No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Genghis Khan in Wimbledon

Episode Date: September 22, 2022

Live from the London Podcast Festival, Dan, James, Anna, and Andrew discuss cats, Confucianism and costly carrots. 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 This week coming to you live from the London... Anna Tyshinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray and James Harkin, and once again we have gathered round 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 Anna. My fact this week is that researchers have concluded that cats don't like cat people.
Starting point is 00:00:52 I'm really sorry. Scientifically speaking, the more you like cats, the less they like you. But I would say I have a cat, and I wouldn't say I'm a cat person, and my cat definitely doesn't like me. So could it be that cats just don't like any people? Sometimes they're just good judges of character, James. But this is actually not that. So this is a study that was done at Battersea Dogs and Cats Home,
Starting point is 00:01:16 with a bunch of universities that were involved, and it got 119 different people to interact with a cat in a room and then it looked at various things about the people like their personality type are they kind of neurotic are they agreeable people you know you fill in a questionnaire and say all that stuff about yourself and it asked them have you ever owned a cat
Starting point is 00:01:36 how long have you owned a cat for do you like cats it turns out the best predictor of how much a cat is going to like you is the number of years that you've lived with a cat but they're inversely proportional oh no yeah the more
Starting point is 00:01:51 and people who people would like say you know I'm really good with cats. It's the people who are self-professed cat-knowers. The thing I was reading is that a lot of it is about cat people. People who like cats. Cat people.
Starting point is 00:02:05 So, good clarification. In case you all thought we were talking about half cats, half person. Really annoyingly, that's all my research. Well, I think this was this study. It found that they touched the cats so-called red areas more when left alone with cats.
Starting point is 00:02:23 The red areas are things like the, please. We all went to that HR meeting, Andy. We know. The base of the tail. Or the belly. Apparently the hairs on their belly are really sensitive, and so a big old belly rub will, you know. I'm sure cats vary from cats.
Starting point is 00:02:43 They don't seem to with the red areas. It's just the belly and base of the tail that are red, and they really seem to across the board dislike. The rest of the cat is yellow area. traffic light system. There's no green area. There is, no, there's... I thought green was under the chin.
Starting point is 00:02:57 You're absolutely right. Yeah, I mean, I read it. I didn't. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, they love a little tickle under the chin. And the cheeks and the base of the ears. Yeah. But yeah, that's basically it.
Starting point is 00:03:09 The cat people are too tactile with cats. And also, this study found that their interaction style, they want to control the interaction, whereas cats really dislike that. So they prefer to be the ones who approach you, they only want to get touched if they've initiated it, they've said, all right, come and you can touch me now.
Starting point is 00:03:27 And this isn't what cat people do. And similarly, older people, cats tended to like them less because older people, sorry, but usually cat people. It's the old cliche that, you know, it's always the person in the corner of the room who's ignoring the cat that it goes to.
Starting point is 00:03:44 It turns out that it's true. There's been a recent study as well that says that they recognize their names, cats, but they don't want you to know that they recognize their names. So this was people at Sophia University in Japan, and they played a load of noises, including the cat's name that was said by the owner, and then as soon as their name was called,
Starting point is 00:04:07 they saw their tail move almost imperceptively, but they just very slightly moved. Some people think that that's because they recognize their name, but other people think, well, it's just something they kind of associate with food, so you might as well be shaking a box of cat food and they do the same. I feel like all of these cats studies are dancing around the fact that cats are dicks
Starting point is 00:04:25 and none of the scientists want to say that cats are dicks because they know that if they say cats are dicks in the abstract of their paper then they'll get in trouble with cat people. So here's another one. Again, they didn't say cats are dicks, but I think we can all agree the implication.
Starting point is 00:04:39 When you own a cat, it will not side with you against your enemies, okay? That's bad. So there's this experiment. Basically, you get a cat And the cat observes its owner struggling to open a container of something, right? And then the owner would request help from an actor, a stooge sitting nearby. And either the actor did help or didn't, right?
Starting point is 00:05:01 And then later on, that actor, whether unhelpful or not, offered the cats some food. The cats were completely agnostic about whether they took the food or not. Whereas dogs, dogs would refuse, frequently refuse food from the person who'd been a dick to their owner. Cats were not like that. Cats were totally neutral, but it is possible that they're too stupid to understand the play that have been put on for their benefit. Wow. Yeah. That is definitely a red area. So this study that I mentioned was done by a bunch of universities, the two Nottingham University's, in fact. And also the Royal Brackets Dick, closed brackets, school of veterinary studies.
Starting point is 00:05:46 in Edinburgh and that's its name. The Royal Dick School of Veterinary Studies in Edinburgh. It is named after a person called Dick, so it's usually abbreviated to the Dick Fett Sounds like it's a real specialty vet and it was established in the 19th century by a vet
Starting point is 00:06:06 called William Dick and before you say anything James, no, there's no evidence he ever shortened his name to Willie. Okay? Never did he go by Willie Dick. Good. Very nice. Have you guys heard, this has blown my mind, and I can't believe it's not bigger news, but there's an app out now called Meow Talk. Have you heard of Meow Talk?
