so slightly, but an average supermarket might have something like 200,000 different items, whereas they might have 2,000 items. It has grown since the earlier days when it came to Britain. But one of the things was everyone who was working there was required to memorize the price of every single item in the shops, to every 2000 item, which meant that there was a thing that's known as Aldi panic, which is when you get to the checkout, the panic is, I can't pack my bags as quickly as they're running the stuff through the till.
Starting point is 00:11:15 So you get a bit worried. And that's really common now because they're so fast at scanning. Well, here's the thing. The reason they're so fast at scanning these days, because this is another Aldi innovation, is if you buy a product from any supermarket, you got a barcode, you get there. The person's looking around for the barcode. If you look on Aldi products, sort of specifically Aldi, they print the barcode all over it, So no matter where you turn the product, it scans.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Exactly. And it's right through. Yeah, because they also opened, I think in the 50s, the first self-service grocery store in Germany. But in those days, self-service meant you go in and get stuff off the shelves and bring it to the checkout as opposed to giving your list to a clerk who are going to get it for you. So that must have been a huge efficiency. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:53 And they brought in shopping trolleys. And I think they were the first company to bring in the shopping trolleys where you had to put a coin in. That's what it says. That's what they say, yeah. I read an article with the communications director at Aldi, and he said, we're always amazed by the pay it forward spirit that happens in our parking lots. And apparently they reckon that in Germany, at least,
Starting point is 00:12:15 people will pay for the next person's trolley. And I just, I've never seen that happen in my entire life in the UK. I go around checking to see if anyone's left a quid. I could lose an hour or two sometimes looking for a single, you know. I literally only have one quid that I keep in my car for that. thing as I don't really use cash these days right do you keep it on a string because you're sounding a bit like fielder albrec they got big in germany because they started looking at the models of what was happening in
Starting point is 00:12:48 america with grocery stores and so there was a memphis grocer that was called pigly wiggly so it was pigly wiggly and uh handy andy was the last one these were all of the like the things going on in america at the time and yeah so they became So Pigley Wiggly was famously the first place that would let you take things off the shelves and put them in your trolley and then pay for them afterwards Exactly And I'm not sure if we said it here
Starting point is 00:13:13 We might not have done but they basically people Didn't want to do it because they felt like they were shoplifting Well I feel like that with the new Amazon Fresh Stools Where you walk in and you scan Yeah but you go and wearing a motorbike helmet Don't you don't scan anything And you're shouting and holding a baseball bat I actually was going to kidnap Jeff Bezos
Starting point is 00:13:31 But he just walked into my hands house into my cupboard. Two weeks later, they put lots of money in my account. It was perfect. So when you go to Audi, there's always, and I didn't realize this was a big thing, but in the middle of Aldi, there's always this weird aisle where it's just random stuff. Oh, it's like the room of requirement. It's sort of like every time it's different. It's huge. It's so bizarre. So at the middle aisle and and it's it's sort of famous amongst online people. There's Twitter accounts where where what random thing have you found in the middle aisle. Yeah, it's massive. Um, yeah. So everything from motion-activated toilet bowl night lights,
Starting point is 00:14:04 you know, just randomly to traffic cones. It feels like sort of it fell off the back of the lorry kind of vibe. Yeah, but which definitely is not the case. Sorry, they definitely did do that, obviously.
Starting point is 00:14:14 No, because I remember, like, you would always get, like, a flyer through the post and it would tell you what was going to be in the middle aisle
Starting point is 00:14:21 in the next month or so. Oh, really? And you would know that there was going to be a canoe there and you'd be like, oh, shit, we've got to get there on the second Tuesday. Well, they only have a certain amount.
Starting point is 00:14:30 And so if it was something really cool, everyone in the town would want to get there as quickly as possible. And they never restock ever, so it's just that. It's like a one flash sale. It gets called the Isle of Shite. That's very good. Yeah, that's very good. One of the thing on German kidnapping.
Starting point is 00:14:45 Oh yeah. I think German. Do you know about the Pied Piper of Hamlin? Yeah. Famously kidnapped all the children of Hamlin. I never thought of it that way. Ah. I thought he got rid of the rats.
Starting point is 00:14:59 And then the parents didn't pay him? Yeah. So then he did the same thing. He played his. pipe and led them. He basically hypnotized children to come with him. Oh, yeah. There's a question of like consent, really. Yeah, it does sound like there isn't. There's no question. There was no consent. Like, basically he took all the children out of the town because they didn't pay his bills.
Starting point is 00:15:14 So he was fictional? Well, there was an entry in Hamlin Town Records dating to 1384 that says that it is 100 years since our children left. And that fits him with the date of when people said this happened, which was in 1284. And it supposedly happened on the 26th of June, the day of San, John and St. Paul and the 130 children in Hamlin disappeared and that's what the story's based on. Was there a day of St. George and St. Ringo as well? But we now have theories as to what the Pied Piper was. So we think that possibly the Pied Piper story is a fictional account of something that actually happened. And the children did go missing and did get taken by someone.
