No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Jesus's Magic Wand
Episode Date: May 15, 2015Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss Benjamin Franklin's massive bed, knife-wielding referees and the longest movie in the world. ...
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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 Covern Garden.
My name is Dan Shriver. I'm sitting here with Anna Chazinski, Andy Murray, and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered around the microphone with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with you, Chazinski.
My fact is that, instead of being one of the founders of the USA,
Benjamin Franklin almost stayed in Britain to found a swimming school on the Thames.
This was his big idea in his early 20s.
So he lived in London.
He was working for a printer as a printer's apprentice.
And he liked to swim.
And he nobleman used to queue up along the sides of the Thames and be like,
what is this guy doing?
He's swimming.
Which bit of the Thames?
Is this sort of London?
He used to swim from Blackfriars to Chelsea, which was three miles, I think, or roughly three miles.
So that bit of the terms.
How long was he here for?
He came back and forth, I think.
So he was here initially for a few years.
And then he considered setting up a swimming school
because he was teaching all these noblemans kids to swim.
And he asked a friend for advice as to whether he should.
And his friend said, I don't think that's very good idea.
Why, you come and work for me in America again?
So he left Britain in about 1726, I think.
He also, one of his lesser spoken about inventions
is that he invented basically flippers for the hands.
This is how much he loved swimming.
He invented hand flippers for watching.
you were swimming. And I think he was a child
in fact when he did that, wasn't he?
He was about 11. Yeah. Another crazy
invention of his, which I just love
his lesser ones. Basically, he invented
a method for getting a book down from a bookshelf.
It was way too high.
He invented what's called the
No, it was called a book arm.
And it was basically an extended stick that you would
reach up and grip onto books and take them down
off the shelf. Yeah. Have you heard his
pseudonyms?
Because he had a load of pseudonyms.
Female ones, didn't he?
Yes, he did.
So he, when he was a boy, he wanted to write in his brother's newspaper, and his brother didn't let him.
So he wrote, in the guise of a middle-aged widow, Silence Do Good.
That was the widow's name.
Oh, yeah, I've heard that one.
The later one was Polly Baker, who was a fictional woman who had had children out of wedlock and been punished for it.
And there was Alice Adetongue, who's not a widow, Celia Shortface, Martha Careful and Miss Busy Body.
He also, one of the women you mentioned, and I can remember which one, maybe the first one.
I hope it's Celia Shortface.
It's nausey.
a short page was he created her quite a hell of his time in order to show the one who had
illegitimate children and stuff. Oh, Polly Baker. Yeah, Polly Baker was created to comment on society's
prejudice towards women and their attitudes to women who'd been mistreated. Yeah. Amazingly forward
thinking. I think he had more female pseudonyms than male ones. I certainly found a lot more female
ones. I don't like Polly Baker because it's not like a funny one like the others, is it? That is a typical
man's response, you know? Polly Baker would have been all over that.
When it was hot, he said you should sleep in two beds.
What, at the same time?
He said you should sleep in one until you're uncomfortable.
And you just go to the other one.
He'd obviously not discovered the flip the pillow over to get the cold side.
No, it's been attributed to him, but I don't think he invented that.
They shouldn't have invented a claw to turn it off.
But he also said it's okay if you just have a very large bed.
You can just get up and go to a different bit of the bed.
Sorry, I don't see why you have if you have a large bed.
You don't have to get up and go to another part of the bed.
How large a bed was he imagining?
Really large.
Are you going to get a taxi to the other part?
You get up, you pack a snack and a few toilet trees and your head off.
Top left corner, please.
But he also invented a hand.
This isn't really an invention.
He invented a device by which he could unlock and lock his bedroom door from his bed
without having to get up.
Really?
So maybe that was also a cooling device.
Prince Albert invented one of those as well.
Did he?
Oh, well, they're probably having a big fight up in heaven right now.
of a right to the intellectual property
to the incredibly successful invention
that they both came up with
that everyone can't do without these days.
Do you know until the 1930s
there were water slides along the Thames?
Were there?