Starting point is 00:06:26 No. Everyone listening, everyone here, everyone watching. If you have a cat, get Meow Talk. It's an app that translates what your cat is saying to you. And it was, I swear to God, this was done with scientists. And if you read the reviews, it sounds like it's actually genuinely picking up what the cat is saying. So this was a New York Times article that was written by Emily Anthe's, she was saying she tried it out and there's basically what they break it down to is different sounds of the cat get matched to certain terms so they can tell by the tone the pitch the length and so on of the meow in order to say roughly they are saying this so she first used it and the cat meowed after i think eating something and it translated as i'm happy she was away from home and she came home and the cow purred
Starting point is 00:07:10 as she got in and her app said the cat says nice to see you like oh come on absolutely this had so many reviews. I swear to God, this is a real thing where they think that that is happening. But then it's also got like weird little terms that it uses as well. So there was one time that she went to the cat and the cat went, which translator is just chilling.
Starting point is 00:07:29 This is not true. Okay. Stick with me, guys. So they've got, look, the other terms they've got is there was another time that she came in and the cat went, well, which went, my love, I'm here. Which is the word that it used. Is there another one where you kind of get out and it goes, you should upgrade your membership
Starting point is 00:07:45 to premium accounts. If you read all the reviews of the app, that's unfortunately, they get a lot of one stars because the first meow leads to, you need premium membership to understand what your cat is saying. But the best one is she lifted her cat off the ground once and she was moving it somewhere and the cat went meow. And that translated on her phone as,
Starting point is 00:08:02 hey baby, let's go somewhere private. But this is real. We can now talk to cats through meow talk. I've never been more convinced you've been completely duped and not saying something. Have you guys heard of Caden Griffin? No. So he's relevant to this field of study.
Starting point is 00:08:23 He is an American teenager, sixth grader. Last year he was in the sixth grade, which I think is about 12, 13 years old. And it's from Tennessee. And last year, he became curious about how often the objects in our home are touched by cats' bottoms. Okay? If you own a cat, you might think, oh, is the cat rubbing itself on everything I own? so he being a scientifically minded child ran an experiment by putting lipstick
Starting point is 00:08:51 on his cat's bottom then studying the home for where lipstick was popping up and what an amazing guy where did it end? Not his toothbrush It's not on his lips just his toothbrush day after day it's really good news for owners of long head cats
Starting point is 00:09:09 there's basically no lipstick anywhere at the end of the trial period short head cats There's a little bit on soft furnishings, but, you know, in general, it's okay. Okay, yeah. Do you know that outdoor cats are banned in Hussavi in Iceland, which is the town where they did the Eurovision movie. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 00:09:32 Remember that? Beautiful. And there's actually a few places. It's also a place called Accurari, where they're just about to ban them, and they'll be banned in 2025. But to try and stop that, there was a guy called Snorri Admondson,
Starting point is 00:09:44 and he started the cat party. And in the recent local elections, they got 4.1% of the vote. That's not bad. This is just cat people in Iceland. They beat the pirate party, who actually a pirate party quite big in Iceland. They were like a few years ago, they were anyway.
Starting point is 00:10:00 And a lot of the candidates for the cat party said that they were expressly running on behalf of their cats because the cats were ineligible to vote or run for office. Right. I dread to think the kind of genuine bastards we'd have in charge if actually we voted on behalf of our cats. Yeah, yeah, exactly. I'm going to have to move us on very soon.
Starting point is 00:10:23 I've got a quick story about someone who doesn't like cats. Okay. And that is Andrew Lloyd Weber. Hang on. Yeah. Who apparently was so annoyed and so angry with the recent movie cats that after seeing the movie, he went out and bought a dog.
Starting point is 00:10:39 He was just... He was so angry, right? But then he fell in love with this dog, and it became a really great thing. And he was traveling a lot overseas. So any time he got on a plane, he tried to bring the dog with him. And the only way you can really do that is claim to be an emotional animal, like an emotional support animal, right? So that's what he did.
Starting point is 00:10:57 So he said, I rode off and said, I needed him with me at all times because I'm emotionally damaged, and I must have this therapy dog. He said, the airline rode back and said, can you prove that you really need him? He said, yes, just see what Hollywood did to my musical cat. And a note came back saying, no doctor's report required. It is time for fact number two, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that if you take 50 generations of Confucius descendants and read out their names from oldest to youngest, in it, it will reveal a secret poem.
