No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Heavy Snuggle-Pupping

Episode Date: January 31, 2020

Dan, James, Anna and John Lloyd discuss correct gambling attire, the inventor of Vaseline, and Athens' sixteen thousand secret swimming pools. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, ...merchandise and more episodes.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, everybody. Welcome to this week's episode of Fish. We have a very exciting guest on this week. Yes, is it Andy? It's not Andy. Yeah, no. Andy is still a guest. We consider him a guest at the show. But no, he was busy this week. I suppose what I'm saying is Andy isn't here. Yeah, that's, that's effectively. But I still, I feel the guest thing. We, no, very excitingly, we have the founder of QI, John Lloyd himself. He's been on a few times. This is the guy he gave us not the nine o'clock news. Blackadder, spitting image. He helped create Mr. Bean, co-wrote two of the original radio episodes, a Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Yes, he exec produced a short-lived television show, no such thing as the news. Which he says is the highlight of his career.
Starting point is 00:00:40 I don't know if he means the ending of it or the experience itself, but he's now turned himself into a music manager. The band that he looks after is called Waiting for Smith. And if you hang out, listener, to the end of this episode, we're actually going to play a track from Waiting for Smith. I'll be honest. You don't have to listen to it all. You can fast forward the whole episode.
Starting point is 00:00:59 just get straight to the song. No, no. Experience the show without our guest, Andy, and see how it feels and give us feedback of what you think. Anyway, he was a fantastic guest. It's always amazing to get Lloydy on the show. And have a listen at the end. And yeah, enjoy the show. Hello, and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent,
Starting point is 00:01:37 My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with James Harkin, Anna Chisinski, and Chief Noam, John Lloyd. And once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, John. Right. My fact is that when the Greek government put attacks on swimming pools in 2008, only 324 Athenians admitted to having one. A search by Google Earth, however, revealed the actual number 16,974. It's incredible. It's bare-faced, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:02:18 According to the IMF, more than half of all Greek households pay no income tax at all. Wow. And Greece has got the largest black market in the whole Eurozone accounting for 21.5% of its GDP. There's a reason for this, I believe. When I was in Greece last year, somebody, explained why this is, why the Greeks are so poor at paying their taxes. Because for a thousand years, they were part of the Ottoman Empire, which they absolutely hated. And it was considered a patriotic national duty not to pay your taxes. And they just haven't caught up with the
Starting point is 00:02:51 history that the Ottoman Empire fell apart 100 years ago. I think there are some traditions that you really want to bring back immediately and maybe paying taxes not one of them. Maybe that's a bit lower down on the list. You're right. I love these pools because it feels as if they were prepared for this Google Earth search because they all hide them with camouflage. How do you hide a pool? Okay, so they have floating tiles that they put on the top of their pool. That's very clever. Yep, they have army nets, so they camouflage it all together. And some even paint the interior of their pools to mimic grass. Wow. Wow. It's brilliant. It's extraordinary. So the first Google search said, no swimming pools, but an extraordinary
Starting point is 00:03:28 number of army nets in people's garden of no apparent reason. The Greeks have a really good history of paint tax, though, because in ancient Greek, they had a really good system of paint tax. And that is that the assembly in Athens would pick the richest people to pay tax, the top 300 in some cases. And they would just say, you have to pay for this parade and this battleship and this whatever. And they all agreed. They even competed to spend as much money as possible because it was a real kind of thing where you would get respect from people and gratitude. And if you were one of the people who pay tax, it really increased your standing in the community and people really like you for it.
Starting point is 00:04:07 So everyone wanted to pay tax. Okay. Everyone wants to be in that 300. I wonder if you got your name stamped on the event as well, like the Livius Parade. You did. Yeah. The more you paid, the more likely you were to get your name on something.
Starting point is 00:04:19 So this is kind of like those philanthropists who, I don't know if you mentioned after Notre Dame burned down, the philanthropists who really wanted to donate millions, and then it turned out they kind of only wanted to do it if the bell was renamed, you know, the ex-person, you'll remain as bell. Trump Bell. or the IKEA wing of Notre Dame.
Starting point is 00:04:40 They're not the worst taxpayers in the world of Greeks, though. The Chinese, only 2% of Chinese pay any income tax. And in Pakistan it's 1%. I mean, you wonder how these countries operate. Especially China, which operates entirely as government. Yeah. I suppose it's just hard to get into those hard-to-reach spots, isn't it? We've all had that itch on our back that just can't quite picket to.
Starting point is 00:05:01 I was kind of nervous researching this. because my Google searches were like amazing tax dodgers and we're coming up to the end of the tax year. But I find tax dodgers quite fun the way that people got... Again, researching them, right? Researching them. Just... Ah! Ah!
Starting point is 00:05:21 That's my accountant there, do you know what? Yeah, no, early England taxes like the 1700s. So there were so many great ways that people tried to get around all the taxes that were being thrown at them. So there was tax on bricks, for example, in houses. So one of the Dodgers that they used to do was people just used to use bigger bricks So you use less brick per house Yeah, that's a great idea
Starting point is 00:05:41 You could just use four bricks, one for each wall Exactly And then they caught onto that So they eventually taxed big bricks as well Did it by weight? That's actually a bit like with cheese You know the origin of big cheese wheels Is based on the fact that cheese
Starting point is 00:05:56 Used to be taxed by number of cheeses In Switzerland rather than by weight And so people would just make bigger and bigger giant cheeses And that's why we have them And now the average emmental is three feet diameter and weighs 220 pounds and uses one and a half tons of milk because it just gets the same amount of tax as a mini one. That's a mini baby bell. And baby bell. I was just looking at the quite famous case, the Jaffa cake case on tax.