Floating baths, temporary lidos,
pontoons and water slides
all the way along the Thames
because people used to swim in it so much.
My God.
That's amazing.
And now it's illegal.
So the first ever swimming book
was written in 1539
by a German guy called Nikolaus Weinman or Vinman.
And it recommended various different swimming aids for buoyancy,
which included belts made of cork,
which they used in life preservers for centuries,
bundles of reeds, and my favourite, air-filled cow bladders.
Oh, that's good.
Nice.
Yeah.
They had, I think people used pigs bladders in England in the 16th century for it.
Because the first guy to swimming in Britain,
it was written in response to that
because it was thought that that didn't really tell you how to swim.
It more just sort of described swimming.
I mean, all I've got is how to float from it.
So, you know, I haven't written the whole thing.
It is in Latin, but...
If you don't have bovine bladder,
then you're buggered.
So this guy,
the first guy to swimmer was written
by a guy called Everard Digby
in 1587.
He is not to be confused with
Everard Digby who was involved
in the gunpowder plot
or in fact the father
of Everard Digby
who's also called
Everard Digby,
but also don't confuse this guy
who wrote the swimming book
with the guy who replaced him
as a clergyman
who was also called
Everard Digby.
Wait, the guy,
one of the gunpowder platters
wrote a swimming book
guide.
No.
That's why I said
don't confuse them.
So you're confusing.
I have confused.
I'm ready.
There was one thing
they asked you to do
and you just got against it.
I sort of didn't hear the bit
where she said don't
and I just heard confuse him with.
Was Everard Digby
just like the John Smith of its day?
I think he must have been.
What a great world to live in.
Everyone's called Everard Digby.
Every Tom Dick and
Everard Digby has been coming in here.
Can I just say
the first person to get a call back
to Everard Digby?
and 10 rise.
So Everard Digby, the swimmer.
He was a clergyman
who wrote a guide to swimming,
and where he comes out most strongly,
as I think BBC history is reporting on this,
is in exhibitionist swimming.
So he describes what you should do.
Is that like synchronized swimming?
Well, yeah, I think he's sort of like
the grandfather of synchronized swimming, really,
because he explains how you can look good in the water.
So he advises things to do well swimming.
He chose how to sit on the water
while keeping afloat,
carry things in both hands,
across the water, swimming holding one foot with one hand.
Useful, he says.
Useful if you happen to get cramp.
Ah, right.
So before you ridicule.
That's great.
Swimming while dancing with both legs in the air.
Also maybe useful for cramp.
And this is the best one.
He also explains how to swim whilst cutting your toenails in the water by lying on your back,
bringing your knee up to your chest and using a knife.
So using a knife to cut your toenails in the water whilst floating on your.
That's really cool.
Yeah.
He sounds great.
I was reading about strokes because breaststroke seems to be the oldest stroke that we know about.
There's in fact cave paintings in Egypt where they show people doing breaststroke.
How do you know?
Really?
Yeah, I read it on.
No, not how do you know that it's breaststroke?
How do they know that it's breaststroke?
I guess it just looks like it.
There's no motion in cave paintings.
I think they've got one of those peelable books but in stone.
So you flip the book and you see it moving.
Yeah, you flip the rock.
Yeah.
You've got to run really fast and one came to the other.
And that's very untrue to say there's no flip paintings.
Have you seen the documentary by Berner Herzog?
Oh, that's so good.
Extraordinary.
Andy, do you know about this?
Is it called Cave of Forgotten Dream?
Yeah, Cave of Forgotten Dreams.
They have, there's one drawing of a horse.
They would draw horses and they would draw them with like five legs in motion.
And you kind of think, why are they doing that?
Why does it look like that?
And they realized that if you had a fire inside this cave and you were looking at it,
the flames would create the motion.
Like a flicker effect.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So it would give it like flipbook kind of artistic running horse on the inside of a cave.
Or breast stroking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anyway, breaststroke, really old thing.
This is a story that I read, which I really like.
1844 breaststroke was the big stroke for swimming in England.
Two guys came over.