Starting point is 00:11:41 So this is, this I find really interesting. this is the story of Confucius. Confucius basically has the Guinness World Record for the longest unbroken lineage. And I happen to make friends quite recently with the 79th generation descendant of Confucius. He's a guy who lives in London called James Kong. And the Guinness World Record has recognized that basically for thousands of years, the Confucius family have been charting their family tree so consistently, so tightly that we know who everyone is inside the Confucius family. And there's two million of them.
Starting point is 00:12:20 So every 60 or 70 years or so, they update the big database of all the descendants. And in 2009, one book, which was broken up into 80 volumes, weighing over half a ton, was published, having every single name of all of the descendants, both living and dead in there. And James Kong is almost the closest that we get to a direct descendant. that's alive. Now the reason
Starting point is 00:12:45 that their names would reveal a poem is there's a beautiful thing that they do in China. Certain families do this, which is a generational name, and a generational name means that all the families can know which generation a child is from by inserting a key word into their name. So what they do is they write a poem,
Starting point is 00:13:02 and the next generation just takes the next word in that poem. So you can look at that poem and you can go, this is the 79, 78, 77, 76. So if you're out and about and you meet someone from China and you ask their name, you hear a keyword, you can go, oh my God, it's a descendant of Confucius. That's really cool.
Starting point is 00:13:18 Yeah, which is really awesome. So, you know this poem? Yeah. Does the next generation have to make up the next line, like a improv game or something? Yeah. Like consequences, confusion consequences. So it's a word at a time. As far as I know, it loops back onto itself once because you're not going to have 50 generations alive at once, so you're not going to get confused.
Starting point is 00:13:37 You're not going to get confused. Yeah, isn't it? It's a really good joke. What's really nice is that back in the day, Confucius was a very prominent person in China and his descendants, therefore, were almost like a class of their own. So if you knew that someone was a descendant of Confucius, there would be things like tax breaks when they were buying houses and stuff like that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:02 And then it all went tits up when the cultural revolution happened because Confucius then became a sign of something that Mousitong and so on didn't want. So basically they lost everything. The main bloodline of Confucius had to flee to Taiwan, and it became hard times for all of them. But now it's better again, and this one family handed the reins over to James's family. But when James goes back, he lives here, he's a very normal guy. In China, he goes back. And it's like in coming to America, when Eddie Murphy goes back to Zamuda, it's like everyone's bowing and kissing his feet.
Starting point is 00:14:36 Yeah, he's a big deal back in China. But the thing is, if anyone has a grasp of how numbers were. there are shit loads more than 3 million descendants of Confucius out there, right? I mean, I think everyone in China is probably directly descended from Confucius. But if you go back, even, I think we'll descend it from Genghis Khan. So this is just people who have managed to get the paper trail to prove it. Yeah, basically. Wait, am I descendant from Genghis Khan?
Starting point is 00:15:03 I think you might. I mean, there's a little bit of grey areas because how much immigration happened. We don't really know. Your family never left Wimbledon for 5 million generations, did they? No, and Genghis Khan didn't make it to whippled it. Imagine that. We'd have been furious if he'd made it, the lawn, the lawn, darling, they've damaged the lawn. I'm going to go and say something, I'm going to go and say something.
Starting point is 00:15:28 That's what thwarted him in the end. He couldn't handle the British passive aggressive attitude. Can you imagine, though, Genghis Khan, if we ever crack time travel and the descendant to go back to meet him as Andy. I think you'll be quietly impressed Would you? Yeah It's a warlord, yeah I think you'll say, I see he's got soft skills
Starting point is 00:15:49 And that's important Famously soft skills Is something that Genghisatt may as it Just on Confucius I didn't realize how Unsuccessful he was in life He was incredible He basically became important
Starting point is 00:16:06 About 100 years later During his life He was not listened to at all. Nobody took up his ideas for a century at least, and he, I'm kind of not surprised. His main book is I think it's called the Analex, is it?
Starting point is 00:16:19 Yeah, and it's not by him, it's anecdotes about him, so it's like a sort of fun, like fun stories about Confucius. Hence the Confucius says as a kind of term that came out of it. Exactly, yeah, yeah. But he didn't charge any of his pupils or his
Starting point is 00:16:35 students, and he was teaching philosophy. All he requested from them was a symbolic bundle of dried meat. But I can see why he's like priced himself out of the market at the wrong end, basically. I think you're not going to be respected if you say, I want one pepper army and I will then
Starting point is 00:16:50 tell you the secrets of the universe. You would probably go for the second cheapest option, wouldn't you? Yeah, yeah, yeah. He had 3,000 students and only 72 managed to pass master all of his teaching, so that's quite a high bar, isn't it? But the anal-X, there are two versions of the anal-X, one's called the Lou version
Starting point is 00:17:06 and one's called the Chi version. and really exciting. Is the Lou version? That's the easy reading, big fun. Funny jokes in it. If you've got five minutes, get the Lou version. Well, the Chi version was long lost, but really excitingly in 2015, we found a copy in the tomb of Emperor Liu He.