Starting point is 00:15:56 Can you guess what the actual job of the real life Pied Piper probably was? Oh, okay. Are we going to, is this guessable from school bus drivery? School bus, that's really good. I mean, the dates don't quite work for school buses, 1284. I've got it, I've got it. It's called car driving. Swineherd.
Starting point is 00:16:13 Swinherd. Dresses the children up as pigs? Lovely. No, that's not what. Okay, was he one of the wiggles then. Aldi trolley manager. Load them in with free trolleys. Well, according to most theories at the moment, he could have been a recruitment consultant.
Starting point is 00:16:30 Okay. The Tide Piper. I follow them in the street. I find it so beguiling. These children all now working like Deloitte. There was an economic depression around that time, and a lot of the youth of various towns were taken out of German sort of villages and taken to the bigger areas of Western Europe,
Starting point is 00:16:50 and they had locators or recruiters that would go around these towns and try and bring the youth out there to work in different places. And so there's one possibility that the Pied Piper But Stari is based on a recruitment consultant. Wow. They all got sort of free mugs from my companies. Came back later with those cool wireless phone headset. Yeah, ages.
Starting point is 00:17:16 It is time for fact number two. And that is Andy. My fact is that the world's largest collection of model trains doesn't fit on standard model train tracks. I'm really pleased you added the word standard in there because there's a big discussion. Yeah, we had a big email chat about this. No, but I've just got to say, Alex has got in front of him actual. Like, this is the weirdest bit of research. I'm not going to go into it, don't worry.
Starting point is 00:17:39 I'm going to say the basic fact, and then we'll have the argument. Yeah. This, by the way, thank you to Neil Gibson, who sent in this fact, who didn't realize the chaos he was unleashing in our previously happy team. This is something that's from the National Rail Museum in York. They have a collection of 610 model railway vehicles all made by the same man, who was called James Peel Richards, 1902 to 99. and he was incredibly devoted to detail and accuracy
Starting point is 00:18:07 and he thought he could get his models more accurate if you made them to a 33mm gauge so the gauge is the distance between the two train tracks and the normal gauge for model trains is 32 millimeters and they're not compatible with the vast majority of model railway lines and even the National Rail Museum don't have a layout where they can put these trains on a train track so I just think it's very sweet fact I think
Starting point is 00:18:31 I don't want to make this fact even more contentious, but I have a feeling it was 612, not 610. What did you guys read? Could you maybe forgive me for a fraction of rounding? The idea is, a lot of these model trains, you take anything that's one foot long and you make it seven millimeters long, and you do the same for everything else in all the trains, right?
Starting point is 00:18:50 Now, if you do that, then you get your gauge to be exactly 33 millimeters to 0.0.1 of a millimeter. So it's pretty much 33 millimeters. but historically they've always had 32mm gauges and so all the other trains that you would have are slightly not exact So that's like the Hornby standard for example, it's like nearly all the track you'll find is that width
Starting point is 00:19:11 A lot of them is called the O gauge but basically he decided well I want mine to be exactly right so I'm going to get this one millimeter difference even though I won't be able to go and hardly any tracks I'm going to make it because I want it to be perfect Yeah, he's a hero Did he make his own tracks?
Starting point is 00:19:26 He must have right I think I think as I went there and I had an amazing two days. I stayed overnight. Seriously? Was there a sleeper train in the museum? That would have been so great. Alex cramming one finger into the sleeper train.
Starting point is 00:19:42 No, because they have actual other stuff. They don't just have model. They have actual trains there and all sorts there. No, it's amazing. And I remember seeing them. They've got this fantastic. I think it's called an open archive where they've got all this stuff that they don't, they don't really have room to sort of display in proper museum,
Starting point is 00:19:57 just like thrown on the shelf. and sort of displays you can see it. And I remember also seeing they've got scale models of Queen Victoria's Royal Train, which is all sort of entirely plush inside with a velvet's upholstered toilet and things like that. In miniature? Yeah, yeah, this is all miniature. When they were designing and building the train, the actual full-on steam trains, they used to make scale models of the steam trains that are about,
Starting point is 00:20:19 I'd say, like a foot wide and several feet long, that were full-on-working models to check that they worked and they were all kind of the right size. So they have these really stonking great models of, like, working steam trains. They've also got, you've mentioned it before on the podcast, there's a massive train set that was used to train signal operators. So it's a train set, but the fun of the train set was like all about the signals and not the trains. So can I ask Alex, did you see the entire collection of J.P. Richards's trains when you were there? I don't know because there's loads on the wall. I remember them they're all stacked up on the wall.