Native Americans had a race and they used front crawl.
Totally whipped ass.
Like they just killed this race, right?
But no one liked it because they thought it looked un-European.
This is how British-British-British.
people are, they did not take on that stroke until 1873. That was in 1844 that that happened.
So it's a generation, is it? Thousands of hours wasted. Get this. In the 1900 Olympics, there was a 200-meter
obstacle swimming course. You were able to swim with the current, because it was in moving water,
but you had to make it past three obstacles. You had to climb over two of them. One was a pole,
and one was a row of boats. And then you had to swim under the other one, which was another row of boats.
Sounds great.
Why have we not kept this?
Yeah, that sounds amazing.
Yeah.
I've got another Olympic one that I just want to flag up.
1896, summer Olympics.
Athens.
Athens, these were all of the sporting events for swimming.
Okay.
100 metre freestyle.
500 metre freestyle.
Yeah.
1,200 metre freestyle.
Sailors 100 metre freestyle in which only sailors from Greece, who happened to be sailors,
who could enter the competition.
Oh, yeah.
Which country won gold.
Yep.
So Greece won gold, silver, bronze.
Well done.
And no one lost because only three people entered the race.
We were talking about races and stuff like that in swimming.
In 1791, three men swam from Westminster Bridge to London Bridge for an eight guinea wager.
The winner was carried to a pub to celebrate where he drank so much gin, he expired.
Presumably the other two just split the four guineas each.
I think second place would get it now.
Yeah
The people used to swim loads in the Thames
Didn't they?
I read that in 1880
There was a man-dog race
In the Thames
And the dog won
Really?
Really?
So I think Windsor Baths
They used to have little bits
Of the Thames as James said
At the start I think
Like Lido's set apart
So you could swim in them
And they had to move Windsor Baths
In 1870
Because it allowed Queen Victoria
A view of the naked men
Really?
It was inappropriate
Oh what?
They moved it so that she couldn't see it
Yeah
Sorry
No, the way you said it.
It's like in the Olympics how they moved the end of the marathon
so that the Queen could see the end.
The end of the race.
And Victoria's like,
I really would like to see you those big men.
I read this in a book called Queen Victoria, the hidden pervert.
Did you guys see the giant swastika that's been spotted in a swimming pool?
So there was a helicopter on a kidnapping mission to retrieve.
Hang on.
That's terrible.
Imagine when you're doing a kidnapping mission,
but you're like,
but we have to tell someone about.
this poor.
Oh, I'm so torrent.
They're like, I've got this letter from someone saying they've taken my child.
And also, apparently there's a swastika.
Police said the unnamed homeowner would not be charged as the swastikers on private
land and was not on display to promote Nazism, which you do wonder why it was on display.
Wow.
It could have been just a Hindu sign of peace.
Which those clumsy, clumsy tyler's put in the wrong way round.
If I wasn't a Hindu and so peaceful, I'd be few.
Okay, time for fact number two.
That's my fact.
My fact this week is that sumo wrestling referees carry a knife on them
so that in the event that they make a bad decision during a match, they can kill themselves.
How often does that happen?
Do you know, it hasn't actually happened.
Traditionally, the idea is that...
They've always made brilliant decisions, or they've thought, actually, it was bad, but it wasn't that bad.
well okay
sumo wrestler
referees is it's a very high ranking
they actually have rankings you become the sort of
the head of sumo
wrestling referees they are the ones
who carry the knife traditionally the idea was
that they would kill themselves because it was such an honor to be that
height if they do make a bad decision
these days they'll hand in their papers
and say I'm retiring so it's seen as
yeah but the knife is there to remind them that you should kill yourself
so if like the best football referee like
Howard Webb or someone would carry it but
all the others wouldn't.
Yes, exactly.
I have the idea of a player going,
oh, referee.
And the referee thinking you're going,
no, you're right, you are right.
So the reason I found this fact is Anna and I were having a drink with her friend Meg.
Meg was telling us that sumo wrestlers are incredibly flexible,
and they can all do the splits.
