No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Indiana Jones And The Rare Burrito
Episode Date: April 17, 2025Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss noise, names, notes and nachos. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and e...xclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Hobern.
My name is Dan Shriver. I'm sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, James Harkin, and Anna Tyshinsky.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is James.
my fact this week is that sodium citrate, the chemical you add to cheese to make it
melty nacho cheese, contain sodium, carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, or according to their chemical
symbols, N-A-C-H-N-O.
Unbelievable.
And this is proof of living in a matrix, right?
Yes, very unimaginative matrix.
So I was watching a YouTube clip by a person called Minute Food and they showed an experiment
of how to make American cheese from any kind of cheese.
So you could just take any kind of cheese and add sodium citrate
and it will make it more melty.
And in that, that's when they can set this fight.
Although I've looked since logs in it is kind of all over the internet.
Right, okay.
It's not like some people will know.
It's not enough over it.
I think that we're doing the world of favour
by hopefully putting it more on the internet because it is amazing.
Yeah.
This podcast is about what I learned this week
and this is a thing that I recently learned.
It's a melting salt, isn't it?
That's right.
So when you melt a cheese, the fats and the proteins separate out from each other.
But it can get very lumpy.
It kind of forms like a mesh.
Normally it's like a big solid thing with proteins and fats and moisture and stuff.
It kind of all spreads out.
Now you've got this mesh of stuff.
And the more meshy it is, the more meltier is, basically.
Yes.
And the sodium, as far as I understand it, it replaces calcium ions.
And the calcium ions are the thing that made the cheese proteins all bond together.
So the more sodium citrate there is,
the smooth of the meltiness gets.
And it does exactly the same thing
in another thing that needs to get thinner.
Oh, humans.
Oh, it should be used to diet.
A Zen pic is actually made up osmium.
Blood, blood thinners.
Really?
It's put in lots of blood thinners.
It's exactly the same thing.
And it's usually in when you donate blood,
they need to add something to keep it from clotting
after you've donated it before it's given to someone.
And they pop in basically nacho cheese.
Sodium citrate.
It also helps your body to create hydrogen ions, which lowers acidity in your muscles and
stops you from feeling the burn when you do lots of exercise.
Oh, cool.
I'm not exactly sure of the chemical process of how it works, but it does work.
And so some people take sodium citrate supplements.
Well, they might use it if they've got a urinary tract infection because it can be used
to relieve discomfort in those.
Really?
I presume by just selectively melting bits of your urinary tract.
I've understood the science.
Does it work if you kind of like shove some melty cheese up there?
I think that is suboptimal, but it will, in a pinch.
That's all you've got.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Natural cheese is not a cheese.
It's not a cheese.
It's a cheese product made from cheese.
Because as James says, you can put any old cheese you shove it in and put this stuff in, you melt it.
That becomes the natural cheesy sauce.
So there's no sort of core cheese that produces natural cheese.
So natural cheese is not a cheese.
It's a cheese derivative.
It's an idea.
It's an idea.
Very clear if you eat it.
It's kind of, it's weird because it's taking a cheese and it is making it worse, isn't it?
I mean, it's making it more useful because it can spread over stuff.
I think the thing is about food is it's not completely objective.
What?
I disagree about it.
And I think, do you?
You think everyone who likes nacho cheese is just straight up wrong.
Well, I have brie on my natures.
That's what I do.
And it's a bit harder to melt, but it's fine.
And the other thing about American cheese is it was invented in Switzerland by a Canadian.
I know it's funny.
I think we've mentioned it before.
It's James Kraft, who came all the idea of extending the shelf life of cheese by putting all these salts in it.
Interesting.
Have we mentioned the competition we did?
Oh, on stage.
On our last tour.
Oh, no.
We tried to break a record for the most slices of American cheese eaten in a minute dry.
Yeah, so it was a Guinness World Record.
I brought Craig Glenday, who's the editor-in-chief, on stage for us to attempt to break it.
and we sucked.
It was really hard.
10 slices in a minute without being able to lubricate your mouth is nuts.
It was too much.
James, you got the most, I think.
I think James did pretty well.
I did respectively and you guys did a small corner.
I ate one.
I was just so pulled by the quality of the trees.
I found the hardest thing was taking off the bits of plastic
because you had to do that as well.
And I think the pros have like a special flip that they do with a wrist
that kind of flips the cheese out and helps it.
tweeted. I think I had four and a bit.
Yeah, you did amazing. That's good.
I've had like one, and he'd been practicing for a week before.
Yeah, I'd been practicing for so lot. But he only told me on the night I couldn't drink.
If you can drink in between, you can get a lot more done.
Do you know what you can do in fondue instead of add sodium citrate?
And what they do do, in fact?
White wine, you add to it, don't you?
What? Yeah, I guess you know how to make fondue.
Anna's reaction there was like she'd asked, they've a number between one and a million, and I guessed it.
It's because I was thinking, how has James worked out the chemical processes
and then figured out that wine does that?
Oh, no, he just knows fondue recipes.
That's what the wine does in fondue.
Dry white wine has the same kind of acidity,
and that helps the cheese not congeal in exactly the same way.
It stops the cassine proteins binding together.
Does the alcohol burn away, or does it?
Most of it burns away, but it is why fondue smells, as, like, you'll notice, of alcohol,
which I've always thought, God, it's such a strong smell.
I don't think I've ever eaten it sober, so, like, for me.
Yeah, what's the difference?
There's so much alcohol around anyway.
I've never noticed the smell of the fondue.
You're so right.
It's just in the air, isn't it?
Who invented nachos?
Have we said this before?
I'm not sure we have.
Mr.
Nacho.
Mr. Nacho.
Actually, not Mr. Nacho.
Mr. Anaya, but his first name was Nacho, which is Chauve Ignacio.
And he created them in 1943 at the Victory Club in Mexico, Coahuila.
And it was a restaurant close to the border.
and a lot of American service people who were kind of training for World War II were there
and their families as well and they all came in one day and said we want some food.
This guy was the matri-D but the chef had disappeared.
As soon he said, don't worry, I'll make you something and he ran into the kitchen
and all he could find was this cheese and bits of sastardas and a few jalapinos
and he put them all under the grill and the new dish was born.
So you're saying it was kind of discovered by accident in a way?