Starting point is 00:20:49 You've seen them because they're all there. But I don't know if I saw 610. What's really interesting is that J.P. Richards never saw the entire collection himself. we think and that's because he always kept them in his home where most of them were in boxes so they were never all out at the same time and when he donated them to the museum he was really really sick it was just before he died
Starting point is 00:21:10 he was too ill to travel so when it was on display he never got to see it so he actually never saw his entire collection on display I'm really sad about that because what a hero what a great guy I love it the collection is still growing but actually I should quickly say thank you to my friend Chris Valcoyan who is the associate archivist at the National Rail Museum, who sent me loads of stuff for this.
Starting point is 00:21:31 Absolutely brilliant. But yeah, the collection is still growing because a lot of his wagons weren't quite finished when he got there. So he left them to other people to finish them because he wanted the entirety of the train system of the London and Northwestern trains. Well, don't we all?
Starting point is 00:21:46 That's what we all want to see, really, isn't it? Between 902 and 1944. So he wanted everything. And they weren't all exactly done at that time. So some people are still doing them now. They're still kind of making them better. It is the most impressive thing when you see the detail that someone goes into to recreating an area. Because you make it's not these aren't things you buy from the shop. You create the buildings and you create and this is like when you're making a whole landscape.
Starting point is 00:22:08 So the tracks, the trees, the buildings around it. I've only ever played with two model train sets before. Oh yeah. And they belonged to Eddie Isard. So blank. No, no, no. Trust you to have a celebrity train set anecdote. This is not. It's not what it sounds like. every time I go to Bexhill on Sea, which is my family goes there a lot, I always take my boys to the Bex Hill Museum. And inside is Eddie Azard's childhood model train set that her father had built when Eddie's brother was born started building it then. And then Eddie's mother got a bit ill and eventually she passed away. And part of the project of keeping themselves busy from the sort of, you know, the horrible depression of it all was to continue building this train set. So you can go and press buttons and it sends two
Starting point is 00:22:53 trains around and it's where Eddie's dad worked. You can see the train he used to get into London and it shows all the buildings around and they've commissioned all of Bexhill on Sea as a train set as well. Eddie's kind of put money into that and you press buttons and it goes around that snows. I love that. It's incredible. Did you guys read about Simon George? No, no. Simon George is a model railway fan currently, currently modeling and making huge sets. So in 2021 he had just made a model railway which is really big. It was 61 meters. And it was a model of a specific line From where he'd grown up in the 80s
Starting point is 00:23:27 It was the Kola Valley Lots of coal-fired trains And it's one of Britain's biggest If not the biggest model train set Really impressive He spent eight years working on it And he met someone He met his girlfriend
Starting point is 00:23:39 While he was making it Wow Yeah He's amazing This is the thing Well wait a minute Okay, go on So he was interviewed about it
Starting point is 00:23:46 And he said When I first met her She didn't know I was building this And what had happened was It wasn't in his home This train set he was building He'd leased a mill because it had this enormous basement, right?
Starting point is 00:23:55 So, and he's, okay, she knew I leased a mill with a huge basement, Simon said, but I kind of led her to believe I was a wine merchant. Because that sounded cooler than building a model railway. I'm just imagining the discussion that he had when he said, now, we've been getting on very well. I think there could be something here. I need to tell you that the basement in the mill, that I've not let you go in, it's not a wine collection.
Starting point is 00:24:22 What must she have thought? She turned up unannounced at his work one day. She wanted to surprise him, and she turned up to his wine merchant business. What did he do? Don't come in. I'm wanking. There are loads of bodies down here. This is where I keep a family locked up. Come on.
Starting point is 00:24:42 He said, she wondered where all the wine was, but actually she really appreciated the detail and the artistic element. Very, very cool. Herman Guring, the Nazi. Who's Herman Gering, not the Nazi? Is there any others out there? He was an enthusiastic. No.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Yeah, Nazis love trains. They love models, obviously, you know, that famous Third Reich one. No, sorry. Again, Alex, you spent two days in the National Railway. It's nothing to do with train models. No, no, sorry.
Starting point is 00:25:09 That's a totally, totally off topic. Did they have a big model? Hitler commissioned a huge model of what the centre of Berlin was going to look like. And it's a really horrible, scary model that's that exists. You can go see it there. And it's really bizarre and interesting.