So I went home and Googled that straight away, and they can.
If you Google sumo wrestlers splits on the internet,
have a field day.
I think it's easier because it's the weight of your torso just jams you right down.
No, they're incredibly flexible.
I assume they have to be athletic because it's a weird double thing, isn't it?
Because they're really, really heavy, but also they're very, very athletic.
Yeah.
It is extremely hardcore.
The training isn't it in the stables, which is the schools that they kind of train in.
And I think one of the bits of training is you have to do the splits,
and then your tutor forces your chest down onto the ground.
It's amazing.
So Anna's just said stables, that's what they call it.
It's sumos have a kind of Hogwarts where you go.
You're like, you've been picked as a sumo wrestler and you go and you do put on the sorting nappy when you go in.
Yeah, and they live their lives in there.
They have to.
They do sit in class wearing nothing except the nappy.
Really?
When you see their lessons, they're just sitting in a class taking notes from the blackboard and you've just got all these huge topless men.
What's it called?
It has got a proper name.
It's an M-word, I think.
It's the Mawashi.
And if your moashi comes off during a fight, then you have to forfeit the fight.
There was a thing, because obviously people think that it's a bit strange, if they haven't seen sumo before, that they're wearing what looked like nappies.
So there was a few years ago.
A few years ago, the Japanese amateur sumo association announced this plan to let young players compete in shorts.
Because normally you're only fighting the mawashi.
And it was thought it would get more young people involved in it because they have a problem with this.
Is it shorts as well as the mallachians?
No, it's just shorts.
It was what they were saying.
Like, you don't have anything to grab onto.
Surely that's an issue.
Like, because they kind of grab onto those.
Yeah.
I suppose so.
Well, anyway, it didn't happen because the professional body said over our dead body
and nobody in shorts would be allowed into youth tournaments.
So it just completely died of death, the idea.
They, I mean, it's incredible the respect that they have for all of the traditions,
including that.
And even the audience, there are no heckles whatsoever.
And this goes back to the referee thing.
if the referee makes a call, regardless of what an audience member thinks,
and regardless of what the sumo wrestler thinks, they just accept it.
There's no yelling, there's no contending, it's okay, he called it, that's his job, it must be right.
That's good.
Wow.
Yeah, it's a total respect.
And you have to be a good loser, don't you?
And yeah, never betrayed dissatisfaction with the result.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's sort of like the polar opposite of a football match, basically.
It really is.
The crowd is singing, the refreason, excellent arbiter of the balls.
Yeah.
Well, he's got a knife.
The most popular referee in the 19th century was called
Everard Bigby
Damn it
I held that up for you
The most prominent referee in the 19th century
was called
Seagar bastard
And
So that's why referees are masticus
I think there was a suggestion of that
But that actually came about about six years
after he died.
But yeah, and he became
known he was so good,
he became known as
Knight of the Whistle.
So I like to think
they maybe called him
Sir Bastard after that.
The Knight of the Whistle is true.
Do you want to hear something
about the UK Sumo scene?
Yes, please.
This is from the UK Sumo website
and it's also sad.
At present, the sport of sumo
in the UK has a very limited following.
Regrettably,
behind Dover's White Cliffs,
there are no known organisations
or individuals
with any recent training experience
at any Chapman
Sumo clubs or establishments, although one Englishman did once join the sport in Japan.
The UK is something of a sumo desert.
Oh, that is sad.
It is sad.
But it's not true for everyone, because loads of top sumo wrestlers are Eastern European.
Yeah, Czech Republic's quite popular there, isn't it?
That's amazing.
And of the Yokozunas, which is a top kind of thing, there's not any Japanese ones at the
moment, I think.
They're all Mongolian.
Wow, really?
Or I think something like the last 36 competitions have all been won by, yeah, non-Japanese
people mainly in Mongolia. This is like the England cricket team, isn't it? We invent it. Everyone
else beats us at it. It actually is like that because if you look it up, the articles are
exactly like English people writing about cricket. Articles are like, what has happened to Japanese
sumo wrestling? We're being thrashed by foreigners and it's a real problem I think. And it's because
it's really unpopular now amongst the youth, isn't it? So the average age of like a sumo
audience is over 60. And yeah. So not a lot of young people. It feels to me as a country,
the UK, we're never going to get cricket back or football back.
we should maybe go into sumo.