Starting point is 00:17:26 And he was one, he was like a really not a great emperor. He was dethroned after 27 days, which is the shortest reign of any of the Han emperors. and the reason he was kicked out is because he was like debauchery, a terrible lifestyle. There was like a period of mourning and during that time he bought a special kind of chicken and had lots of sex. With...
Starting point is 00:17:52 No, no. With concubines. Okay. It is better. It is better than chickens. I do think so. It is better than chickens. Andy's still thinking. Well, anyway, he was punished by being given
Starting point is 00:18:06 a small fife of 2,000 families who would pay tribute to him. He was punished by being given tribute? He was, and his subordinates were all executed. Oh, bloody hell. Why was that... Sorry, because that does sound nice,
Starting point is 00:18:20 to me. He's going from being an emperor to just being in charge of a couple of thousand families. It's like, we're going to take off the main responsibility for you. It's like how, you know, if I was in charge of something and then you guys demoted me, so I was only in charge of holding Sharpies for after-show signings,
Starting point is 00:18:33 that would be, for example, just an example. Just an example. Just an example. Do you remember that show a couple of shows ago when we didn't have any Sharpies? Yeah, that was awful. I'm still sorry about that. He's just when I read his story, I thought there were kind of parallels to Tutankarmoon because in the same way that Tutankarmoon's grave was found
Starting point is 00:18:55 virtually intact, I know there was a grave robbing, but it was because he was kind of wiped from the records, wasn't he? He's sort of no one knew to loot it. It's kind of like this guy as well, his tomb where they found this Confucius reference was kind of untouched because he was sort of wiped out from history as well. Yeah, I think so, yeah. So go to all the irrelevant people's tombs.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Let's go to Tim Farron's tomb and see what's there. He's still alive. I don't know. He was just... But he might as well be dead. I think it's what you're saying. I don't even know who he is. Who are we talking about?
Starting point is 00:19:28 Who is he? Speaking of politics, as we were, Dan. He's a politician. He's a politician. So you don't know who Joe Swinton is next. It's a politician. They're all alive, though. I feel bad.
Starting point is 00:19:42 Sorry, Joe. It's all right. So speaking of politics, Confucius, like Andy said, not that successful one alive, but he was the minister for crime. He was basically the pretty Patel of his day. Wow.
Starting point is 00:19:54 He's a politician. And so he was working for a duke. It was like a dukedom. And he was in charge of sort of punishment and crime and stuff like that. Wow. And he fell out with the Duke, apparently, and wandered for 12 years after he fell out with the Duke. And apparently the reason that he fell out with him is he was at a sacrifice,
Starting point is 00:20:15 and the sacrificial meat was being offered around, but he wasn't offered any. And so, without taking off his sacrificial bonnet, he left the country. He loved meat. Yeah. That's the main thing I'm getting time and again. Do you know what? I've got a data point to add to this. When he was, so he wandered for 13 years, trying to 12, 13 years.
Starting point is 00:20:35 trying to get people to listen to him. No one did. So he went back and became a politician again. And he was quite successful as a politician, to be honest, just not spreading his ideas. But he transformed the town that he was counsellor of. And the way he transformed it, I read, mainly, is by ending the adulteration of meat.
Starting point is 00:20:51 God. He's just the sausage king, and he just happens to have... This is amazing. Incredible. He once said that the main goal of life is to become a man of virtue, which is... There's a word for that, Junzi.
Starting point is 00:21:04 I'm sure I'm pronouncing out wrong, but it's about education, it's about compassion, it's about observing ritual. But if you don't succeed, that is also a chance to gain virtue. And he said, is not a Junzi, one who stays unruffled, though men ignore him.
Starting point is 00:21:21 Anyway, I've gotten to the fact tell me. It's a blissful moment. If you compare him to what other people in, let's say, Europe were doing at this time and saying, Basically, philosophers were, they were quite pro-war, they were pro-pride, they were pro-patriism or your city. There wasn't much chat about compassion and kindness and generosity. And he was much more about all of that, which was about 2,000 years ahead of where anyone else was.
Starting point is 00:21:50 He was quite crap on women, which is a slightly annoying thing about him. Yes. He did think that they were like a different species, really, or not like a different social class. There was one moment where he met a leader who said, I've got ten. very good ministers working for me and Confucius looked at them and went well one of them is a woman so you've only got nine but look I know if you should cancel two and a half thousand years later we all made mistakes I've just got some stuff on family trees if you want to hear yeah yeah so a couple of very long family trees possibly you know almost records compared to Confucius the
Starting point is 00:22:30 Lurie family some people think that's the longest in the world according to Dr. Neil Rosenstein who wrote a book about it, they can trace their lineage all the way back to the biblical king David. Oh. Okay. But in the Bible, it says that David was begat by Jesse, who was begat by Obid and then booze and then salmon and then Nassan. So I don't know why they stopped there because we know who came before that.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Oh, I see. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then the only other family that could be around the same is the House of Solomon. And they claim to go back to the Queen of Sheba. That's the imperial family of Ethiopia. And we know who the latest on that line is. It's someone called Zira Jacob who was the second African
Starting point is 00:23:08 ever got to Eaton College to ever go to Eaton College and in the 90s the last time I could find him he was living in the Rastafarian community in Manchester and according to the legend his family looks after
Starting point is 00:23:20 the Ark of the Covenant so Indiana Jones could have just gone to Rushall What a downer that movie would have been it All right you're coming over here looking for your arc of the covenant. I'll have you, mate.