Starting point is 00:06:21 So you know there's always this debate over the cakes or biscuits debate. And that originates in 1991, I think it was. And it's because cakes are traditionally in a lot of countries actually are not subject to VAT to sales tax. biscuits with chocolate on arc as cakes were seen as a necessity because it used to be, you know, your working household would make a cake. But yeah, in 1991, McVitties insisted Jaffa Cake was a cake and so they agreed it had biscuit tendencies but then had to argue overall that it had more cake elements.
Starting point is 00:06:49 And as part of the, like in court, as part of the evidence for the fact that it was a cake, McVitties baked a one foot diameter Jaffa Cake to show this is actually a cake. And the court's concurred and it's been a cake ever since. Oh, cool. Yeah. That is amazing. Do you know the difference in cakes and biscuits? How do you tell?
Starting point is 00:07:06 Because when they go stale, biscuits go soft and cakes go hard. Yeah. Oh, that's cool. But they didn't have the time to sit in the court for sort of three weeks watching the java cake go stale. This is also actually the case with gingerbread men. So a gingerbread man counts as a cake and counts as a biscuit that's exempt from tax because it's got no chocolate on it until it has a certain amount of chocolate. So if you've got a gingerbread man just with eyes, but naked, no tax on it. it, but then it'll cost 20% more if it's got one button.
Starting point is 00:07:37 No. Yeah. One button on its shirt. Who in their right mind is adding that one button then? I don't know. These people are missing a trick. The people who are best at paying taxes are Americans, strangely enough. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:50 That's slightly surprised me. 81 to 84% of Americans don't cheat on their taxes compared to 68% of Germans and 62% of Italians. Are these self-reported figures? But, you know, it is really shocking. actually how much tax avoidance goes on, you know, not just Apple and Amazon. You know, Amazon has not paid any federal taxes in America, even though it makes profits of, you know, billions.
Starting point is 00:08:14 And there's $8.7 trillion worth of world's wealth hidden away in tax havens by the rich. Wow. Isn't it? It's something like the fifth biggest country in the world if it was a country, isn't it? Something like that, I think, the sixth biggest, in terms of income, the tax haven't. Whatever we're calling that. Where is that?
Starting point is 00:08:35 Sounds great. We know where it is. It's very wealthy. It's wherever you want it to be down. The UK is king of tax haven't. I mean, we've got more than anyone else in the world. Yeah, exactly. We talk about Greece and whoever, but, you know, British, the Cayman Islands belongs to Britain.
Starting point is 00:08:50 The Virgin Islands belongs to Britain. Bermuda. Permuda. Yeah. Channel Islands. Jarnal Islands. Fulton. Bolton.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Didn't realize you were taxes up there. We're a bit like those villages in China who's very difficult for the tax man to get down to Bolton. Tough itch to scratch, Bolton. So one of those honest Americans is Warren Buffett, who's been paying income tax since he was 14. Wow. He had a paper round.
Starting point is 00:09:15 And in 1944, he paid tax of $7 on an income of $592, which would be equivalent to about £8,000 to know, to a pretty enterprising 14-year-old. That's a lot of newspapers, isn't it? Yeah. Another guy who paid £7 tax was the longest-serving Prime Minister of Pakistan. He's a guy called Noaz Sharif,
Starting point is 00:09:36 who was in office for nine years on three separate occasions. At one point he had a personal fortune of two billion pounds, but over a period of several years paid only just seven pounds in tax. Wow, the same amount. I mean, why would he bother to pay any? It's like, yeah, this is it. I'm fessing up here. Here's your full seven quid back.
Starting point is 00:09:56 Shall we say some stuff on swimming pools? Yeah, sure. Let's do that. So, do you know, Name something that you're not allowed to do in a swimming pool. Urinate. Have a poo. Come on.
Starting point is 00:10:10 Are there any signs on the walls to say you can't do that? No, that's true, which is why I always challenge them. When they attempt to kick me out. Name something that's explicitly told you're not allowed to do on the wall. Petting. Petting. Petting. Not allowed.
Starting point is 00:10:25 I mean, who uses that word anymore? Right. So why do they call it heavy petting in the swimming pools? Yeah. Because surely it's just snogging or kissing or whatever, right? Well, the reason is in the 1920s in America, they had some things called petting parties. And high school students would go to swimming pools
Starting point is 00:10:44 and they would kind of kiss and cuddle and whatever. They would never have sex in there, but they would be getting very, you know, close. And people disapproved. And so they would have signs saying no petting on the swimming pools. And that has kind of kept over for, you know, almost 100 years now and you still get heavy petting signs, even though you don't have these.
Starting point is 00:11:02 parties anymore. But you might have them if they took the signs away. I'm not saying, yeah. So is that what a petting zoo is? It is. I had a traumatic childhood actually, repeatedly taken to those places. To a heavy petting zoo. They were also, these petting parties, they were also known as necking parties, mushing parties, fussing parties, and snuggle-popping parties. So I really think it should say on the swimming pool, no snuggle-popping. No snuggle-popping. Which there won't be because everyone will feel too sick to pet anyone at the phrase snuggle-puffing. Because there are no signs actually saying no urinating. Public swing pools contain up to 20 gallons of urine.