Starting point is 00:25:21 But I think that whole element of control from a far like you know the kind of go you're saying goren did the train two he had two train sets um just like Eddie is odd one in the no just like sorry you see see wait that you seen said you've seen two trainsets in your life no play with it twice played with it twice both were eddies yeah right so okay so he had um um and the going had one train set in his attic and one in his basement oh yeah okay and um there are pictures of it and they're really it's pretty extensive as you know lived he lives in a big old Nazi house and had a huge attic and a nice basement um and there's there's a
Starting point is 00:25:53 rumour that you can sort of maybe see evidence for in the pictures that there was there were wires where they went over the one in the attic that planes went across and you could drop little bombs out of the planes to bomb which is wow good fun wow they originated in germany didn't they model railways basically uh there was a company called marklin and they'd be making toys and stuff but they mostly made dolls houses the idea is you make a doll's house and you sell them the house and then they have to buy the dolls to go inside and they have to buy the cookers and they have to buy the chairs
Starting point is 00:26:26 and they have to buy all the bits and pieces. And they wanted something that boys would like. How are the dolls going to get to work? And they just thought, well, by doing the railways, then we can sell the railway tracks, but then we can sell the stock and we can sell the little bushes that go on, I don't know, I've never played there.
Starting point is 00:26:44 There's another German connection, which is maybe the earliest ever model train belonged to the poet Goethe. did it Clang yourself, mate This is from 1829 It's six years before Germany had even a railway A steam railway of its own
Starting point is 00:27:00 Some English well-wishers gave him a tiny, tiny model of Stevenson's rocket The earliest steam railway engine I think the earliest steam railway engine And it came with a set of wagons and rails And Goethe put it on his desk I think he might have given it to his grandchildren At the time because he was an old man by that point
Starting point is 00:27:16 Yeah, cool Wow Do you want to hear an incredibly well so okay here's a fact about model rightways i'm just going to tell you what okay that's what we're all here for what a change of topic i know what's about to happen so you know how you use different things to represent so you might use a coffee stir as a piece of fencing yeah like big like things from our world oh okay yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah i see okay you could use a marble as a boulder for instance yeah you paint it or whatever
Starting point is 00:27:45 yeah exactly okay so do you know what they use to make cold Okay, so it's got to be something that looks like coal, but is much smaller. Yeah. But maybe it's not the same colour, but you could paint it black, right? Is it not just small bits of coal? They use coal. Oh my God. I hit it with a hammer and grind it up small.
Starting point is 00:28:07 What? No. Well, it's definitely a fact. It's just by any chance the fact that you message does say, I just told my wife a fact. And she said that's the dullest thing you've ever said. in your life. That's the fact.
Starting point is 00:28:21 She just said, Stop talking. It found it so interesting. And it's so boring. She took off her, I'm with discount T-shirt. Amazing, Andy. Great facts.
Starting point is 00:28:35 Thank you. So you know, the really tragic thing, we last talked about model railways four years ago. I looked through my notes for that show. It was in there. So, probably the most famous model railways.
Starting point is 00:28:49 in the world have to be the ones that we see in Thomas the Tank Engine. Oh yeah. Tom's a Tank Engine. I mean, that's globally the biggest, most famous. And just a cool connection. So there is famously the fat controller who's now been renamed Sir Topham Hat. He was always called to. He was always called.
Starting point is 00:29:09 Yeah, but they kind of phased out the fat controller. He's in the cartoons. He's back to Sir Topham Hat. And we know someone who was the real life Sir Topham Hat. Stop it. No. What do you mean that's in the voice? No.
Starting point is 00:29:22 So, they used to have offices for Thomas the Tank Engine. When children wrote in, they had an official Sir Topham Hat who would write letters back to the children. And we know that person. And they've been on fish. They've been on fish. Is it Craig Glenday? Yes. Craig Glenday.
Starting point is 00:29:39 Editor-in-chief for the Guinness World Records. Wow. Okay, that's bizarre. Yeah. When I was tiny, I wrote to Sir Topham Hat. And I got a letter back. Did you? It's true.
Starting point is 00:29:48 It's just small coal. You're a really annoying child. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that in 1760, a book was publicly burned in Switzerland because it claimed that William Tell did not exist. Fair game. Yeah. Because, I sort of think he did.
Starting point is 00:30:21 I sort of think you did. Well, publicly burned me then. Is it like the Pied Piper and he was just like a management consultant? No, he's less historical than the Pied Piper, I would say. He was part of the foundation myth of the country of Switzerland, basically. He's kind of Robin Hood-esque, right? Yeah, he is. You're spot on, you know, shot an apple off his son's head to...
Starting point is 00:30:46 That's the only thing I know. It's the only thing, shot an apple off his son's head. I didn't know any of the context. I just knew, I never questioned it either. It was quite contrived, like, for some reason he ended up in a situation where they were like, shoot it or we'll kill you and your son. And then he did it. And then they were like, well, hang on a second.
Starting point is 00:31:01 Why, how come you've got two arrows then? And he was like, well, if I accidentally killed my son, I was going to shoot you. It was quite cool, wasn't it? Because the reason this whole thing started was he was going through this town, which was called Altdorf. And he was, there's a guy there who was a bailiff called Gessler. And Gessler had this thing where he put a hat on a pole. And it was in the center.