Maybe
Did he only
Did he have sodium citrate
Did he have like a big jar of chemicals
And it's like one of these
Because actually natural cheese
As we would know today
Like the stuff you could kind of squirt onto the top of it
Didn't exist then that existed a bit later
I believe he did get a promotion to head chef or something
He did
Of the back of it
Interesting I didn't know if that was a promotion
I thought they were just on different career streams
Like I would have thought Major D
Then goes to hotel manager
Okay well he just changed career a bit
basically, on the back of the major invention.
Because he had this moment of...
It just had this moment of glory.
That's fair enough.
100% agree.
I just agree with you, Andy.
I hadn't put that together.
And now I think about having worked in hotels for lots of my life,
that absolutely isn't a promotion at all.
It's very much a sidestep.
It's a pivot, yeah.
And then he eventually left.
He opened up his own restaurant, which he called nachos restaurant.
Though I feel like he missed a trick.
I feel like he should have called it,
let them eat nachos.
That's my title because his wife was called Marie Antoinette.
Really?
Yeah.
It just would have been fitting.
But you would have had to have big brackets.
The owner's wife is called Barry Antoinette.
It's a great story for when you're sitting down saying, why'd you call it that?
Another thing from Mexico, another food from Mexico, rather, Caesar salad.
Invented in Tijuana in the 1920s.
In fact, not only in the 1920s in 2024, because they've just had the 100th birthday of the Caesar salad.
chef called Caesar invented it, which is why it's called Caesar salad.
It's actually got nothing to do with Julia's Caesar.
I didn't know that.
No.
That feels like the kind of thing you're learning QI on your first day.
I'm so embarrassed.
This is actually a suspiciously similar origin story to the nacho thing.
He had a big crowd in the kitchen at his restaurant, but he only had some lettuce and
crustini and a dressing.
Yeah.
But it makes it seem like, was it a Caesar salad dressing?
Because it feels like that's really part of the invention.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like, yeah, but who invented God?
You know.
Here's another surprising one.
Where was the burrito invented?
Oh, like Nantwich or something.
During the Pia de Klaude Festival.
There was a big rush at the Pita Kalada festival.
Someone said, we need something to mop up all this Pita collada.
And the chef only had some pulled pork.
Got it in wine.
Burrito.
Okay, well, for me, Mexico, because it means Little Dogki and Spanish burrito.
Absolutely.
I've only got a very silly answer here.
So, yeah.
North Korea.
This surprisingly, it was invented in 2011.
This is one of the weird-ass claims that Kim Jong-il invented the burrito
that was released by the local news sources of North Korea,
who said that its popularity has been booming ever since 2011 and his invention of it.
But it's one of those false memory things where you think you had them in your childhood,
but actually who saw a burrito before 2011?
Yeah, I never did.
No one. I think it's no one.
They actually have in their real history,
or sorry, the alternative Western history,
they did tend to be eaten in Mexico.
And then there was this massive program
called the Braqueros program in the 40s and 50s
where the US was short on workers
and there were loads of Mexicans who wanted to come to America.
So they offered them loads of work permits.
And Americans thought,
the good way to feed these labourers
who, of course, they were paying lower wages
and they would pay Americans,
is to give them these burritos,
which we know they're into.
So they gave them all burritos every day,
two burritos a day.
Wow.
But all the immigrants came from,
Central Mexico where actually no one ate burritos.
And they hated them. And it was part of the reason for huge resentment was the fact
they were being force fed these.
And I don't think they were the great burrito. They were like a bit of wrap and some beans,
no sauce.
Before all of this, of course, we had the Aztec and the Maya and the pre-Columbian Americans
and they all let maize, a lot of their fingers to do with maize.
And like tortillas are all made of maize. So it's carried on.
But the interesting thing about that is,
If you just eat maize, it's not very good for you.
I mean, it's fine, but it's not going to give you much of what you needs to stay alive.
But they came up with a thing called niximalization.
Basically, you soak the grains of maize, and then you cook them over wood ashes.
And then there's like an invisible outer coating of the maze, and that gets removed.
And then it's much easier to grind, much easier to cook, and it enhances the amount of protein in the maze.
And it's so much better.
that you can basically look at
whenever this was invented
by looking at old fires
and where the maze has been cooked,
you can look at it
and you can see all these
Meso-American civilizations growing
when each area kind of works out
how to niximalize things.
Yeah, it's incredible.
And when the Europeans went over
and brought maze back,
there's lots of areas
that kind of started eating maize in the old world,
but they still got quite malnourished
because none of them knew
how to extormalize things.
Really?
It's crazy.
I'd never even heard that word before.
this week. And they also have that thing where they eat the fungus that grows on maize in Mexico,
don't they? Which actually says it looks kind of delicious when they have it. Corn smut.
No, have you had it?
No, I hate funguses.
Oh, sorry, that's why you're shaking.
Of all the funguses that I'm ever going to try, maybe a black truffle, but a piece of corn smut?
Probably not.
It's a disease, and it looks like a sort of black lump of mould.
And there was quite a fun story in 2014 where there was a farmer called Nat Bradform.
and he was asked to grow some corn for a chef,
quite a famous chef called Sean Brock,
who's a big deal in America.
And he wanted this corn to be grown for his handmade tortillas.
And poor Nat woke up one day,
when I went to his fields.
And overnight, the whole thing destroyed by fungus.
Corn smart everywhere.
So he called the chef, like, you know, in tears.
I'm so sorry, I've destroyed your restaurant.
And obviously, Sean, being a chef and knowing the ways of the Mexicans,
was absolutely played delighted.
It was like, you've got a delicacy there.
You've just accidentally grown overnight
this fantastic delicacy that I'll incorporate
into my Mexican restaurant food.
Col smut pizzas I'll round.
Call smart pizzas, there you go.
Do you guys know Taco Bell?
You must know Taco Bell.
Massive American chain.
I think I've ever been to what.
Do we have them over here?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, do we?
Well, there's one within walking distance of my house.
Yeah, they're here.
They're not massive here, but in America they're very, very big.
And globally, they have places all over the world.
One place I don't have is Mexico.
And they've tried twice.
The first time they went in, they sort of went all out, just saying this is a fast food version of what you guys have here.
So have it. They said, no, it doesn't make sense.