Starting point is 00:11:43 Damn. Enough to fill a dust in. And the proportion in hotel jacuzzi is up to three times worse. Whoa. Why are people doing it more in a jacuzzi? I think it's the bubbles, mate, you want to go, don't they? Do you think? Well, I think someone knows.
Starting point is 00:11:58 That study where they found out there was, Did you say 20 gallons? Yes. Of urine. It was really clever how they did it because it's quite difficult to work out how much urine there is in a swimming pool because often the chlorine would change it into other compounds or whatever.
Starting point is 00:12:12 But they found a compound in urine that doesn't react with any other chemicals. And that is called acesulfame potassium. And it's a sweetener that you get in lots of like diet drinks and stuff like that. And if you put, if you urinate that into a swimming pool, nothing can get rid of it so it will stay there. And so they could take an amount of water and see how much of that. was in and then work out there were 20 gallons of urine from that. Hang on, are we all urinating this sweetener?
Starting point is 00:12:36 I think they took an average of how much people would. It's in a lot of foods. It's not just in soft drinks. Okay. And that 20 gallons, as well as being a dustbin, it's approximately 120 wine bottles worth of urine in each swimming pool. In each swimming pool. And they sell it in Aldi, don't they?
Starting point is 00:12:56 That's a terrible slam. Aldi has a really good wine selection, genuinely. They do. They do. They do. I'm sorry. They win all the awards. Did you know this thing that another thing they could use, and I think they do in some
Starting point is 00:13:05 place, is silver has got their curious property of sterilising water. So they could use silver instead of chlorine. That's going to be a bit more expensive, though, wouldn't it? You need only tiny amounts. You need only 10 parts per billion. And it's completely safe. That's great. So in the Olympics, whoever comes second could jump in the pool after the race
Starting point is 00:13:24 and then clean the pool for the next race. Yes. That's really good. You know when you smell that really strong smell of chlorine in a pool. Yeah, I like it actually. And you think, okay, and you some you get high off it maybe, or you think there's too much chlorine in this pool. Do you know what the problem actually is?
Starting point is 00:13:41 My nose is too sensitive? No, it's that there's not enough chlorine. Oh. So I actually learned this from Dr. Carl wrote this in one of his books, but if it smells too strongly of chlorine, it means they haven't put enough in, because the smell that you're smelling is actually when the chlorine reacts with the nitrogen from things like urine and sweat and dead insects and bacteria and stuff.
Starting point is 00:14:01 It combines with it and it makes these chemicals called chloramines. And the smell comes from this particular chemical called trichloramine. So it's very volatile so you start smelling it. If you add more chlorine, then it keeps reacting and it moves on through the chemical process and the trichloramine goes away. That's incredible. Is that amazing? This smell that I really like is actually dead insects and urine. That's correct, yes.
Starting point is 00:14:22 That seems true to form, knowing you. Did you know that Clint Eastwood used to dig swimming pools for a living? Did he? Or was he very enthusiastic grave digger? He was quite successful, quite young, and he was sacked by Universal Studios because his Adam's apple was too big. What? What are you talking about, John?
Starting point is 00:14:42 You're testing us now, aren't you? That can't be true. Well, it is true. It was on IMDB and on www.compteat.com. Where I also found the fact, his name is an anagram of Old Westwood. action. That's quite good, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:14:57 That's really good. Wow. I actually am now thinking of Clint Eastwood and he has a big Adam's apple. You can picture it in these old films. He wasn't stuck him from digging holes. He wasn't sacked from the grave digging. No, no, he's sacked from the movies.
Starting point is 00:15:11 Oh, right. And then he had to get another job. You're going to scare the mourners. It was swimming pools. It wasn't great. When did the Adams Apple thing come in? Sorry, I've lost to him. In the 50s.
Starting point is 00:15:22 He was fired by Universal. That was at the start of his career or the end. Yeah, he'd been in a couple of sort of B movies. And then the Adams Apple, they suddenly noticed, hey, that guy there. Oh my God. It was horrible. It was when they started having 3D movies, didn't it? And people thought they were being posted in the eye. Okay, it's time for fact number two, and that is Chazinski. My fact this week is that some terrosaurs had heads that were more than four times the length
Starting point is 00:15:57 of their bodies. No. How big was that Adam's? They were such stupid-looking creatures. So the pterosaurs were pterodactyl, is often used as kind of a word for the pterosaur. Terodactyl actually not a thing. The pterodactylous was a type of terrosaur.