Starting point is 00:31:20 of the town and if you walked past the pole and you had a hat on you had to sort of take your hat off and be like hello pole and so we should say the pole represented the immensely powerful Hatsburg empire it's still weird it's still weird so he goes past doesn't take his hat off i guess gessler who just happens to be monitoring every person passing by sees that says hey take your hat off he says no and then that's where this thing happens where he says you need to now shoot your son or rather shoot the apple shoot the He says, you've got to put your son, you've got to put an apple on his head, and you've got to shoot through it. And if you get it, then you guys can go free.
Starting point is 00:31:57 If you miss, then I'm going to kill you as well. So it was a kind of big challenge. A perfectly fair challenge punishment that fits the crime. It doesn't make any sense. It makes sense for someone who's put a hat on a pole and made it to get out to it. Could he choose the apple, though? Could he choose a very large apple, like a pink lady? Like the one I saw in me buy any car.
Starting point is 00:32:14 com that time. Honestly, I could have hit that for 200 yards. I know you stopped listening, Alex. James has an anecdote about this very, very big apple he once saw. It's actually, it's really weird to get bored on a podcast that you're on, not even listening to. But if it had been that apple, yeah, you're right. It would be easy.
Starting point is 00:32:30 Anyway, look, like Dan said, and Alex said, this is the story. And then because he did the Apple thing, they said, okay, fine, Switzerland could exist. And he became like the foundation myth of this country. So everyone believed it and thought that he was a real character. And then there was a historian called Eguidius Chudi. And he found out that actually the earth, earliest writing of it was 250 years after the events. And then they found the original
Starting point is 00:32:55 oath of Rutli, which was for the foundation of Switzerland, for the early cantons all getting together. And it named the three representatives, and none of them was called Tell. None of them was called William Tell. And so, and actually they got the date wrong as well in the original sort of, the original story. And so this guy called Dehalla wrote a book called William Tell a Danish fable. And everyone in Switzerland thought this was. was outrageous that he could put this in writing and the book was publicly burned in Altdorf Square. Was he a Swiss author himself? He was Swiss, yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:29 Because I sort of vaguely thought of William Teller's a bit Robin Hoodish as in someone who might have existed, but not really. Yeah. I didn't really think, oh, that doesn't seem like a very significant thing to me. But I read a piece about, it's from the Atlantic, but it's from 1890. And it's just this line, to understand the commotion produced in Switzerland by Copse ex-posé, we must try to imagine what would be the result in the United States if George Washington was suddenly declared to be a legendary character.
Starting point is 00:33:53 Yeah, it's a big huge moment to find out. It was a bit of that. And then what happened was, everyone was like, De Hala, what are you doing? This is ridiculous. And so he said, oh, no, no, no, this was a literary exercise. I was just, it was just an essay I was writing to see if I could. It was like, you know, it's like coming up with two reasons whether we should leave the EU or not leave the EU.
Starting point is 00:34:14 And this was the one I decided to go with. It wasn't supposed to be taken seriously. This is the first like, dude, it's a social experiment. It sounds like he was petrified. It sounds like had he not renounced that, it could have been like a Salman Rushdie kind of situation where he might have gone into a hiding in a cupboard kind of thing. They were absolutely furious.
Starting point is 00:34:30 But then obviously he'd opened the floodgates and suddenly all the sceptics came in like sceptics do and said, well, actually there was no organised uprising after all and there's no evidence that anyone called William Tell had lived, let alone shot an apple off anyone's head and they concluded that he was probably a fictional character, possibly based on a little bit of real-life stuff. And then someone found this old story from the Danish sagas,
Starting point is 00:34:56 which is basically the entire story. And that was written hundreds and hundreds of years before William Tell was supposed to have even existed. And so it seems like they've taken an old story from the sagas and they've kind of appropriated it. It was a story of Harold Bluetooth. Yeah. Aventure of royalist technology.
Starting point is 00:35:15 It's certainly the namesake of it. Danish King of the 10th century. Yeah, yeah. And it is, like, I looked at it and it's identical. It is the same story. Yeah. And there was a play. Schiller.
Starting point is 00:35:25 Schiller's play. Yeah. And then the play became an opera by Rossini. And it's just, it's such an international thing. So it's an opera about a Swiss hero by an Italian composer, Rossini, based on a play by a German writer, Schiller, which premiered in Paris. Brilliant. As in it's all of Europe is involved in this. And you know the, but you know the famous William Tell Overture, the Della, Della, Dla, Dla.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Yeah. Rossini didn't actually write that. for the William Tell Opera. Get out. He was like running out of time when he was writing the Williamson opera. That's not how it works when you're writing at a time, writing music. When it speeds up.
Starting point is 00:36:01 No, he was running out of time to finish the entire opera and didn't have an overture ready. So he went and borrowed a pre-existing piece from one of his earlier operas, which was called Elizabeth Queen of England. So that was written almost 15 years beforehand. How interesting, because everything I can think of about Elizabeth the Queen of England, none of the events in her life fit in with that music.