Second time they went in, which was years later, they tried to push it as not Mexican food, but American food, while still having the menu that they have.
And they even advertised it by saying, it's not Mexican.
It's just something else.
I think that's a much better strategy.
Because, yeah, Mexicans would deny it was Mexican.
It was all.
Americans deny it's American.
And tacos weren't hard.
It's insulting either.
Either way. It's insulting if you say this is your cuisine. It's insulting if you say this is our cuisine.
They don't have any taco belts in North Korea either. It's for the same reason.
Yeah. They invented it. Exactly.
Did you hear of Diana Kennedy? No. She was very cool. She's one of the people who has contributed to saving, or not saving, but preserving huge amounts of the diversity of Mexico food.
Because obviously it's a huge country. It's got hundreds of different cuisines in it. And she spent 60 years driving around the country, doing a print
ships and bakeries, like going to individual villages and saying, what do you eat?
Let me learn how to make it.
I want to sort of make it myself.
And she was awarded not only.
I think she might be the only person ever to have been awarded an MBE for services to Mexican-British relations, but also the order of the Aztec Eagle, which is Mexico's highest honor.
Okay.
It's a very cool, isn't it?
We need to rename our MVEs, actually.
Yeah.
She was called the Indiana Jones of Food.
She sounds great.
Yeah.
Which bit of Indiana Jones's career is at his academic.
where he's always as a professor or out fighting Nazis.
She's out in the, she's out like she's gone into the temple.
There's a rare kind of burrito on the stands.
Yeah, okay.
And she swaps it over for some tamales.
She's holding in her other hand.
Chased by a giant ball of pawn smut.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that white noise was named because the pattern of its waves
resembles white light and pink noise was named because it resembles pink light.
Brown noise was named after someone called Robert Brown.
I've never heard of pink or brown noise.
No.
And it was quite unclear what white noise is actually before looking us up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, there we go.
Let's get into it.
So white noise, first of all, is the most common one that people will know because it's
this.
And there people often use it to make their children go to sleep.
They do.
And pink noise is more like,
And this brown noise is the one that makes you poo.
And brown noise is the one makes you get yourself of you.
No, it isn't, isn't?
It's not, no.
So white noise is basically a noise that contains all the different frequencies within human hearing
to the same extent.
So we can hear between 20 hertz and 20,000 hertz.
And if you take all of those frequencies, 20, 21, 22, etc.
And then you play them all with exactly the same amount of energy.
That's white noise.
confusingly white noise sounds horrible I think
I don't understand people who find it relaxing
because higher pitches sound louder to us
pink noise is where there's more energy
in the lower pitches
it's a bit basier now listening to pink noise
I still think it sounds it's still quite jarring
isn't it I would say pink noise
well you know like a lot of people just to give the opposite side of the argument
think that it sounds like the waves washing over you
I would say brown noise sounds like waves
I think pink noise, but you're right, a lot of people do write that.
But brown noise is the hip new noise, right?
Brown noise is what everyone is now listening to on YouTube hours at a time as they go to sleep.
Headlining Glastonbury this year, guys. Get with it, all right?
And that's low brown noise.
So brown noise is where it's putting a lot more energy into those lower frequencies, so it sounds bassy.
And I think if you listen to that, it sounds like trees or sounded a bit like a nice ocean waves to me.
Can we explain why it's good for sleeping?
Because I think that's important too.
And I think the reasoning is it increases your what they call arousal threshold.
Steady on.
It's that normally if you're asleep and it's completely silent around you
and then a car alarm goes off, you wake up, right?
Yeah.
Because there's a big difference between the background, nothing and then the car alarm.
But if there's a background playing constantly,
you're already kind of higher on the sonic mountain,
like all boats have been lifted.
And then so that spike of the car alarm,
which is like the top of the mountain,
it pokes up less high above the general background that you're listening to,
and therefore there's less of a chance of you waking.
And it doesn't matter what frequency the car alarm is,
because all the frequencies are being fired at you anyway.
Right.
So it's bound to be covered by one of them.
Exactly.
So then you wake up in the morning, your car's been stolen again.
But at least you had a good night.
Exactly.
But apparently it also, for a lot of people,
stops the voices in their own head.
So people going to sleep going, oh, did I lock the car?
Did I lock the car?
Did I lock the car?
I didn't know.
It stops all those questions from your head and just lets you fall asleep.
And more so for ADHD, people, as you'd expect.
Because if you've got ADHD, then distractions in your mind and out of them are more distracting.
And it sort of helps drown them out.
I should probably say how these relates to colours very quickly.
Won't go into it to a boring extent.
But just because white noise is named after white light.
So white light is like all the frequencies of light all mixed together equally.
Pink light is what the brain interprets as a combination of red and blue light.
there's actually a bit less blue.
So in the same way, it's a bit heavier on the lower frequencies,
because red is like a bit lower.
And then Brown, Robert Brown, was a Scottish botanist.
It's so random that his main legacy to the world is naming this kind of noise.
Well, it's not his main legacy.
He was an amazing botanist, and his name is put to many animals and geographical locations.
It's only become his main legacy since Brownways became the new trendiest thing on block.
I must have it, like before we did any of this stuff,
only heard of him because of brownian motion.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, that's fair enough. But he's
within the world of botany, his name is
there. Lots of plants and grasses
and things. And brownian
motion is the way particular molecules,
if you look at them under a microscope,
he observed they looked like they were dancing, these
pollen grains that he was looking at, and they're not alive,
how can they be dancing?
It basically is to do with the heat of individual molecules.
Yeah, the molecules are bouncing off things,
moving things around in a random way, and this
noise is more random than the others.
Yes, yeah, the way it looks. And in fact, it was
Einstein himself, good old Einstein, his first influential paper, who took Brownian motion,
which basically Robert Brown, and he had a habit of doing this, just looked at it, went,
oh, that's happening, and then went back to his plants. And Einstein went, let's explain that.
And it was essential to finding out that atoms and molecules are the smaller particles of matter,
because it was like, how else could these pollen bits be moving, except of tinier bits of moving inside them?
Well, he was a busy man. He collected 2,000 new species in Australia alone.
Yeah, but it was a piece of piss.
those days. Like no one else had done it, so you just wander around. You go,
anyone's seen that flower before. Throw a brick. Yeah. Easy. He's a rare flower.