Starting point is 00:16:17 But, yeah, they were the first flying species, and they started off about 250 million years ago with heads nearly as long as their bodies, and they just extended and extended until you got some terosaurs like the Kethorles, like the Ketzelkoatlus, where the heads and the necks were at least triple the length of the torso, so it took up over 75% of their bodies. It feels like if you're a flying animal, having a massive head that's three times bigger
Starting point is 00:16:41 than everything else is probably going to be a problem. You just tip, plumb out the sky all the time. It's been this real mystery about how they figured it out, R.E. center of gravity, and generally their massive size. And one of the ways that they did it was by having a very light head. So they had these openings in front of their eyes and their skulls called the Antal fernestra, which is just the window in front of their eyes. And we don't really know what was in it, maybe a gland or muscle. It might have just been a big air cavity. And this sometimes is huge
Starting point is 00:17:07 hole in their skull was so big that it could, in some of them, it could fit their entire torso through it. As if they didn't put their torso through it. If they stopped too fast, would it shoot out through it? Yeah, it's exactly. They literally turn inside out. Like a jumper you have to put back the right way around. Yeah, it's amazing. And also one reason that we know they had very light heads is because the bones were very light, right? Yes. So the bones were quite thick in places, but there was a big gap of air in the middle, and then the actual edges of the bone were like one millimeter thick.
Starting point is 00:17:38 And that means it's really hard for us to find pterosaur fossils because they just kind of wash away or they crumble up. There's hardly any of them in existence. I read one article. I don't know if this is true of all pterosaurs, but one person said you could put all the fossil material of terosaurs that we've ever found in one handbag. No. If you were to crush it all up.
Starting point is 00:18:01 And that's because it's so thin and so weak. Oh, that's amazing. It's not that many of them as well. It could be that they were talking about specific species. I couldn't quite tell from the... You could believe that, though, if you powder it all, put it in a blender. I've seen some big handbags. That's why they check your handbags at the Natural History Museum when you're...
Starting point is 00:18:18 That's why? There's a teresaur in it. Excuse me, sir. Is this all of the fossils of terracosos we've ever found in history in your handbags? Like, busted. Terrorosaurs, not dinosaurs. No. I'm sure everyone around this table knew that, but I didn't.
Starting point is 00:18:31 So it's worth saying for the people at home. Yeah, not dinosaurs. And also birds didn't descend from them, which, again, I think everyone says birds descended from dinosaurs. And you think, well, it must be the flying type. But, yeah, not at all. Birds descended from things that could not fly when the dinosaurs were around. It's really amazing that, isn't it? And I read as well that the largest thing which survived that attack from a meteorite, not an attack, it wasn't a meteorite.
Starting point is 00:18:57 It wasn't malicious. You make it sound deliberate. He was just flying through the universe and the earth got in the way. It's not the meteorite's fault. But the largest thing that would have survived was around 44 pounds. And that today would be about the size of an American beaver. So anything bigger than a beaver would die. Anything smaller than a beaver, some would die, but some would survive. and the things that turned into birds were not just the small dinosaurs, weirdly,
Starting point is 00:19:23 it was some of the medium ones that were eating seeds. Okay, because when there's like a nuclear winter, because the meteor hits and nothing can grow, the seeds can still live underground. And so these little dinosaurs could go and still eat the seeds until everything got better, and they were the ones that survived. Wow. And I wonder if that's, I think that's why today, like birds,
Starting point is 00:19:43 which are the things that survive from there are the things that eat seeds. Okay, yeah, that's really cool One thing that's Descended from those guys Are woodpeckers And I just found What they do with their heads They bang their heads into trees
Starting point is 00:19:59 At speeds of about 15 miles an hour Up to 12,000 times a day Whoa I mean, what must that be like? Why don't they get headaches? We found this out for QI once And it's... I know they've got a weird tongue, haven't they?
Starting point is 00:20:13 Yeah, yeah It wraps around their brain, doesn't it? Yeah I think they've got fixed skulls or some kind of padding or something like that. They've got some kind of special brain casing. Yeah. It's sort of wobbles around in jelly. It is amazing though, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:20:25 Another headbanger is Death Watch Beatles, which repeatedly bang their heads on the floor to attract mates. I've tried that. It doesn't work like that? Oh, no. Death Watch Beatles. That's a metal band. Death Watch Beatles to Metal tribute Beatles band.
Starting point is 00:20:41 I've got some, I decided to run a search. for four times, what things are four times as much as. Oh yeah. So there's some quite good ones in here. So spider's milk, but you didn't know there was any, but some spiders produce milk. And spiders milk contains four times as much protein as cow's milk. They're hard to milk, though, aren't they? I reckon, like, you get more from a cow's other than you do from a spiders other.
Starting point is 00:21:08 Just go and say, milk the spiders? I'll be back in two months when I've got enough. So, and chimpanzees expend four times as much energy walking on either four or two legs than humans do. Wow. It's really hard for them walking, yeah. I wonder why that is. I don't know. They've got huge upper bodies, haven't they?
Starting point is 00:21:26 That must be tiring. Yeah. The T genome is four times longer than the coffee genome. So that's discovered by Chinese geneticists. And this one is astonishing. Almost four times as many people are murdered as are killed in wars. Wow. Isn't that a shock?
Starting point is 00:21:42 Yeah. Yeah, wow. Yeah. I mean, some of us would say that been killed in a war is murder. All right, Jeremy Corbyn, okay. I'll get out. Well, we've had a lot of guests today, Jimmy Carr, Jeremy Carbin. Actually, on pterodactyls, they were also a bit hairy, some of them.