Starting point is 00:36:23 No, it doesn't really work, does it? Yeah. Like, you can't imagine Sir Walter Rally laying down his cloak and her going, the opera was only performed in full three times. And then, because it was five hours long. Five hours. Isn't that average time for an opera? No. Really? That's very long. Definitely more than a few hours is fine, but five hours is pretty long. Even three is. I've never been to one. I just always know that they're long. Especially given that some of the music was so fast. Like, you would have thought the music would be slower if he was going to drive it out. There's a Herman Guring, link. I can't believe there's another Herman Gering in this podcast. The Nazi...
Starting point is 00:36:57 Which Herman Gering, by the way? Sorry. The Nazi one. Okay, sorry, good. Just good to clarify. The Nazi regime made a movie of William Tell. Okay. And they treated the tell story as a kind of Nazi myth. Because at that point, I think it was before the war. They claimed they were liberating ethnic Germans living in other countries who'd been oppressed by those countries. And Herman Guring's mistress was cast in a leading role. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:19 Okay, right. That was based on Shiller's play, wasn't it? Yeah. But then Hitler banned it later on because there was an assassination attempt on him by a guy called Maurice Bavo, who was known as the new William Tell. Yeah. And he thought, well, I better get rid of all other William Tells.
Starting point is 00:37:37 People's Swiss as well. Yeah. That's true. Yeah. I've been in Switzerland for Swiss Independence Day on the 1st of August. Oh, yeah. Which is when they have a lot of, sort of fireworks. and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:37:49 Yeah, it's relatively low-key. Lots of chocolate, probably cheese. Yeah, lots of chocolate. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Where did you go? Like, specifically? A few different places. Oh.
Starting point is 00:37:59 They sound great. Did you go to Burn? I've been to Burn. I don't think I did go to Burn. I was very young. Is that way they got rid of all the books? Oh, my God. Brilliant.
Starting point is 00:38:09 Brilliant. That was worth it. In the Burn, there's a lots of, like, bears, because a bear is the symbol of the city of Burn. and the Appenzel Canton flag so the area of Switzerland called Appenzel has a flag which is a bear with an erection Crocky
Starting point is 00:38:28 Yeah so if you look at it It's only a tiny little red triangle If you can imagine a bear rampant And then you've got a little red triangle where his penis would be And there was a time when St. Gallen This was in 1579 So the canton of St. Gallen had a printer, and he did a calendar of all the Swiss cantons, and he did the Apenzel Canton flag, but he didn't put the erection in the bear.
Starting point is 00:38:58 And this was, it kicked off. It really, really kicked off. They almost went to war because they didn't have the penis on the bear. And then it was only averted when the printer offered abject apologies, and St. Gallen agreed to destroy every single. copy of the calendar they could find. Again, lots of rounding things up and destroying them. Yeah. It's a very spicy
Starting point is 00:39:21 time. No wonder's where it's so determinedly neutral and calm today. Yeah. Through all of their stuff. For a very like organized country, they've got a really chaotic origin story. But I think they've got it all out of their system. They must have decided I think at a certain point. We cannot stop rounding up and destroying calendars
Starting point is 00:39:38 and things like that. Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show and that is my fact. My fact this week is that to make sure that no one leaked the answer to who shot JR on the TV show Dallas, the production team had every main character film a scene of them shooting JR, including JR. It's an amazing thing. So this is...
Starting point is 00:40:05 We need to explain what Dallas is. Exactly. So Dallas was a soap opera in America, went on for a very long time. In the 1980s, it began. And it was a show that kind of really transformed the idea of soap, these dramatic plot twists and also cliffhangers and so on. And it created the greatest cliffhanger, probably in TV history, certainly American TV history. And it's about, like, it follows like the escapades of like a wealthy oil tycoons family in Dallas, Texas.
Starting point is 00:40:35 It's less secession. Early cheesy secession, really. It is. It's about squillionaires and the main character is an anti-hero just like Logan Roy. I do think that Succession is a very original idea, and they definitely didn't rip off Dallas in any way whatsoever, just as an ultimate opinion. I'm not so sure. I think... So, yeah, it's at the end of this third series.
Starting point is 00:40:56 It's the finale. And JR, who is the character played by Larry Hagman, is shot. We don't know who's pulled the trigger. And then there's a big break in the season. And in that time, America goes slightly ballistic. We're trying to work out. The world almost. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:13 Who shot JR was basically the big question that everyone... With T-shirts next to the... I'm with discont. who shot J.R. Politicians were referencing it. Yeah, everyone. And just, spoiler alert, it was Kristen. There we go.
Starting point is 00:41:28 What? Whoa. But the thing is, the shooting of JR, this huge event, maybe the biggest event in fictional TV history, was not meant to be the end of the series. They had already filmed an ending of the series. And they'd had a load of events.