Yeah, he was kind of there to help prove whether or not Australia was a group of islands,
wasn't it? So it was known as New Holland at the time. And so the idea was that he was going
to go through the interior to try and work out if this suddenly broke up. And, and...
It's a big task. Well, you wouldn't know.
Just prove that this 4,000 mile wide thing is not an island place. Yeah. Because it gets quite warm in the
middle, doesn't it? It does get a bit barren.
You know what's named after? To prove it's an island, you only have to go around the outside.
You know, it's going to go in the middle.
Andy, organizing a trek through the centre.
Wait, what are you saying? To prove something there's an island, all you have to do is go around the edge of it.
No, because it could be like an atoll, you know?
There could be islands within it, you're saying.
Yeah, exactly. You mean it could be fully encircle, but even then it's a lake inside, isn't it?
Still think it needs studying. Sure.
On this expedition, they took on to abererals.
originals, Bungary and Namboree. They took them on board to help them communicate with the local
tribes. And they were essential to the success of the trip, basically, because every time they
stopped on the coast, they had to send. It was usually Bungary, I think, onshore to say these
guys are legit, they're normal, and usually didn't speak the language of the different tribe,
but at least knew the... Is this bit still the same island or have we gone on to a different
island?
They knew the general habits, but usually the protest.
was that you should remove your clothes.
So every time they've parked on the coast,
they'd be like, right, Bunga, take your clothes off, go ashore, please.
So he had to strip down naked every time he went to negotiate with you.
Bunga Bunga party.
Oh my God.
Yeah, actually, of course, Australia isn't one island.
So fine. Thank you.
And Brown was the first person from Europe to explore Tasmania.
Right.
And also for Andy, there is tetradontium.
Brownianum, which is a species of moss called Brown's four-toothed moss, and it's named after him.
He found it in a place called Roslyn near Edinburgh in the 18th century, and the place where he found
it you can still see this moss growing today.
That's nice.
That is very cool.
The Brownian motion thing, by the way.
So that was a discovery that he made at the time through a microscope that he had, and that
was called into question many, many years later because they thought there's no way that the
microscope would have been able to prove this.
And so there was a big thing where they took out the original microscopes
and they had to re-observe what he said he had observed in order to prove it.
Well, they used his old microscopes.
They used his exact microscopes.
I think it's a weird thing to doubt, isn't it?
The interesting thing is he thought that pollen was moving by themselves
and this was, you know, how sperm's move around to reproduce.
That's what the pollen was doing.
This was the force of life that basically existed in all things and it existed in the pollen.
and that's why basically that was his thought.
Oh, so it did have a theory.
Yeah, it was...
This was in the 1820s, and it was such a big deal in the world that it was mentioned in Middlemarch, George Elliott.
Is it?
Is it?
Is it?
I'm trying to remember that bit.
I did read Middlemarch a few years ago.
It's not like a major plot point, I would say.
No, it is.
Dr. Lydgate.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
He's a biggie.
He's a biggie.
He's trying to buy a vase from a guy called Mr. Fairbrother.
Oh, yeah.
And Mr. Fairbrother says, you are eyeing that glass vase again.
Do you want to make an exchange?
I have some sea mice, fine specimens and spirits, and I will throw in Robert Brown's new thing,
microscopic observations in the pollen of plants if you don't happen to have it already.
I mean, that sounds like subtle advertising, doesn't it?
Oh yeah, sorry, then it goes hashtag spawn.
In fact, there's an offer code we can...
So this would be kind of a weird fact for a lot of people to listen to,
because I think a lot of people listening are trying to get to sleep right now.
Have you checked the car?
There are dozens of sleep podcasts.
I mean, specific sleep podcasts, you know, not just ours, which is just boring.
But I mean, supposedly, I don't know if this is like big podcast who've sponsored this research, but 46% of people sometimes will listen to something as they go to sleep.
And 28% do it regularly.
There's a thing they do on radio called comfort noise, which is, it's got a slightly different motive.
but it's to also keep you at ease when radio goes silence.
So, for example, if there's like a minute silence,
because if there's a minute silence and the radio goes completely silent,
you start going, wait, has the radio station just turned off?
If it's complete silence, that's supposedly quite good.
But the only time there's ever a minute silent on the radio
is when they say, we're going to have a minute silence now to remember the dead.
So you never then go, what the hell's happened to my radio?
Well, it's interesting.
They do it for a few reasons.
So one, they do think it gives a comfort to people who think,
it's suddenly turned off. So they'll play bird noise or they'll play London traffic in the background.
So it keeps it going. There are actually things...
Beep, beep, beep! I'm working here!
I'm trying to drive down wider. Where's this huge crowd of people standing around in silence?
Beep, beep!
Wait, how come we've never heard? So when they play the minute of silence on the radio, that's what we're hearing.
I know I have heard a bit of bird song, actually. I think that's familiar.
The other reason for it is, is because there's protocol.
calls in place as part of a major
system for all radio, which is when
absolute silence is there, a song
will kick in. So you don't want a minute
silence for the Queen and suddenly YMCA
comes on halfway through, right?
So that's another part
of it. Yeah, that's a good point.
This is not to do with this really,
but the Masters golf is probably
happening when people are listening
to this or it's just happened. And
they play in bird noises.
And actually a lot of golf,
if you watch golf on TV, they play in bird noises.
Oh, do they?
And I was listening to Tom Scott's podcast
and they said that there was a time
when they played in the wrong verb noise
for wherever it was in the world
they were playing this golf tournament.
A lot of people wrote in saying,
you don't get the great crested grebe in South Korea.
Okay, it is time for fact number three
and that is Andy.
My fact is, when you hover over a link on the computer
and the mouse icon turns into a little hand,
that icon dates back to the 11th century.
They waited so long before inventing the rest of the computer, didn't they?
You know, you know, it looks like a white-gloved hand, certainly on my computer anyway.
Is it mostly on Max, you get it? Or do you get it on all of them?
It's on quite a few.
They get it on old, then you?
Yeah, I don't know.
So on my computer, it's a little, it's got a pointing finger, and it's got a white glove on, and it's got three lines on the glove.
It looks like a butler's glove.
Like a snooker referee.
Oh, snooker referee, exactly. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And those are our two reference points.
James got on a snooker.
I grew up with stuff.