Starting point is 00:23:47 All right, look, I need to move us on tour next fact. It is time for fact number three, and that is Andy. My fact is that there is a two-headed tortoise in Switzerland whose two heads prefer different foods. And here he is. So, for people at home, their picture has just come up on the screen.
Starting point is 00:24:06 Yeah, Andy didn't have him in his pocket. He's... Yeah, Janus is his name, named after the old god with two faces. Yeah. It's facing different ways. And he's 25 years old. He's just turned 25. He was born in, and still lives in Geneva, because he's quite slow moving, and he hasn't
Starting point is 00:24:27 managed to leave yet. Hopefully in about 50 years he'll be in Zurich. Yeah, exactly. This is all from a great piece, just about a minute times, by the way. And he lives in the Natural History Museum. and he sounds like a great guy. I mean, he really, he has a wonderful life. He has...
Starting point is 00:24:45 Can I just ask? With it being two heads, should you not say they rather than he? I agree, they need two names. Like Janus 1 and Janus 2, maybe? Yeah. That'll do. Okay, well, just rip up these notes then.
Starting point is 00:24:59 Well, they... No, you're right, because they have different personalities. You're right, yeah, yeah, all right. Well, anyway, between them, these two little guys who share a shell, They have a skateboard, which I love. Do they? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:13 Isn't that cool? That is really cool. Do they, someone gave them that, right? They didn't go out to make their way to the shop and say. They made it themselves. He or they get Valium rubbed on their heads every day. Oh, that's nice. Vaseline.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Oh yeah. Yeah. Oh my God, you do not want to get those two mixed up. So I've got Valium here, but I think I just wrote that as a couple. kind of wishful fulfillment thing. They have Vaseline because their heads bump into each other too much. And why would, why would Valium prevent chafing, as I've also put in the notes? This is why you're always in so much pain.
Starting point is 00:25:53 I've been telling you. I'm depressed, but I'm incredibly smooth. But yeah, and also, like, he does have a lot of, or they both have a lot of issues in terms of general lifestyle. So they're 25 years old. these tortoises can live for quite long time. If they were in the wild, they'd probably be dead by now. One of the ways that tortoises, as we know, survive in the wild
Starting point is 00:26:16 is if a predator comes in, they can back up into their shell. But there's only space for one of the heads to go back in, which would just leave the other one hanging out. Fortunately, he's got a skateboard so he can make good his exit. I was just thinking maybe if they cover him in Vaseline might be able to slip in there. They chucked valium at the predator. This is a mutation, right, where you have two heads instead of one.
Starting point is 00:26:43 If it's a mutation, then that means, because he's 25 years old now, it means we have all missed the time when there was a genuine teenage mutant hero tortoise. Owning a skateboard. Oh my God, yes. I know, and he's 25, so he's now a mid-20s. A bit old for a skateboard, really, 25. Yeah, yeah. On the skateboard, it's not putting one foot down to propel itself, right?
Starting point is 00:27:05 It's just someone's pushing it on the skateboard. I think his helpers are pushing him around. Yeah. Because I visited the embalmed body of Jeremy Bentham and they said, oh, he's got a skateboard. And I saw the skateboard. It's not a skateboard. Hang on, I mean, he's definitely not riding that skateboard.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Why has he even got that? Oh, because when he rides out of his box to get vacuumed each year, they need to get him. But actually, doesn't he have two heads? Jeremy Bentham. She does have two heads? Yeah, yeah. He has, like, his real head is hidden away and he's got like a fake head.
Starting point is 00:27:34 They might sort of a wax head Oh my god, we'd blown this right open. Two-headed tortuces. Jeremy Bentham is a tortoise. And so what? They just skate him out to hoover him. Yeah, when transporting him, they put him on what they call the skateboard.
Starting point is 00:27:50 I imagine it's the same with... To be honest, I didn't know that they hoovered Jeremy Bentham once a year. As in that's... We've mentioned it in the show, I think. Yeah, yeah. They have a little vacuum and they hoover him. Yeah, yeah. Anyway, tortoises.