Starting point is 00:22:02 They had what is called Terrofuzz in, I found in a threat, in an email thread that I sort of found archive between paleontologists. But yeah, they found hair fibres on some of them. them and they also think this might be what helped them be able to fly to do with insulation but they were sort of fuzzy or fluffy that's really cool that's quite cute but not on the wings i think just on the bod fuzzy bod, bat wings they were they were also the babies you know what they call the baby terradactyl or terrosaur um no flaplings oh yeah flaplings nice little word and they were so they were first identified by a guy called george's courvia george covier george coveyet george George Cuvier
Starting point is 00:22:44 At what stage reading that census Did you realize you were in trouble? Did he live in Cornyrd Garden? Sorry, who was George Curvia then? George's, George's, Curvieier,
Starting point is 00:22:57 was a, he was a scientist, and he was the person who discovered, or firstly identified the flying teresaur in 1809. And he said that, in 1812, he said that they were unlikely, we as humans were ever unlikely to find any animal as large as that.
Starting point is 00:23:16 And then 10 years after he died, we discovered dinosaurs. Oh, what a shame. He was the first person to say that they flew, but the first person to describe them in any way scientifically was Cosimo Kalini, and he was most famous for being Voltaire's secretary. Yeah, so weird. Cool, isn't it? Such a weird two worlds colliding.
Starting point is 00:23:37 Yeah. His little hobby. I wonder where he was secretary, because Voltaire, just down the road from us in Common Garden, he used to live there. Oh, Voltaire. Yeah. I think probably in France is where he lived most of his life.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Okay, cool. I think Cuvier discovered, you said 1809. I think it was 1801, wasn't it? Yeah, and it's Cervier. Sorry. He was also, I mean, not only did he see the baby, he was also the person who was the foundation of all Darwin's theories. He was the person who realized that animals could become extinct.
Starting point is 00:24:06 I have one last thing before we move on, which is, did you know that there are terrorists, saws in the movie Citizen Kane. What? So this is really worth checking out. So obviously Citizen Kane held up as one of the greatest movies ever made, Orton Wells. He had an incredible script. He had an incredible cast.
Starting point is 00:24:22 What he didn't have was an incredible budget. So for a lot of the movie, they had to reuse certain things from other movies. And there's a scene in the movie, and I've watched it, where they're at some sort of party that's on a beach. And in the background, to show a sort of jungly background, they had to borrow footage from King Kong. or son of King Kong because they couldn't afford to do it themselves.
Starting point is 00:24:44 Yeah. So in the background, you see these giant terrosaurs. No way. No way. Spoiler alert, that's what Rosebud is. Name of his pet terracar. Okay, it's time for fact number three,
Starting point is 00:25:02 and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that the world's first casino had a rule that you could only gamble if you were wearing a tricorn hat. So this was in Venice. It was in 1638, and it was called Il Redotto, which means the private room. And Redotto was actually a word which was used for illegal gambling clubs at the time, but they closed them all down and everyone was very upset about it.
Starting point is 00:25:32 But they said, no, don't worry, we're going to make an official one that you can all go to. So by the rules, everyone's allowed to go there. You're all allowed to gamble here. Don't worry, you'll all be able to still gamble. But if you do want to gamble, you're going to have to wear a tricon hat and a mask, and tricons and masks are extremely expensive, and so actually the poor people couldn't do it anymore.
Starting point is 00:25:51 So these were the kind of masquerade masks that you would go, weren't they? Really sorts out your poker face problem, doesn't it, when you're gambling to have a mask wearing mask on? How could they have called anything? I guess usually they don't cover the lips, do they? They're sort of... So if your tell is a big pout. Because they normally do say that your tell is in your eyes.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Do they? Yeah, not pulling faces. with yarn. But the masks, you can see out of the mask, you can still see people's eyes. Yeah, you can see it. Well, yeah, I didn't know the eyes with the tell. I've been looking at the nose. Yeah. His nose hasn't moved. It's still there. The talk about the casinos in
Starting point is 00:26:27 Italy. In 1963, Sean Connery, I just couldn't believe this fact, but it's there. He's successfully backed the number 17, three times running at the St. Vincent Casino in Italy. Yeah. You've heard that story? I have heard the story. I know that to be true in a way, but it did happen to be that there was a lot of press there.
Starting point is 00:26:50 It was basically a publicity stunt by... No, you think it was a publicity stunt, but I like to believe it. Yeah. Although he did, he could put it on 17 twice beforehand and it didn't work, didn't he? It does seem like he was like, oh, something's going wrong. Oh, no. But yeah, basically most people these days think it was a publicity stunt, because it happened to be the week before his movie came out,
Starting point is 00:27:10 and he was with all the press and everything like that. So I saw a bit of footage the other day, totally unrelated to it, but to this fact, I just happened to be watching it. I'm convinced it must be a publicity stunt, but I can't see anyone that says it was. Muhammad Ali, when he was up against Sunny Liston, he taunted to get the fight and to really get at him. He kept showing up at his house in a bus and yelling through a megaphone at 3 o'clock in the morning, getting him out of the house, just infuriating him. And there's footage of Sunny Liston at a table in a casino, rolling dice. and Muhammad Ali beside him just yelling at him,
Starting point is 00:27:43 I'm going to take you down doing all this Ali's stuff and just out of nowhere Sunny Liston pulls a gun out of his pocket and he fires it at Muhammad Ali and you see footage of Ali running out and everyone freaking out
Starting point is 00:27:54 and then it turns out that the gun only has blanks in it and he fires a couple of shots into his jacket and then just goes back to rolling dice and everyone's fine with it and it moves on. He must have crapped himself
Starting point is 00:28:05 I found this great line from Stephen right about gambling. In Vegas, I got into a long argument with the man at the roulette wheel over what I considered to be an odd number. Do you know this? You all know the fact that all the numbers on a roulette wheel
Starting point is 00:28:26 added up together. No. They add up to 666. Yeah. It's a bad sign. People should know not to enter casinos. But I actually did some research on roulette for this series, the R series.