The standard sumo diet is 10,000 calories a day, I think, in their schools.
And they get force fed in...
10,000 calories a day.
Yeah, it's a lot, isn't it?
It's a good amount.
That's a lot.
A blue whale can eat a million calories in one mouthful.
So that is what...
How many more?
A thousand times that, is it?
It's not a competition between sumo wrestlers and blue whales.
It's a hundred times more.
A hundred times that.
So 100 sumo wrestlers equals one blue whale.
whale.
Wow.
Who would miss a day in a mouthful?
One blue whale mouthful.
So a blue whale could eat 100 sumo wrestles in one mouthful?
That's not quite what I said.
And they do.
They often do.
That's why the sport is unpopular in Japan at the moment.
It's very hard to get people to sign up because they know.
That's why the Japanese go after the whales are all.
It's revenge.
So ex-sumo wrestlers.
Yeah.
Again, as with, you know, we have footballers over here who go into weird and
wacky things after they leave football.
Oh, yeah.
One of the most famous ones.
Konishiki Yasukichi became a hip-hop artist and hosted a children's TV show.
One of my favorites, Yasuyuki Hirose.
I got this on an article about ex-sumer wrestlers from The Guardian.
He can drink a two-liter bottle of orange fanta in 10 seconds.
That's his trick.
He's also in a comedy group, and I quote directly,
his obesity-related difficulties are often the topic of the group's jokes.
I think an alternative comedy revolution might be required.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
10 seconds.
Two liters of Orange Fanta.
I can't drink two liters in a day.
I think I could drink two liters of water in that much time, but Orange Fanta is pretty fizzy.
Two leases?
How many pints is that?
It's about four, isn't it?
Oh, no, I can't do that.
I once drank, I think I had to drink four pints for a bet in 10 minutes.
And I did that, and I was violently sick.
And I was working as a waiter.
Excuse me, we asked for some water ages ago.
It hasn't arrived.
Arkansas throwing up in the corner.
Speaking of, so they're overweight, as I think you mentioned, they have to eat a lot.
And I was looking at overweight people in other sports.
And in the 1952 Olympics, there was no weight.
So there's usually a weight restriction on the bobsleigh.
And there was no weight restriction.
And only the German team, I think it was, realized that the way to go
fast and bobsleys, obviously, to put really heavy people on.
And so the average weight of a German
bobsate entry in the 1952 Olympics was
£2,000, which is almost
20 stone, isn't it?
Whoa. I reckon they learn their lesson from that
Olympics, and weight restrictions everywhere now.
What a shame.
So on referees,
I did not know, because I know nothing
of sport, that
one man invented yellow cards,
and he was called Ken Astin.
And he was a really tough referee. He was really
good. He was involved in football. He was a football
referee. He was British and he was
I think this was in around the
50s or 60s but he'd just seen an England-Argentina
match which was so rough
that afterwards the Argentinian team tried to
break into the English dressing room. That's how bad it got
and one Argentinian player
had been pleading with the ref and just
being very passionate about saying that was not a foul
that wasn't offside, whatever it was. And he
got sent off for violence of the
tongue was the phrase that was used and as
Ken Astin was driving home
he thought there must be a way of
punishing someone without
just sending them off because there must be an intermediate stage and he said as I drove down
Kensington High Street the traffic light turned red I thought yellow take it easy red stop you're off
so it's based on traffic lights yeah which I mean it's what you'd assume it should be an amber card
it should be an amber car that's why I'm going to call it from no one oh god you're going to be
even less popular at football matches that was never an amber on his ideas list was there
carry a dagger in order to commit suicide anywhere
Was that feature in his brainstorm?
I once went to a party where the host of the party
employed the yellow card, red card system.
Did he?
Yeah, the idea was if you got too drunk, too rowdy,
you'd get a yellow card.