Starting point is 00:28:03 So, yeah. Janice is a tortoise and it is quite rare, but if you go online, you can see lots of tortoises that have two heads. Probably the second most common animal to have two heads. I think snakes are slightly more common, but yeah, if you're going to get any animal with two heads,
Starting point is 00:28:18 if it's not a snake, it's probably a tortoise. Snakes all over the place, by Keffley, as it's called. One in 100,000 snakes. That's loads. Yeah. And, again, they never really lived that long unless they're in captivity, partly because of this whole,
Starting point is 00:28:31 the heads argue with each other thing. So it's a serious. this is a serious problem. If they, like, one head will fight with the other for food and they'll end up kind of no one gets it and they exhaust so much energy fighting with each other that they starve to death. And what's crazy is it goes into the one's stomach.
Starting point is 00:28:46 Well, it depends. Some of them have two and some have one. But yeah, but the ones that have one, yeah, exactly. The two heads will be fighting, not knowing, never having studied anatomy and realizing. It's so sad, because it feels like they could, Lady and the Tramp all their meals. Yeah. And that would be very charming.
Starting point is 00:29:02 But I know, because I think that is. It's incest, isn't it? Definitely. I think something else has to happen for incest, really. Yeah, that is hard. Yeah, the thing about that is... Wait, just kissing is not incest? Dad's interested suddenly. No, but just we found, like, a very interesting philosophical question,
Starting point is 00:29:25 which is if a two-headed snake has a wank, is it incest? What is it using to have a wank? Oh. There's plenty of tail there, I think. Could do the job. Oh, it puts the tail. Oh, go right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Do they have these snakes? We need to take it to the dick vet to find out of that. So snakes, tortoises, Tasmanians are the other people with two heads. Commonly. Apparently, there's a thing, in the olden days, there's a thing in Australia that all Tasmanians had two heads. Really? And the reason being that they had a problem with a deficiency. of iodine and so would often have goiters. So people in Tasmania would often have goiters.
Starting point is 00:30:08 What is a goiters? So a goiter is like a growth on your neck and it can get really big and it can almost look like a second head. But actually what would happen is they would have some surgery and so they would have like a scar on their neck. And then during the war, a lot of Tasmanians would go to the front line and they'd meet Australians and they say, well, where's your other head? Because they saw a scar and thought that a head had grown that. I believe these days it's not so common to be iodine deficient in Tasmania. And it probably wasn't 100%. But I do think the ones that did it, because they are Aussie, so they've got a sense of humor.
Starting point is 00:30:39 I assume they drew a face on their goiters. Good point. Went around freaking everyone out. Good, I might. That's true. I found this through QI, actually. In 2019, a two-headed rattlesnake called Double Dave was born. Do you know why it's called Double Dave?
Starting point is 00:30:59 Because it's got two heads. No. He was found by two scientists called Dave. That's amazing. You know Nicholas Cage? No. Who's that? He was Ming Campbell's predecessor
Starting point is 00:31:18 as leader of the Lib Dems. Nick Cage, he once spent $80,000 on a two-headed snake because he'd had a dream. He dreamed of a two-headed eagle, which you can't get. And so... So he went on eBay and so is a two-headed eagle.
Starting point is 00:31:34 This is why it came up. Weirdly, you can't get a two-headed eagle, as in no one's ever seen a two-headed eagle, even though it's the symbol of loads of countries and it's a big thing, and it just doesn't happen as far as we know. Anyway, and he got so freaked out that he gave it away to a museum
Starting point is 00:31:47 because they fought, and he said, I had to put a spatula between the two heads to feed them. Is that where he got the idea of a face-off? It's quite a different plot, but they're... You know, once these Hollywood types rework a script and then rewrite.
Starting point is 00:32:05 Yeah, yeah. I'm going to have to move us on very soon. What? So you can't get Janus cats, cats with two faces, which I think is the correct use of the term Janus, because Janus had two faces, not two heads. So I actually think that there's tortoise here,
Starting point is 00:32:21 they fucked up. Misnomer. Well, it does have two faces as well, in fairness. Yeah. Okay, it does have two faces. You're right, but it's not how you describe it, is it? If you were saying that tortoise has got two. He can't look forward into one year
Starting point is 00:32:34 and look back into another year. Exactly. That would be so shit if you added two-faced daughters and one of the faces just looked backwards into your shell the whole time. Janus and anus. Oh, that's just anus. Lovely lipstick, anus.
Starting point is 00:32:56 It is time for a final fact of the show, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that Yeagermeister was originally drunk to stop people from feeling sick. How many do you have to have? It's about 12. Okay.
Starting point is 00:33:21 So, no, it was originally a digestif. And in fact, some Germans still call it liver glue. And the idea is that you take it after a large meal and it was settle your stomach. And it was always taken at room temperature and that was the only reason you would have it. And it was invented by a guy called Karl Mast and it was his nephew Gunter who came with the idea that you could take it cold and have it as a social drink and get
Starting point is 00:33:46 hammered with it. I haven't thought of it as something you had cold. Just whenever you have Yeagermeister, you are so unaware of the temperature of the drink. I don't think of it. Excuse me, can I send back this Yeagermeister, please? It's a few degrees off. I think it's corked.