If anyone wants to know the difference between me and Andy, I say this quite often, then that's it.
For me, it's Mickey Mouse's Glob.
And there's Dan.
Yeah.
So this is a thing.
It's based on a thing called the Manicule, which dates back to the Doomsday Book.
It's a way of medieval scholars in particular to say, hey, look at this bit of the text.
And it's just a pair of fingers that you draw, or sometimes you draw a whole hand, but you would, the common element was always like a pointing finger saying, hey, look at this bit.
It's like a highlighter.
It's exactly like a highlighter without.
having to draw along the whole, because often the manuscripts are, you know, because they didn't
have highlighters, basically.
But it's a way of marking passages, yeah.
Yeah.
Or an arrow.
I mean, it's so much effort to go to, isn't it?
Because when you look at them, they're so beautiful.
And I guess it's just testament to fact, again, in the old days, they didn't have Netflix
and stuff.
So they clearly spent so long on these stunning drawings.
Sometimes they'd be like a beautiful octopus, pointing its various limbs at various bits of
text.
There was another dragon, which instead of a head had a hand for a head, point.
There was a whole big Greek god kind of gesturing at something.
And these are often just people who are reading the text as well.
They're not usually monks.
Often monks, but just literate people.
I think often anyone who had the text was a reader, like a rich person.
It's such an interesting evolution because you have the Doomsday book where it's the monks who are reading it,
putting it in the margins, right?
So they're going, here's a bit you as the next reader should look out for specifically.
Then by the time we get to the 15th century, the printers,
themselves are putting the fingers in to say, we think you should look specifically at this bit.
And then it kind of to where we are today evolves into how authors will now put footnotes in
their own pages now because they're now saying, actually, this is super interesting and I want
to tell you more about it. I'm going to take up the page. It's not even about the publisher
or the reader putting in anymore. But yeah, they look absolutely lovely. They're stunning.
And they're just a form of marginalia, really, aren't they?
Yeah, a marginalia is just anything that's not part of the book
that was scribbled by someone else in the margins, right?
Yeah.
And then the modern one, certainly the one in the Mac,
was invented by someone called Susan Kerr.
Hmm.
And she has done lots of different icons for various computers,
not just Macs, also Windows stuff.
So she came up with the command key on Apple keyboards.
Wow.
Which is a biggie.
It's like, what does it look like?
It's a square with circles on each corner, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's like a little infinity.
infinity not, yeah, she got it from some road signs in Scandinavia.
They used it for landmarks.
And she just thought that looks good, so I'll use that.
And she also designed the card deck for Windows Solitaire game.
That's a big idea, isn't it?
She's had a huge influence on my childhood.
Yeah, she's amazing.
And the road sign thing is very interesting because that's exactly what she said.
Each of the symbols needed to be.
They needed to be as clear as a road sign.
She had zero experience in this field.
And so as part of the interview, she went to a library,
and she took out a bunch of books
that were all about graphic design
and just brought them
and put them on the table with her
so it looked like she sort of was super keen.
They were like, oh, look into all those books.
She came into the interview room,
did she just sort of closed the last book in the pile
that she got to the end of the last page?
Huh, okay.
Sorry, what?
What's the page?
A lot of her designs, no, you wouldn't see
because they're quite 80s,
but one that stuck around
is the thing that I never know what it is,
that a little watch.
So you know sometimes, and I think, again, sorry, we're very spoiled off this, so we all use Macs.
But you've got the mouse, you've got the hand, you sometimes get the little timer thing.
Then you know, sometimes you get a little watch that comes up.
And it just basically means something's fucked up.
Oh, I've never seen that.
I always thought it was a computer saying I'm working it out.
Give me time, is what it's saying.
Maybe it is saying that.
Yes, I think perhaps it's that.
Well, I assume.
Well, it's very annoying anyway, so I'm not a huge fan of her.
It still uses the floppy disk symbol for when you're saving something.
Oh, yeah.
And that's no one using a computer who was.
born in the 2000s. We'll have any idea
really what a floppy disk is in the same way that they don't, yeah.
Except they're all reading all the lists that say, oh, why are we still using this old
fashion floppy disk? You can still buy floppy disk by the way.
Yeah, yeah. And they're often used by like DIY media, arty kind of people.
If you create an amazing bit of media and you want it to be really sort of super
awesome, you might just put it on floppy disk and everyone will think it's even better.
But you can buy them. There's not that many around, but there's a few specialist places.
and they cost about $1 per megabyte of data.
Okay, that's a lot.
It is because the average cost of memory right now is one cent per gigabyte.
So if you buy a floppy disk for your to save something,
it's the equivalent of buying a pint of milk with a one kilogram bar of gold.
Cool.
Which is what I do.
But I'm not right in talking to the common man.
This pointy thing, just one last thing on the manicule.
Oh yeah.
I just like the names of it.
of it. So it was called the indicianum
or the index
which is from the Latin 4 to point
and that's where... Index finger.
Index finger comes from. Yeah.
But it was also known as a mutton fist or a bishop's fist
and I don't know why.
That's interesting. I was actually
reading, as part of my research for this, the
descriptions of the perfect hand
because it's a drawing of a hand
and how people have drawn hands.
And it included mutton
mutton hands but as a non-desirable thing.
This was...
This is in the 18th century, a guy wrote a book called Orthopaedia.
And there's a guy called Nicholas Andrey, and it's where we get orthopedics from is him.
He invented it.
And it actually means a correct or straight child, hence the paedia,
because it was a book of how to correct deformities in children.
And I read his whole chapter on what makes the perfect hand.
And he indeed said, your hand should not look like shoulders of mutton.
That's fair enough.
Well, his shoulder of mutter thing was just a hand that was a bit too square.
I am looking at your hand now, James, and he said, although they're useful for catching things, they're the worst type of shape.
Are you joking? I've got beautiful hands.
Yeah, don't listen, James. You've got lovely piano player's hands.
Can I ask you?
I am good at catching things.
You had to say that, didn't you?
You had to make clear.
Ciphyllus, gonorrhea.
Can I check if you guys have these proportions.
I was actually quite impressed with mine when I went through his list.
So your fingers should be a bit round above and flat below.
Your index tip, the tip of your index.
finger should end at the root of the middle finger nail if you're holding your hand up straight in front of you with your fingers together.