If you then repeated in a fence, you'd get a red card.
What happened when you got a red card?
You had to go home.
Yeah, I had to go home.
I got red carded.
I'm a qualified referee, do you know?
Are you?
Football referee.
Really?
Yeah.
What level are you qualified?
Could you do a premiership match?
I did, yeah.
I did Arsenal versus Swansea this week.
That explains it.
But he's not allowed on the pitch anymore because of his new Amber Card system,
which has met some resistance.
James was actually a very successful referee for a long time,
but he was fired after drinking all the halftime water.
Four players died of thirst.
Okay, time for fact number three, and that is Harkin.
My fact this week is a trailer for the longest movie ever made
has just been released, and it's 72 minutes long.
Wow.
I like to think that the film is just 73 minutes and they had a terrible editor.
Is that the game?
There's a lot of spoilers in this trailer.
No, sadly, the movie is 30 days long.
Is it?
The guy who's making this film, I looked him up a bit.
He's called Anders Weberg.
Is that right?
That's right, yeah.
And he said it would be an abstract, non-linear narrative summary of the artist time spent with the moving image.
Sounds great.
And that it will show how space and time...
is intertwined into a surreal dreamlike journey beyond places.
Are there any action scenes?
I don't know if there's a chase.
Isn't it going to be screened just once?
Yeah, I think that's the plan, yeah.
Although, you know, due to popular demand, they might roll it out.
DVD sales might be huge.
You get 10 DVDs in the post.
Supposedly it's going to be screened once on every continent
from the 31st of December 2020 onward, so it's not hit out for a while.
Yeah.
And then it's going to be destroyed.
By the audiences.
It sounds terrible.
Has anyone watched the trailer?
No.
Basically, there's not enough time
to watch a 72 minute trailer, is there really?
You can imagine going into the cinema
to watch another film and this trailer comes on
and for the first couple of minutes,
you're really into it.
By 45 minutes, you're thinking,
God, the trailers, they're going for ages these days,
don't they?
I really like in trailers now,
they do this, they've been doing it for a long time, actually.
They show bits of movie that never make it
to the final movie.
Really?
Yeah.
So many movies.
because they'll release a trailer
while they're still cutting the movie
and then a decision will be made
when the final movie edit is happening
we don't need that scene
and then they just go that's fine
it doesn't matter that it's in the trailer
so like famously a lot of people
know this about this particular movie
but there's a movie called the Transporter
or Transporter
Jason Statham
in the movie they did not include
a classic scene in the trailer
and it is a classic scene in the trailer
where a missile is launched
to Jason Statham
and he deflects it
using a tea tray.
Using a tennis.
Oh,
a tea tray.
I was going to say something.
He just smacks it out of the way,
like not interested.
That's amazing.
Why was that not put in the final film?
Because Jason Statham,
I think,
said,
no one's going to believe this.
And so,
but they filmed it.
Like,
he didn't point that out before shooting it.
He saw it in the script and went,
that's fantastic.
But I continued reading.
I found this on IMDB.
I continued reading just movie trivia for that particular movie.
Can I give you a couple?
Yes, please.
Okay.
So,
one of them is that
in the garage scene
what was thought to be
transmission oil
was in fact
molasses syrup
Jason Statham
reported to be
a very stickier situation
and then
underneath the tea tray
knocking the missiles away
two facts below
it says that Jason Statham
did most of his own stunts
is that great
weirdly there's an inventor
of trailers
didn't know that
is there?
Yeah, very famously, a guy called Nils Granland.
And he made the first trailer and it was for a play called The Pleasure Seekers.
And it was in 1913.
So he wanted people to come to the play.
So he thought he would shoot incidents from the play and they showed it.
And then they realized that this was a fantastic idea.
So they applied it to movies.
And he then made the first ever trailer for a movie, which was for Charlie Chaplin movie.
Yeah, so Chaplin had the first ever trailer.
Is it right that they're called trailers because they used to go after the movie?
Yes.
They used to trail the movie.
Exactly.