Starting point is 00:41:43 They'd had a deathbed murder confession. They'd had their sectioning. They had all sorts of, you know, greatly written themselves into a corner kind of thing. And then they got told, hey great news you got four more episodes they had to write four more episodes and then there was a big head scratching
Starting point is 00:41:55 thing in the writer's room and someone said why don't we just shoot the bastard because apparently a lot of the writers were comedians or funny people at least yeah and this was I read this in an interview with Lorraine Desprez who was one of the main writers
Starting point is 00:42:10 and yeah she said that these were really funny guys who were trying to come up with ideas and almost let's shoot JR was one person going wouldn't it be funny if we did that Because wouldn't it fuck things up if we did that? And then they all went, oh, actually, that would be good. Well, that's, I mean, a lot of the writers of succession are very funny comic writers. Yeah, yeah, Armstrong.
Starting point is 00:42:29 Lucy Preble. Preble, sorry. So, you know, it's another link between the two, I'd say. But, no, I mean, the world went crackers, didn't it? It did. It did. If you were on a plane going from Europe to America at the time, if it was an Air France plane, they said that they would tell anyone over the intercom who'd shot JR.
Starting point is 00:42:47 If you couldn't watch the show Someone would radio up from the ground Say it was Kristen And then they'd go We're flying at 40,000 feet And it was Kristen who shot J.R. Isn't that amazing? That is a huge spoiler
Starting point is 00:43:02 There's no way of avoiding A Dlaned Tanoi spoilt. That's true, although in those days You couldn't watch things on demand Like you could have VHSed it Or maybe So you kind of wanted to have to be spoiled more Actually even in 1980
Starting point is 00:43:13 I guess you would have had VHSs but only just Yeah, right. So, you know, you had to watch it live. If you didn't watch it live, you were not going to watch it. Exactly. You weren't going to know. The Turkish Parliament suspended a session so that the legislators wouldn't be able to tune in and wouldn't miss it. There was a really fantastic piece in Texas Monthly, which if anyone's going to cover who shot J.R.
Starting point is 00:43:36 Front page, surely. Absolutely. But no, there is an amazing piece which is all about the madness that happened. So they shot at a real runch. You know, they shot some scenes at a real run. It was just shot in interior sets in Hollywood. But the son of the guy who lived at the ranch they shot at was, it's called Joe Duncan.
Starting point is 00:43:55 And he says that they had people turning up to take chips of the fence, take pieces of rock. You know, they could have taken a chip of the fence and used it as a tiny fence. That's like relics. That's mad. It is. He said,
Starting point is 00:44:14 listen to this quote. He said, I was once 20 feet away from a guy. who jumped the fence and went out into the pasture to pick up a piece of horse manure to take home as a souvenir. And that was a time before eBay. Yeah. His name was Dad Shriver. I read an article from this was the day before they were about to show the who shot J.R.
Starting point is 00:44:34 And this was in the Minneapolis Star. And they asked some local celebs who they thought had shot J.R. And like the head of the coach of one of the local sports teams said, I don't know who shot J.R. but there's a lot of agents of players who I'd like to shoot. And then... Zing!
Starting point is 00:44:54 The police chief, who's called Anthony Boozer, he said, I'm happy to report that I've never seen a single minute of that goddamn program. And they asked the mayor, Don Fraser, is the mayor of Minneapolis, and he said,
Starting point is 00:45:06 I haven't the foggiest who shot him. Are you serious? I've only seen one episode of that show and it was quite by accident. Wow. Sounds like a lifelong fan. I just can't believe they asked him like they asked someone and they got these answers
Starting point is 00:45:19 and they felt well it might as well print me yeah yeah the thing that I knew Dallas for because I'd never really seen it but I know it as a famous like a famous example of retconning where you retroactively change what happened so
Starting point is 00:45:32 they wrote filmed and shot and broadcast an entire season in which a character Bobby Ewing died but this character was really popular and they decided they wanted to bring him back so in order to do that they retconed it by the beginning of the next series they made the whole previous series of dream sequence
Starting point is 00:45:48 which is hailed as one of the like the cheesiest and the rubbish ways of like retconning but one of the weird continuity things was that Dallas had a spin-off show called Notts Landing that existed in the same universe but when they brought back Bobby Ewing and was like oh this character never died
Starting point is 00:46:04 in Notts Landing they had referenced the fact that Bobby had died so at that point it's like a universe splintering moment it's like spider verse into the multiverse but they were We're simultaneously taking into a, like they were like keeping track of the different universes while simultaneously wiping entire series off the faces. Because you would think it would be easier to say, oh, he didn't die, he faked his own death.