Starting point is 00:28:38 And I was reading into the number, zero quite heavily. And did you know that zero was banned on roulette tables in this country in the, I think it was the late 60s? Really? Yeah. It sways the odds too much in favour of the casino. Well, it sways the odds in favour of the casino at all, basically. So, like, you'll know, if you go to a casino today, they all have a zero and they absolutely
Starting point is 00:28:59 have to. Otherwise, a casino wouldn't be able to come off making money because there are 36 numbers, and you're given odds of one in 36, but there's this zero one. Sometimes there's a double zero or a triple zero if you're really being ripped off. But yeah, in the 60s, in 1967, the law lords, like the equivalent of the Supreme Court, decided that they didn't approve of this. They thought it was unfair that the casino would have any advantage. And they banned zeros from roulette tables. Wow.
Starting point is 00:29:24 And Scotland Yard policemen would go round casinos and, like, check for zeros on tables and then close them down if they had them. And how long did that last for? It lasted a year. And then they realized that all casinos were saying, well, we're not going to do business anymore. And people like casinos. And so they changed that law. I was reading a thing that apparently something that's experienced by quite a few casino goers is if they sit down as a slot machine, they'll sometimes sit on quite a damp chair. And that's because very, very dedicated gamblers who've been playing on a single slot machine for ages and know that if they leave, it might be the next one that wins.
Starting point is 00:30:01 Don't go to the toilet. They just go in their trousers. It's a big thing. Sort of urinated, urine-covered seats is a big point. problem in casinos. Is it really? Yeah, yeah. It's, well, certainly...
Starting point is 00:30:12 A big problem? Well, I've never noticed it when I've been to casinos, I must say, but I can believe that. I think that they wear, like, adult diapers and stuff. Yeah, there's new products that have been made specifically for a casino goers. It's called Player's Advantage. And, yeah, and the idea is it's a diaper that gets you an additional 10 to 12 hours of continuous play. So, um, you can put, you know...
Starting point is 00:30:35 Well, you've got to take a long, hard look at your life, haven't you? when you're buying Ambler's advantage or whatever. Yeah. The roulette wheel, we don't really know who properly invented the modern one, but a lot of people think it was Blaise Pascal.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Yeah, who's the mathematician, who's like the father of probability, really. And the idea that a lot of places say, I don't know if this is true, that he was trying to make a perpetual motion machine, which would make it a really bad game of roulette, wouldn't it?
Starting point is 00:31:02 Very dull. The ball just goes right forever and ever and ever. Well, the diaper would come in here. handy in that case. Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is my fact. My fact this week is to promote his new product, the inventor of Vaseline would demonstrate his invention by dipping his hands in acid and then healing the burn wounds with the balm. Dedicated to his product. I'd buy it after that.
Starting point is 00:31:32 Yeah. How quickly does Vaseline work? So this is, okay, so we've mentioned this guy very briefly ages ago on the podcast. His name is Robert Chesa Brew, which is... I call him Cheesebra. I really want to call him Cheesebra. And I googled how to pronounce his name a bunch of times. And it came up with Chesa Brew. Okay.
Starting point is 00:31:50 Let's call him Cheesebara. Cheesebara is way better. So, yeah, Robert Cheesebara. He patented the balm, Vaseline in 1872. So he had this new invention. He'd spent 10 years experimenting on himself to see that it would work. But for the time, it was hard to convince people that it had any practical use. So he became one of those traveling salesmen, and he went to department stores all over New York, where he would arrive.
Starting point is 00:32:12 at the location and do a demonstration, the demonstration consisted of him dipping his hand in acid or sometimes holding his hand over an open flame, burning himself, and then putting the bomb on, and then showing his other hand that he had done a demonstration on the day before and how it had healed it up. Yeah, so it was one hand at a time. Oh, wow, so it was the blue Peter of its day, so he is one I made earlier. Exactly. There's a lot of trust in that demonstration, though, isn't there? Yes, yeah. Because it, I mean, you're trusting that he had done that the day before and he's not just every single day putting his one withered hand in some acid. I bet it was his left hand always that he put it acid, wasn't it?
Starting point is 00:32:50 That's true. Yeah, but so he did that and used to travel all over. It was a real front-line salesmanship from old Cheeseborough. He had a horse and cart, didn't he? And he would give away samples. And apparently this is the first time people gave away samples of any products. Wow, that's a very good friend. I don't know if that's, it doesn't sound like someone else must have thought of it.
Starting point is 00:33:10 But this is the first example that. we've found. So he used to Chesaborough or Cheesborough, whatever his name is, he used to have a distilled sperm whale oil business. And that started becoming redundant because the oil industry became
Starting point is 00:33:26 huge. And he was basically going bust and he used his very last few dollars to go to Pennsylvania and he was going to get a job in the oil industry. And he noticed all these oil workers, we were always complaining about the stuff called Rodwax, which is a black
Starting point is 00:33:41 gunk that gooed up the drill heads and then keep having to clean it off and he got curious about this and he took a bucket of it home and he thought because if they got wounds and burns and cuts and things they smear it on it seemed to get better i don't think it's got healing qualities actually but what it does it keeps the dirt out of it that's one reason it's good for you yeah and keeps moisture in doesn't it he was fascinated by this he took this home as dan said he went years and years experimenting to turn it from this black goo into this very clear almost translucent balm um and did you know No, he was a Brit.