Starting point is 00:34:04 But yeah, Yeagermeister, invented in Germany by this guy called Kurt Mast. He He was a son of a vinegar maker, and he decided he would go into liquor. So he invented loads of types of drinks. Burning Love was his biggest one until he came up with this 56 herb recipe for the Yeagermeister. Do we believe the 56 herbs thing?
Starting point is 00:34:27 Because they sort of are open about 10 of the herbs. But then they claim that there's definitely 56, but the rest are all secret. And it's secret, isn't it? They've got a chief sort of chief bartender. He's called the Brandmeister at the moment. his name is Willie Shine and he says that he come on, grow up guys
Starting point is 00:34:44 he says Willie Shine says he is legally only allowed to discuss 11 of the 56 ingredients. Wow, I know. So does that mean if you ever talk to him about licorice or something? He's like you can't say anything. Yeah, he's like a one man guess who
Starting point is 00:35:00 but instead of guessing a person you're guessing ingredients is amazing though because I know I guess back in the day you know Coca-Cola has the secret ingredient or KFC, you know, the secret ingredient. Like, these days, are you allowed to get away just saying there's a magical something in there? No, I don't think you're saying, no,
Starting point is 00:35:18 I've got a nut allergy, a secret ingredient? Get the fuck out. But it's still allowed, right? Yeah, it's still allowed. I guess maybe alcoholic drinks seem to be a loophole. I've never looked at the back of a bottle of vodka. No one has ever read with the back of a bottle of Yeagermeister. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:33 It was quite a stiff, like a drink for kind of stiff types, wasn't it? before it was loosened up. It was basically well-to-do German people who drunk it. And then I think it was in the 1970s. There was a businessman called Sidney Frank, who realized in America that the only people drinking this thing were these well-to-do German kind of immigrants. And for some reason, I reckon I can make this huge.
Starting point is 00:35:57 And he completely transformed its reputation. He hired a lot of Yeagerets and Yeager dudes, I think, came later. Yeagerets are scantily clad women who tend to be just rolled out whenever you need to sell anything in life. But he sent sort of scantily clad Yeagerets around the bars of the US. And it went huge. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:18 And one of the things that he did was kind of spread rumors about Yeagermeister. So there had actually been a guy who had been up, I think for attempted murder or something. And he said that he'd had something called Liquid Valian, actually. Stop it. He actually had solid Vasili. It was solid Vasili. It was solid. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:37 But then later on, a bar in New Orleans started selling this Yeagermeister as if it was called Liquid Valium as a publicity thing. So it was like maybe it had caused this murder or this attempted murder. Sorry, just on the Yeagerets thing very quickly before we move on from that. I was once in a bar in Budapest and someone came around, a sort of young woman came around who was... She was like a kind of Yeageret, but she wasn't selling shots of alcohol. She was selling carrots. Really? I've got one.
Starting point is 00:37:08 And it was like, it was like a quid for a carrot, which in the supermarket, I know which in the supermarket is crazy, but next to a glass of wine, you think that's a good, actually, an investment is it, and that's reasonable. And I swear to God, that was the best carrot I had ever eaten. It was, like, it was about a foot long. It was, it was clean, it was, it was, crunchy, it was shaved? It was shaved or peeled, as we call it. Oh, yeah, that's the weird one.
Starting point is 00:37:33 You paid a quid for a carrot. I don't regret it for a second. And I looked around the, but every other man in the room. room and also was just standing there with a carrot. Wow. I've never seen this in any other bowl or any other country or anything like that. That's because it was a one-off. I have no question
Starting point is 00:37:49 in my mind that you were part of a scientific study setting out to prove that men are so stupid they will literally buy anything at any price if an attractive woman sells it to them. So what? So what? Apparently I'm also a mug when the Sprout girl came around a couple of minutes
Starting point is 00:38:09 later. That was a fucking lovely sprout. It only cost a Yagermeister, the word itself is, it means master hunter. And it's really interesting the story. So if you look at a Yeagermeister bottle, you'll see there's a stag on it. And in between there's a Christian cross going across it. The crucifix is there. And sometimes it's depicted when you see pictures of where he took this idea from
Starting point is 00:38:38 with Jesus on the cross itself. And what it was was it was a guy who eventually became a saint, Saint Hubertus. He was out and he was. hunting and he suddenly saw a stag come around the corner. He was meant to be in church, but he wasn't. And he saw a stag come around the corner. And the stag had a sort of crucifix, just a cross, in between, glowing through its horns.