They would trail the movie.
and get you excited about the next thing you could go and see.
And then presumably they stopped doing that because people just left.
One of the things I find weird is that the director who's doing the film you're talking about,
Waybug, is he's only ever done short films.
So this is quite a big step, isn't it?
And for my next film.
That's amazing.
I must out that in between step.
It really is.
I have attached all the short films to each other to make a mega film.
But the runner-up, so the longest film ever until, well,
The current longest film ever
because this one hasn't been released yet.
Yeah, this one will be in the future one.
Yeah.
Is Modern Times Forever and it's a finished film.
It's 240 hours long.
And IMDB describes its plot line as the ever slow decay of Helsinki's Stora Enzo
headquarters building.
So that's what Modern Times Forever is about.
It sounds a really good film.
Get a 6.4 on IMDB.
It's how the headquarters are going to decay over the next few thousand years.
I think they projected it onto the building.
building itself, didn't they?
Oh, did they?
So you could kind of watch it happen as if it's happened.
Oh, wow.
That's harsh as well.
That's harsh for the building.
Well, the building didn't mind.
Yeah, like someone projecting your own gruesome death onto you or something.
Yeah.
As you just hanging out in the street.
That's true.
Okay, so have you heard of Don LaFontaine?
No.
Okay, he is the man.
He's dead now, unfortunately, but he was the one who's very famous for doing trailer
voices.
Oh.
He's done more than 5,000 film trailers, and his famous catchphrases,
In a world.
In a world.
Yeah.
Because there was a film that satirized that, wasn't there?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
With Lake Bell.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
In a world.
That's so cool.
Yeah, he was a really, really amazing guy.
His voice cracked at the age of 13 mid-sentence.
His final role on television was in the Phineas and Ferb episode,
The Chronicles of Meep.
and he says the final line he ever said
which was
in a world
there I said it
happy
oh really
that was his last last thing
this is really cool
this is a thing that almost predates
in fact it definitely predates film
it's a kind of early version of a movie
okay this is so fantastic
it was a 19th century showman
right his name was John Banvard
and he invented this show
which consisted of
a 1,320 foot long painting
of the Mississippi, right?
It was a mural, and it was on two spindles,
like a VHS cassette, right?
So at the start of the show,
it was all on one spindle,
and then you pull it across to the other spindle,
and you start winding the other one round,
and it pulls it across like a tape,
like a videotape,
but it shows this moving panorama of the river,
and he would do a show for about, you know, for two hours,
telling stories about what was on the river,
and his wife played music as it went,
and he was telling, you know, adventure stories
and all the things that were happening.
Was there stuff on the river?
pictures of boats and fish. I think so. Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. I think it wasn't, I think it wasn't just
muddy, I think it wasn't just water for two hours and 1,000 feet. But isn't that amazing?
It was this incredible long panorama and it was basically a very, very early proto film.
When was that, did you say? That was in the 19th, that was in the mid-19th century, so, you know,
50 years before Blumia and Medians. I remember reading about him in a book called Banvard's Folly. Have you
heard of that? No. Not much more to say about it, apart from everyone should read it,
because it is a brilliant book. It's just about famous people.
people from history who were famous at the time, but then have been completely forgotten.
Oh, wow.
That's brilliant.
Yeah, that sounds awesome.
Such a great book.
Yeah.
That's really cool.
Yeah.
Who was Bannford?
He was the guy.
He was this guy.
I've been talking about him for a minute.
Have you?
Also, yeah.
How'd to go?
Oh, is it right?
Not great.
Okay, so before they had the talkies, they had the silent films.
And there was one patent that I found for the idea of getting the dialogue across without being
able to have the sound.
Yep.
And that was to have speech bubbles that came out of actors' mouths like a party blower.
Wow.
If you wanted to say, good evening, Mr. Schreiber.
Then I would blow this party bubble and you'd be able to see the words.
And then it would come back.
And then you'd say, oh, nice to meet to me, Ms. Dag.
That is so, I've never heard of that.
That's fantastic.
That's amazing.