Starting point is 00:34:13 No, I thought he was American. No, he worked in America, but he was actually a Brit. And Queen Victoria used Vaseline. We don't know why. She was a big fan. And she actually knighted him in 1883. But unfortunately, the sword slipped off his shelter. Because he did use to cover himself, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:34:31 That's the one thing that we mentioned, didn't he? He thought that it was just this amazing thing that would cure everything. And he thought there was some special stuff in it that would make him better. And he got pluracy, and he covered his whole body. in it. And he did actually get better, but probably not because of that. Well, he had a, yeah, I mean, he used to, he, he, he, he lived to 96, and he got sick in his late 50s, and he hired a private nurse who was instructed to rub him down, a whole body rub down in Vaseline every day.
Starting point is 00:34:58 Come, I'm having that job. And he ate a spoonful of it, literally every day, and that's, he, he attributed his longevity to exactly that. Yeah. I mean, you would, if it's your big business, right? You would say that. Yeah. He was secretly taking a lot of sort of morphine and parasitamol.
Starting point is 00:35:16 But I dug out some other uses of Vaseline, apart from the obvious. Oh, yeah. So it has been smeared on fish hooks to lure trout, treat napi rash and toenail fungus. It's used for staunching nosebleeds, removing ring marks from furniture. It's dabbed on cheeks by actresses to simulate tears. Removing makeup, predicting gun barrels, shining patent leather shoes, lubricating slide rules. That's a neat use of personally, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:35:43 That's a euphemous of her anal sex. And then mustache wax, sunscreen, anti-fowling for boats. It's used by ear, nose and throat surgeons to combat nasal crusting. You don't want to get nasal crusting when you're under the knife, do you know? I like the one I really like
Starting point is 00:36:03 is it's supposedly used in boxing before a fight so that a punch doesn't quite land on your face and sort of slips off. You see them put it on the cheekbones, didn't you? Yeah, and they're not allowed to do it mid-fight, and some people are caught doing it, so the coaches will come over and subtly vassaline their face up. In American football, if you're trying to stop someone from getting to your quarterback,
Starting point is 00:36:24 you're not allowed to hold them. That's a big thing. You're allowed to block them, but not hold them. And so people would put vaseline on their whole bodies so that when you're putting your hands out onto the chest to block them, they just slip away from you. Wow. But the defensive people, they kind of go against it by putting
Starting point is 00:36:39 like drawing pins in their gloves and like thumb tacks in their gloves so they can grip on even better. Is that allowed? I don't think it is allowed. It doesn't sound loud. But I think people still do it. Wow. John, you're a director. You've done a lot of advert directing.
Starting point is 00:36:55 So do you know about the fact that it's used as a technique to make a sort of soft focus effect? Yeah, so they smear Vaseline on the lens of a camera. They say literally that put some Vaseline on the lens. Yeah, it's extraordinary. It's used in a lot of soft core porn. You know, you get that sort of thing where it's like a dreamy look Around the face of the actress or whatever I can imagine and I didn't know you had such a strong career in the porn industry
Starting point is 00:37:18 Before you were laid us He was lubricated slide rules before you were But so they use it in Star Trek for example Anytime that Captain Kirk Played by William Shatner would see a girl That was going to be the girl of the week as it were They would use this soft focus on that girl goes misty art, that it looks as if he's gone misty art.
Starting point is 00:37:41 I think I sort of remember that. It's our trick. And Doris Day, the actress, used to have in her contract that close-ups, when she got older, all had to be done in soft focus because she was too worried about the lines on her face and so on. Really? Yeah, so there's movies with her in Rock Hudson, where Rock Hudson is in clear shot as a close-up cut to Doris Day. She's in the street, and it looks really odd. That is so weird.
Starting point is 00:38:05 They also, I just found one use on smearing over glass. One use for it related to that, if you're a burglar, was uncovered in 2012 when someone went around burgling apartments and people realised that he was doing the same thing, every apartment he burgled, which was smearing Vaseline over the opposite apartment's peephole. So that when they looked out of their peephole, they couldn't see him. And I don't know why he thought they couldn't open their own doors. Or they thought, who's that dreamy guy? Burglary in that house. Harrison Ford would never rob a home.
Starting point is 00:38:35 Oddly you should mention me in commercials and Captain Kirk in the same paragraph down Just two of the ads I shot were actually with William Shatner Oh really? Yeah In L.A. for Kellogg's, yeah. Really? He was great.
Starting point is 00:38:48 He was such a good guy. I got on really well with him. Very, very funny. Did he demand the Vaseline for every shot? No. Just one interesting thing about Vaseline, something else that it was very important in the invention of
Starting point is 00:39:04 was mascara. So modern mascara was invented when a woman called Mabel Williams this was in 1915, she sort of singed her eyebrows and eyelashes in a kitchen fire and she wanted to make her eyelashes look longer again.