Tip of your index fingernail should line up with the root of your middle fingernail.
Everyone got that?
No, I'm a bit low, I think.
Yeah, that's classic and he says a bit low is bad.
Uh-oh.
In what respect?
Does it mean I'm a bad podcaster?
Or does it mean I'm an evil person?
I'm hearing mutter.
I'm afraid it means you've got...
It means you've got three weeks.
The ring finger needs to reach the middle nail of your middle finger.
Oh my God, I'm nowhere near that.
James, this guy would have really had a feel day with your hands.
Actually, they're all over the place, aren't they?
We're making it sound like James is a Simpsons character.
I've only got four fingers.
I've got five because I'm God.
Can I just very quickly speak about highlighters?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
So these little hands.
that pointed to a thing that today we would just get a yellow felt tip and color it in and people would be able to see it.
Those things, the fluorescent highlighters, they were invented by accident in 1963 by a guy called Francis J. Hon, who was trying to make a new kind of marker for children.
And while he was experimenting, he got this yellow ink and he put it on and he realized that it basically could still see the text in between it.
And he thought, oh, I'll do that.
And you know Stabilo Boss Highlighters.
I feel like they're the biggie.
They're the biggie.
They're kind of like square in shape, aren't they?
And they've got a very flat tip.
Yep.
And that flat tip was actually invented by accident.
So, so annoying.
One day, some people at Stabilo, in fact, it was Schwann Stabilo, who was in charge of Stabila boss.
He and his group, they were doing some presentation of this thing.
And it wasn't really working properly, and they slammed it onto the desk.
And it made it flat at the bottom.
They went, oh, look, this is.
works amazingly.
That's according to their official website.
I don't believe it.
One more thing on that, please.
In 1996, a prisoner in the UK decided that he would try to get taken out of prison and
put into hospital by saying that he had jaundice by colouring his entire body in with a yellow
Stabilo boss highlighter.
And the prison spokesman said he carefully painted all of his body, even his private bits,
with a yellow highlighter pen.
The problem was that he had made
such a good job of it that he would probably have
died if his skin was really that colour.
Wow. Who did his back?
Someone else is involved.
Oh yeah. What a cellmates for, Anna,
if not helping you out.
Can I tell you about a really silly
drawing things controversy?
Okay, this is great.
Let's go back to 1927, right?
Switzerland.
There's a geologist called Albert Heim.
who at this point is about 70 years old
very eminent Swiss geologist
and he got in a huge route
with the Swiss Federal Office of Topography
over the way maps were drawn
as Switzerland, right?
So you know those relief maps
which show altitude
you know those kind of
they look like they've got the mountains on
they look like if you touch them
they'd be all lumpy and bumpy
yeah I like those ones
yeah beautifully drawn
and they often look like
there's light and shade on them right
Albert Heinz's problem was
that in Switzerland's
two official map series
they were shaded as if the sunlight comes from the northwest.
And he said, this cannot stand.
There's no way the sunlight's coming from the northwest
and hitting Switzerland, right?
He said this was a lie that flew in the face of nature.
What a hero.
It seems very huge, James.
I bet he had good fingers.
And I read this whole article about the Northwest illumination problem,
which was an established thing from the Middle Ages onwards.
It was just the way people drew.
And there are loads of theories as to white.
Maybe it's because cartographers drew from left to right.
So you want to shade so that you...
Because you're right-handed.
Because you're right-handed, basically.
So even in medieval maps, the light is falling from left to right.
Or cartographers draw with the right hand so the drawing doesn't cast a shadow so they can see what they're doing.
Basically, it's to do with that.
And wait, just to double check.
The truth is that it would only ever be coming from the south if we're in the northern hemisphere.
Because if it gets to...
Either it's going above you or...
Well, the sun moves.
But generally, you don't get as much light coming from the north.
Cool.
So what happened next?
Any guesses?
Oh, they...
He was murdered.
They turned it into a map of Australia, where it would have made sense.
They turned all of the maps upside down and traced them from the back so that now they were on the right way.
Lovely.
No, he didn't win.
There still comes from the northwest.
That's all.
That's right.
Is that how we could tell from history who was a left-hand-vers-right-hander if we looked at maps and the way the shadow falls?
Nice idea. I don't know.
I think everyone was a right-hander in fairness.
Really?
Oh, yeah, maybe.
They weren't as tolerant.
Drawn by the right hand.
That's so interesting.
Hey, what is the most famous drawing of hands in the world?
And now think of that.
Escher, where he draws his own hand.
I'm thinking Michelangelo.
Cistern Chapel.
So let's say that's number one.
What's number two?
Okay.
What about the Mona Lisa?
She has her hands one over the other, doesn't she?
Yeah, that's true.
That is a good one.
It's not the main bit of the Mona Lisa though, isn't it?
I've got Dura's hands, the artist Dura, the praying hands, which are...
Oh, Brecht Dura?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes, that is famous.
Those are very famous hands.
The Cloughton prayer.
Yeah, and people have them on their walls globally, if you're religious.
They're a very important piece of arts.
They're from the 1500s.
And for many, many years, it was thought that it was a sketch drawing that was then transferred
onto a big altered piece that Dura did as part of the commission.
Everyone thought that this is just a quick sketch, but it's become this massive famous thing.
There's a new theory which is being put forward by one of the curators of a major museum
that he used it effectively as like a business card.
So whenever people came and he said, you should get me as an artist, he would pull it out of his desk and say,
this is the kind of stuff that I'm capable of doing.
You can draw hands.
Yeah, that was famous, wasn't it?
And the Renaissance, it was like no one could draw.
It's like AI as well.
Yeah.
Which I'm not a question.
Now that we've seen all these bloody doodles going back to medieval times,
people drawing, as far as I'm concerned, brilliant hands all over manuscripts.
These Renaissance artists who couldn't hack it.
Those are cartoons of hands, though. You know, you want to, you want to, like, really good
hands are really hard to do. And it's a nightmare for portrait artists who have to get their
subjects to do everything, you know, can you just stick them in your pockets?
You think it's possible that they could do hands perfectly, but everyone in the Renaissance
had monkey fingers like I do.
That'll be it. A lot of mutton. A lot of mutton doing around.
Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is My Fact.
this week is that there was a football match in Germany last year where one team was made up entirely
of players called Kretanovic. Brilliant. So confusing for anyone playing them. In fact, apparently
a lot of teams often think Kutanovich is the sponsor of the team. I read that, but then
they are actually sponsored by Kirtanovich, some of the players as well. What is Kirtanovich?
Tach is a surname. Okay. And a lot of these guys who play for the team have their own company.
so that they put down this.
So this is a bottom of the league
German football team
who play in the town of Floresheim
and this is a tiny town, 20,000 population.
They have a team that was put together by a guy
who's called Harris Kutanovich
and he thought,
who can I get to be reliable
to come up to practice, to show up,
why not my family?
Why not my uncles?
Why not my second cousins?
A few buddies came along.
But for one match at least,
When you walked onto the pitch, you were playing one name, Kandanovitch.
It's like the opposite of nepotism.
There should be a word for when you just get roped into a career that you didn't really want.
You're guilty.
They all speak Bosnian on the pitch as well because they're all from this area of the border
between Montenegro and Serbia and Bosnia.
So, yeah, that's where they're from originally.
And this team, they're actually really successful as well because, well, I mean, relatively.
They're in the 11th division in Germany.
but they were in the 13th division
and they got moved up to divisions
because their first, they were the second team
and their first team were doing really badly
so they swapped them around.
Right.
Because they also have a few players
who aren't Katanavich's
but who are Serbian and Montenegrin
who have played in higher leagues
so they're kind of better than they should be.
How do those guys feel about being shackled
to the floor of the leagues
by the millions of Katanavich
who they have to turn up with every week?
I think the truth is that on a normal week,
They probably have about four or five Katanavich is playing for them.
But occasionally they bring out a full multi.
I hope this is being filmed.
It sounds like welcome to Rexum.
If they're making their way up the leagues, imagine.
That's a really good point.
That's even more wholesome, isn't it, than what's that very cool?
Like Ryan Reynolds?
Should we be the Ryan Reynolds of 11th Division German football?
I think we definitely could get on their jersey.
We could be the sponsor.
We'd have to change our name to Kurtanovich as well.
I think it's worth it.
Do you know what the German football team is?
No, I don't actually.
Manshaft.
Oh, yeah.
Great stuff.
Just every time I see it, whenever there's a World Cup on, it makes me laugh.
But you get this every now and then with like families playing football.
The Good Johnsons famously.
So Ida Good Johnson, who used to play for Bolton, he's Icelandic.
And his son Arnor was also playing for Iceland.
And there was one game where Ida was playing and he got taken off and his son came on instead of him as like a substitution.
They were in the same squad.
And they were on the same pitch for like a micro millisecond just before they passed over and then yeah.
That's very good.
James, as a golf fan, do you know the work and recent playing of Jiang Unli six?
This is going to be a Kim Jong-un thing, isn't it?
No, no, no.
No.
She was a U.S. woman's open champion.
She was ranked, I think, at her highest at seventh in the world.
Is she Korean?
Yeah, she is.
And she's called Jiang Un-Li-6.
because there have been five other Jiang Un-leys,
and in order for them all to differentiate themselves,
they've attached a number to the end of their name.
Oh, really?
Because that would happen in a normal family.
Like if Andy's father and grandfather were all called Andy Murray,
you would be Andy Murray the third.
Yes.
Right?
Yes.
But these are not family members.
These all happen to just be players with the same name.
So yeah, so she officially goes by Lee six.
So Lee and then the number six right after her surname.
And then you've got one, two, three, four, and five.
who are all golfers.
So it's quite funny when you see anything written about her.
It looks like you're reading something about royalty.
Great.
Brady Fiegel, have you heard of him?
No.
Brady Fiegel's a minor league baseball pitcher.
And he's six foot four.
He's got glasses where he's got a sort of the rim of the glasses sit over the top,
but allow for the lens itself not to be covered in a rim, if you know what I mean.
So.
Yeah.
So frameless at the bottom.
Frameless at the bottom is a quicker way of saying that.
Underboob glasses.
Yeah.
It's actually a way I'm saying it.
Underboobo glasses.
He's got red hair.
I'm giving you all the six foot four underboob glasses, red hair.
Is this a police life?
Now draw him.
Did he take your car?
I was listening to white noise in bed.
You heard smash a baseball bat going through your car window.
All you saw as he went away was the shock of orange hair.
And him holding up his underboob glasses going, see you later.
So he had an elbow problem that needed surgery, so he had that done.
And then six months later, the doctor who performed the elbow surgery is told your patient,
Bradley Fiegel, is ready for his surgery.
And he thought, I did this six months ago.
And so it turns out there were two Bradley Fegals, both who wear under-boob glasses,
who are six foot four with red hair, who look exactly the same.
Both car thieves.
Both have the same name, and both had to have the exact same.
surgery from the exact same doctor for the bit of the elbow and now they're aware of each other.
That's how they became aware of each other.
And they did a DNA test, didn't they recently?
Yeah.
To see if they were actually related.
And?
No.
I think to get the media to shut the hell off about these two Bradley Fegals.
Wow.
It turned out they're not related at all, but they do both have ancestors from Germany.
According to one of these fake, you know, 23 and me things.
Well, what you would have known from their surname Fegel, didn't you?
Right, right, right.
There was a charity football game in Bungi in 2012 where 70 people played Bungi.
Was Bungi not the naked guy from two facts ago?
The Aboriginal.
From Brown's mission.
We shortened.
We nicknamed him Bungi because we're mates.
But he was called Bungary.
All right.
Like dungary.
And this is Bungi, which I think is...
It's just so unusual to have that word twice in one episode.
It's like Bada Mimeonf syndrome, isn't it?
You'll see Bungu's everywhere now.
There was a charity game in Bungi in Suffolk in 2012 where 70 people with the same name played.
And they were all called Bungi.
They should have raised money by going Bungi jumping.
What were they thinking?
That's a big game.
How do you manage to get 70 people?
Because it was all the officials as well, all the mascots, the match doctor,
and also quite a lot of people who went to see the match were called Bungi.
They were all called Bungi.
Yeah, and it was all complete coincidence.
I didn't know there were that many bungies knocking about.
I'm very surprised.
I know.
There's 455, according to the census at the time.
And with 70 of there, that's close to 15% of all the UK Bungis.
that showed up to this one spot.