Starting point is 00:46:27 Yes, exactly. Unless they showed on camera, the funeral, the like open casket. I think it was like the main part of a lot of the story of that season. They literally were like, forget that series happened. It's weird. Yeah. There was a real life, Bobby Ewing, who lived in Texas and who owned an oil and cattle company. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:46:45 Yeah. And so when this big sort of who shot JR thing was happening, they really kind of cashed in and you could buy J.R. dolls, J.R. Colon, J.R. playing cards. And you could also buy fake certificate for Ewing, land, oil and cattle company, which was signed by Bobby Ewing, the fake Bobby Ewing. But then the real Bobby Ewing, who lived in Texas, sued them and said, well, you can't do this because it makes it look like you're selling my company. And I found out that it was settled in the end. and the real Bobby Ewing wasn't allowed to sell any novelty items and it didn't say but I assume he got a massive payout he must have done right yeah
Starting point is 00:47:23 Larry Hagman yeah played JR so obviously there's a big break for the you know when they're not shooting yeah he hadn't signed his contract when they started shooting the next series and he held out for a long time and he he wants he knows he's a star now right everyone's talking about him he wanted a huge pay rise he dispatched his agents to negotiate where white stets and hats with the management of the show. And that was his kind of luck. Sorry, yeah, that was his thing, yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:50 But they... I feel really stupid if I was as Asian and I was told to do that. Yeah. Well, they were like, you're overreaching with this negotiation and you wanted to go in fancy dress. It was worse when Mr. Blubby asked for a pay-rise. You'd come in and be like, ah, Mr. Blumby. When they were, when they were trying to shoot the next series,
Starting point is 00:48:10 they had to start shooting, but without J.R. being present and having signed off his contract, you know, without having signed his contract. So what they started doing, they shot a couple of different versions. One, they just shot J.R. from behind. They just shot someone with the same hair, which they, you know, they could just, like, fill in later. Yeah. And then they also shot scenes with a guy bandaged up like he'd be. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:30 And they said, if we have to bring in another actor to play J.R., we can claim you had to have reconstructive surgery. And now you look like that. Amazing. The problem is J.R. was shot in the stomach. There's no reason. That's great. Hagman, what an interesting kind of personality he was generally. He used to do a thing for many, many years called Silent Sundays.
Starting point is 00:48:54 He just didn't talk on Sundays. So funny. Yeah. So what happened was is that... Religious? No, no. It was part of... He used to be on a different show called I Dream a Jeannie, a brilliant show.
Starting point is 00:49:04 And during it, he had vocal problems. And so he went to a doctor. And the doctor said, why don't you try not talking for a few days? And he thought not only did it work nicely, but he really enjoyed the experience. So every Sunday he thought, I'm just going to do this and didn't speak for decades. It's so good. Yeah. Yeah, he claimed that for 25 years, he never spoke on a Sunday.
Starting point is 00:49:24 I think it's not 100% true. I think he kind of cheated a fair amount. Because it's Sunday's your birthday or... Yeah. Tread on some Lego. Yeah. But sometimes he would go like four days in a row without talking, wouldn't he? And his family would hate him for it.
Starting point is 00:49:38 Really? He kicked it because he says that he started realizing he was missing a lot of of opportunities because he says in LA a lot of business is done on the weekends and so he said he couldn't call his agent he could talk to them to say hey get on the case of doing this or it's incredibly good negotiating to stay silent he probably shouldn't have done all his business on a Sunday just sit there in silence while they just keep upping the offer until like the clock goes over to monday he's like yeah great that's so funny a Nazi who is a fan of Dallas great is it um rudolph hughman girl no what rudolph has the Nazi um no sure too too yeah
Starting point is 00:50:13 didn't we cover another person who there was another, there was genuinely another Rudolf Hess? Really? Oh, he was called Rudolph Hasse, the avocado man. The guy behind the Hasse avocado was called Rudolph Hasse.
Starting point is 00:50:25 Wow. This one was the Nazi and presumably train enthusiast. Was he still alive when... He watched... He spanned out prison. He used to watch it in Dallas and Dynasty
Starting point is 00:50:37 were his two favorite TV shows that he watched. Okay. Did he... They weren't all bad. Uh... Is he... That is reccombing Alex.
Starting point is 00:50:53 Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I am on at Shreiberland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter, M. James. At James Harkin. And Alex.
Starting point is 00:51:08 Oh, I've quit Twitter. Are you on Insta? No. Are you on anything? Are you on Be real? Be real. No. That's good, that one.
Starting point is 00:51:16 I'm still on Bebo. Are you a mastodon? No. Don't be disgusting. That sounds horrible. What is that? Mafia-based porn site. Yeah, or you can email us at podcast at Q&I.com.
Starting point is 00:51:33 Or you can go to our website. No Such Thing as a Fish.com. All of our previous episodes are up there. Do check them out. We'll be back again next week with another episode. We will see you then. Goodbye.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.