Starting point is 00:39:18 And so she came up with this homemade technique of mixing ash and coal with Vaseline and then she'd apply it to her eyelashes and did the trick. Her brother Tom, weirdly watching her, spying on her, and decided to try and recreate this
Starting point is 00:39:33 and commercialise it. So he used a friend's chemistry set, mix it all together, made modern mascara and named it after her, named it Mabelene. No, that's Mabelene. That's really good. Yeah. That's great.
Starting point is 00:39:44 That's cool, isn't it? Very cool. So speaking of burns, there is one thing that's used for treating burns, and that is poo shakes. And that is like a milkshake, but it's made with poo. And this is in New South Wales, and it's the Port Macquarie Coala Hospital. Obviously they had a lot of fires in Australia recently and a lot of the koalas got burned
Starting point is 00:40:08 and they found that by feeding them these poo milkshakes the koalas are getting better a lot quicker and it's basically your old gut bacteria thing so when you're a baby koala you eat pap which is a mixture of digestive, half-digested food and bacteria is created in their mother's gut and comes out through the seacum and the Joey eats it
Starting point is 00:40:32 and so what they're doing is they're trying to come up with a way of imitating this by making these poo milkshakes and they give them to the koalas and it just helps them to put on weight it just helps them to get generally better and that makes the burns heal more quickly. Okay, because it sort of builds up their immune system
Starting point is 00:40:48 against the burns. That's treating burns from the inside, which is such a cool... Inside out. Yeah. My favourite burns-related story is... It's in the 1940s and scientists wanted to come up with a pain scale
Starting point is 00:41:02 They wanted to create the pain unit, the dolor, and they decided the way they were going to do this, the way they were going to measure pain and work out the scale was by taking women in labour and then burning them repeatedly and then asking them to compare the sensation of being burned to being in labour to being in labour. And the women were keen to do that they were like interested. They tended to be the wives of the doctors and the nurses. They were like, yeah, fine, I'm going to be in pain anyway. And so they'd have these women who are in labour going through contractions. And then they just they just like burn their finger with a lighter and say, how bad is that? to your contraction and the woman would be like yeah about it's about the same and then it got worse and they found they said that the problem was that as contractions progressed the women became
Starting point is 00:41:41 less good at coherently describing their feelings so the researchers had to make inferences about their pain based on their behaviors oh i think when she told me to go fuck myself i'll put that down as a ten but that's amazing it's the idea a bit like how you know if you have a splinter and then you break your ankle, you forget about the splinter. Is it that kind of thing? It's not that idea. The idea was that they thought that the peak of labour was maximum pain, so that would be max on the scale.
Starting point is 00:42:12 And then they wanted the women to sort of quantify, be like, oh, that burn is about a tenth as bad as the labour pain I've just felt. But women got less and less good at perfectly rationalising that pain. Do you know, before QI was a thing, I used to have a little email group, six of us there were in the group. and we said this thing called the quite boring challenge. Do you know this story? No.
Starting point is 00:42:34 And the idea was one of us would nominate every week a subject about which nothing interesting was or could be known. Okay. And I started and I nominated Chelmsford because I grew up from near Chumsford. And I spent a week researching Chalmastard. There's a fascinating facts I came up with. And one of them is this, is that largest Burns unit in Europe is in Chelmsford in Essex. And for 30 years, the conservative. DMP for Chelms was Simon Burns.
Starting point is 00:43:02 No way. He was knighted in 2015. He's a second cousin of David Bowie, bizarrely. But because he was educated at Worcester College, Oxford, where he got a third, he's known by his friends as third degree Burns.
Starting point is 00:43:16 Nice. It's amazing when those QI facts come together. 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 have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shreiberland, James.
Starting point is 00:43:40 At James Harkin. Anna. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep. And John, you're not on it either. You're like Anna. I don't do social media at all. Yeah, you too.
Starting point is 00:43:49 Topic app. You can go to our group account at No Such Thing, or you can go to our website, No Such Thing as a Fish.com. We have everything up there from all of our previous episodes. We have links to our behind-the-scenes documentary. And actually, before we go, we're going to play out with a nice little song because, John, you're now the manager of a band Waiting for Smith.
Starting point is 00:44:11 And we've got their single here. I am the manager. My name is Brian Ego, Lovely Boys' Routality. And their latest single is called So Much Love. Okay, well, we'll see you all again next week. And to play us out now, it's Waiting for Smith with So Much Love. I went on like a domino. I've seen things.
Starting point is 00:44:33 you don't want to know and I've heard off people that never grow I know my pain it is a gift I've felt the plot from the offering and I'm ready for death when it comes from me
Starting point is 00:44:46 so can't you see so much love so much love feeling in my arms and legs and toes for you this is so much love so much love
Starting point is 00:44:56 so why won't you let me through come on Come on Come on Let me I promise you I will try To keep you feeling light
Starting point is 00:45:14 I promise you I will try To keep your wings aflight I promise you I will always Always go speak the truth I promise you that our lives Will always feel while you So let the walls stumble down
Starting point is 00:45:31 And if the love to break In that last happiness And from there we can begin Then let me break down your fears And let the love pour through In that last happiness For me and you So come on and let me through
Starting point is 00:45:52 So much love, so much love Feeling in my arms and legs are toes For you So much love, so much love So I want you let me through to love so much love feeling in my arms and legs and toes for you this is so much love so much love so much love so I won't you let me through come on come on come on let me through

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