Although it wasn't all UK.
There was one who came from Australia,
who was then sent off for swearing.
Brilliant.
Brilliant.
For a charity game.
And it was, they'd advertise for bungies.
Yeah.
Which is why,
in case you hadn't figured that out
when you were listening to this.
It used to be really common to give kids
the same names in the UK.
And in Scotland,
it was the case until the 19th century
that it was relatively common,
especially in the island of Sky
and in other Western Isles.
There was a survey done of people who lived in the 19th century there, and there were 462 households that had two sons that shared a name.
Really? Wow.
And 232 were two daughters shared a name.
So there's quite a lot of it, and it was mostly in this area.
And they think what happened was, basically, they had real rules for naming your kids.
The first son will be named after his father's father, second son named after his mother's father, third son named after the father, first daughter named after the mother's mother.
and what happens with that is
eventually the number of names just gets lower and lower and lower
because from one generation that's fine
but then the next generation suddenly everyone's called Mary
and then four generations everyone's called John
and that's what happens and so that really happened
until quite a long time.
What self-inflicted confusion that must have rought over the island of sky?
Well yeah it's funny isn't it?
Because there's another thing where people call each other
by the wrong names within families
so there's a thing if you've got lots of siblings
you might have found that one of your parents will say,
Blart, no, Blart, no, Anna, or whatever.
Have you heard that happens a lot?
Christ, yes.
Right.
They run through the full gamma of names.
Do they ever throw in the dog's name as well, Anna?
Absolutely, yeah.
Okay, so there's a reason behind this.
Which is Toffo.
It's just unbelievable.
You'd think your child would be called that.
I don't know.
I've looked at you before Anna and thought,
Toffo.
But there's a reason behind this, which is really interesting,
which is that is to do with how your brain stores names.
Basically, in your brain, you have two envelopes in which you keep all the names.
In one envelope, you keep...
Stop saying envelope.
These are metaphorical envelopes out there.
No, no, no.
No, they're like the computer icons.
They're not even far.
They're just small.
So one of them, one envelope, is for really close acquaintances.
So immediate family, you know, like people who really matter to you.
The other, for everyone else.
So when you are trying, when you're trying to name someone, one of your children, obviously,
someone who's from envelope number one,
people are almost always taking the wrong name
out of the right folder. And that is why
a parent, your mum, will cycle through all of your siblings'
names and the dog's name before they get to your name.
Because those names are all from the right folder.
It doesn't make sense.
You know what? I put the dog's name and just the draw below.
I wouldn't have the dog in the same folder.
But maybe I'm a better parent.
Hey, just on Scottish names,
we were talking about a Scottish person before,
Robert Brown. He was a Scottish botanist who lived in the 1800s. So just for anyone who's listening,
who's thinking, wait, Robert Brown, the botanist and bootmaker born in the 1800s, no, not that one.
For anyone who's thinking, oh, Robert Brown, the Scottish botanist who also was the first person
to use the word gadget in a book? No, not that botanist. For anyone who's thinking, Robert Brown,
the Scottish botanist, who was also the polar explorer from the 1800s? No, not that one either.
Apparently, there were multiple amazing botanists called Robert Brown, who all existed in the 1800s, who went and made major discoveries.
And that was a problem.
To the point, I'll tell you where it's because Robert Brown, the one who wrote Gadget for the first time ever, had to call himself Robert Brown of Camster to differentiate himself when people confused him with the Robert Brown of Brown noise.
What did you say called himself?
He called himself a camster.
He was from...
I thought you said hamster for some reason.
Whenever he collected a new sample, he'd stuff it into his cheeks.
There's a group of people in Papua New Guinea called the Oroquiva people,
and they have a brilliant system, right?
So if you have the same name as someone else,
as long as you're on good terms with them,
you count each other as what's called a sassau, a namesake,
and you are basically the same person in the eyes of that society.
Like you can shag their wives and...
No.
So it's really interesting.
If you're the younger sasso,
you will consult the elder at every stage of your ritual life
you don't have to ask them what should I have a subject
But when you do your confirmation and stuff
Exactly like that, yeah, yeah
And as the older one ages
The younger one has a responsibility to provide him with firewood
And other provisions
And if the older one dies without a will
Then you have to sort out his affairs for him
And your family groups, your king groups
Are kind of knitted together
Because it's understood that you and this other person
Are the same person
What a burden?
And is that just if I bumped into
someone at the party called Anna Tashinsky, who was a tedious dunt.
I'd then be stuck intertwined with this person.
Yes, but she'd be stuck in time with someone who's very rude about a lot of other people
all in time for no good reason.
So, you know, we're all of across the bear, right.
All the system.
Okay, that is it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over
the course of this podcast, we can all be found on our various social media accounts.
I'm on Instagram on At Sriberland, Andy.
I'm on Blue Sky at Andrew Hunter.
James.
My Instagram.
Oh, I'm also on Blue Sky.
Hey.
But I had to be Harkin James because someone else already had James Harkin.
You're kidding.
That's me.
I've got yours.
But if you want to get to us as a group, Anna, where they go?
You can email podcast.cui.com.
Andy's trying to follow me on Blue Sky.
I have no followers.
I literally only went in because I wanted to read someone's Blue Sky.
Wow, he doesn't even have a profile picture.
This is big.
I'm following.
Follow.
one follower.
Everyone follow James and he'll feel
pressure to generate content.
What was I saying? Oh yeah, how are you getting contact
with us? You can get us on Instagram at no such thing
as a fish, Twitter at no such thing
or you can email podcast at q.com.
That's right. Or you can go to our website.
No such thing asafish.com.
All of our previous episodes are up there.
There's bits of merchandise up there as well.
You can go and find live dates.
We're going to be playing a live show at the Crossed Wires Festival
in Sheffield on the 6th of July.
Or you can join.
join our very exciting exclusive club club fish. It's a monthly subscription. Two pounds 99 a month
gets you add free episodes. It gets you bonus episodes like drop us a line where we go through
the mailbag, talk about all of your facts and all of your corrections in my case and other
things. It's a great place. Check out any other podcasts amount that they charge for their subscription.
299. 299. I think it's a rip-off. Don't do it. Get in quick. All we realize.
Okay, otherwise you can come back here next week.
We'll be back with another episode.
We will see you then.
Goodbye.