Starting point is 00:38:58 And he had this sudden conversation with this stag, where the stag was like, dude, what are you doing? I was thinking the Yeager dudes there. I assume that's how they talk. It basically said, you need to be more ethical in your hunting. you need to make sure that if you're going to kill a stag it's one that's older or maybe sickly or do it you know and he sort of introduced ethicalness into it so he became a saint
Starting point is 00:39:22 Saint Hubertus he's the patron saint of hunters mathematicians opticians chicken roasters could you find any evidence of the chicken roasters because I couldn't find any evidence of where that came from it's a bit left field isn't it it sort of just there was left over and they were like it goes
Starting point is 00:39:39 what is a chicken roaster it's not even a thing but rotissory you see it's a counter at the super market, which has a rotisserie. You just would have thought, if you're sane of the chicken roasters, you'll be saint of just all the meat roasters. I don't know. Andy once paid 20 euros for a rotisserie chicken. That was an error.
Starting point is 00:39:55 Another thing that he did was cured rabies. Oh, yeah. Oh, wow. Yeah. What just sort of, people or animals, because both can get it. Both can be cured by St. Hubert. Oh, great. St. Hubert's key, which is a key that I think priests would keep them, wouldn't they?
Starting point is 00:40:13 And sometimes normal shops would have a St. Hubert's key. And it was like an iron bar and you heat it up really deepibrillator. It's exactly like that. Yeah. The effectively what you were doing was you were heating up the key and you were branding the person with the key. So if they were bitten by a dog that might have rabies, you would immediately heat up the key, put it on.
Starting point is 00:40:33 And the idea is that the burning would sterilize your... Well, I think the idea was that it was a magic key. Yeah. Oh, yeah. But it turns out that actually it might have worked. because of the sterilization of the heat, it's possible. And you would have carterized with wounds, so no bacteria could have got in,
Starting point is 00:40:49 so it might have worked slightly. They got lucky. It's always one in one thousand of these bullshit magical cures happen to also work. Yeagermeister, back to that, Yeagermeister do not like Yeagerbombs. Yeah. Who does?
Starting point is 00:41:04 Just for the streamers, there was a gasp in the room. They can't believe it. So Yeagerbom is Eegermyster and Red Bull and you drop one in the other, and it's great. And so they didn't invent it, and I think they have slightly distanced themselves from it, the Yeagermeister firm.
Starting point is 00:41:19 They say they have to promote responsible drinking, and the marketing director, who's a woman called Nicole Goodwin, she said, you will never see us actively support or promote Yeagerbombs. That's very much driven by our customers. And they recommend you have it with ginger beer. And a carrot. And a nice...
Starting point is 00:41:35 They've signed up to the Parliament Group, haven't they? The apartment group is a thing that encourages responsible drinking that a lot of sort of alcohol companies sign up for. But they have admitted that it's helped. So they don't like it, but, you know, they're not going to stop you from doing it, I think. Yeah, right. So I mentioned Gunther earlier, who was the nephew of Carl Mast, and he in the 70s came up with an advertising campaign, which was one for all.
Starting point is 00:42:00 So like I said, it was quite an upper-class kind of German drink, but he wanted to get normal Germans drinking it. So the idea was it would be a poster, and you would have a normal chairman, and they would just look like it could be a man, a woman, young, or anything, but it would be completely unknown, and they would say, I drink Yeagermeister because, and then they would give an excuse.
Starting point is 00:42:24 A reason. And excuses is a bit differently. An excuse is what you have to say the next morning. I drank all that Yeagermeister because. Well, for instance, I drink Yeagermeister because, as a teacher, I have to go to school my whole life. That was one of them. That's so good.
Starting point is 00:42:42 Yeah. One of them was, I drink Yeagermeister because my husband always calls me Erica, even though my name is Heidi. These are genuinely adverts for Yeagermeister. That's incredible. There's just one more thing. The factory that makes Yeager Meister is in, it's on Yeager Meister Strauss, weird coincidence, in Wolfenbottle in Germany. And an independent journalist went to see what goes on there. and stayed in the Yeagermeister guest house,
Starting point is 00:43:11 where you have Yeager Meister in the mini bar, obviously. And he went to visit Yeager Meister H.Q. And you're told that you're not allowed to take a phone in because the alcohol fumes in there are so thick that they might spark an explosion. Apparently. Well, a literal Yeager bomb. Okay, that is it.
Starting point is 00:43:34 That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you would like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter. James. At James Harkin.
Starting point is 00:43:52 Anna. You can email a podcast at QI.com. Yep. 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 link to the new improved clubfish. It's got all...
Starting point is 00:44:08 Thank you. It's a very exciting place. We've got lots of bonus content going up where we dick about behind the scenes and just think of new fun things to try out. Also, it's ad-free. So if you want that, get that. Otherwise, just stay here if you're listening at home at this very same place that you get us because we'll be back again next week. London Podcast Festival. Thank you so much for having us. That was awesome. We'll see you again. Goodbye.

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