They never did it, but it was a patent.
I love that.
I, in somewhere, in some alternative universe, that is still how we're doing it.
That's the only difference between this universe and that one.
Because it was tried and it was just so good.
It's so much fun to watch.
That's how all news reading is done.
Yeah.
Because it lightens bad news, doesn't it?
So no one took it seriously.
So the actors would have to pause, pull it out of their pocket, put it in them.
Make sure they get the right one.
And also, you'd run out of puff very fast.
After a while, you'd be, for a monologue.
Now is the winch of our disconnect.
One of the great silent film directors of the 1920s was this guy called Eric von Stroheim.
And I really like him because have you guys seen Sunset Boulevard?
Yes.
You have.
Love it.
So he's, yeah, me too.
So he is the main character in that.
He wasn't really an actor, but he was a director in the silent film generation.
Sunset Boulevard's all about the decline of silent films about this woman who's, you know,
as big in the silent film age and her downfall.
And her servant is played by this huge director.
And it always feels really poignant when you watch it because it's actually about his decline
and his demise.
But what I also quite like about Eric von Stroheim
is that he created the best film ever made, apparently, in 1924.
In 1924, so not that many films.
But it's called Greed, and it was another long one.
So it was eight hours long, and it was only watched by 12 people in the end.
And most of those 12 people...
Yeah, because it was watched by 12 people,
and then people decided people aren't going to go and see this.
So it was edited down by his producers, and he was really angry about that.
And they've lost the...
original eight-hour film reel, but apparently this is the Holy Grail of like movie reels.
This is the greatest film ever made, according to those 12 people.
Wow, that's great. So where has it gone? Like literally no one knows.
If we knew that, Dan, it wouldn't be the Holy Grail.
Are there theories about... So where is the Holy Grail, Adam?
I have a weird, sort of, this isn't really related, but it's to do with missing film as well.
which is a holy grail of missing film as well.
When Mallory was found on Everest,
because they found his body,
the big hope was that they were going to find on him his camera.
Didn't have his camera on him.
Because that would prove whether he'd been to the top or not.
The idea is if they made it there,
they would have just taken a photo.
That was the hope.
And they could have seen on the camera.
They might have found there were no photos,
but the idea is maybe it was.
He didn't have the camera on him,
which means that Irvin,
who's the other missing one of the two of Mallory and Irving,
was up there.
He must have the camera on him.
and Kodak have said, because of the way and the nature of the height and the coldness
that's going on, that if that film is still out there, it can still be developed, but only
for a few more years.
So they're desperately trying to find it because it may hold the answer to whether or not
they got up there.
We've got to get out there.
But it's amazing, because that's from the 20s.
There's bloody built-in obsolescence in technology these days where they say it'll definitely
run out after 90 years.
I'm really sick of it.
If anyone's ever been up to the top of Everest and not taking a photo.
I reckon, I bet it's so cold and uncomfortable
and you've got to take your gloves off
I would take a photo of my thumb
That's what I'd do
This is my thumb at the top of Everest
Nice
Yeah
Do your thumbs up or?
Thumbs down
Not what it's cranked up to be guys
TripAdvisor, two stars
Hillary when he got up there
He took a piss
So I'm just saying he got something out straight away
Despite the cold
He didn't take a photo of it
It wasn't that sort of trip.
Okay, time for a final fact of the show, and that is Andrew Hunter Murray.
My fact.
Actually, this comes from, we did a live show in Brussels a while ago,
and someone from the audience volunteered this fact,
and it was so fantastic that I wrote it in my files
and have only just rediscovered it.
So this is the fact.
It's that in the Middle Ages, lots of churches had statues of Jesus,
which had moving arms,
so that he could be taken down from the cross and carried around the church,
And there were other statues which had the Virgin Mary with a working belly,
and you could take out a model of the infant Christ.
So these were four ceremonies in churches.
So things like Easter, Good Friday, you'd have the model of the Christ on the cross.
Yeah.
And you'd take it down and you'd carry it to a version of his tomb, for example.
So the arms had to be fold downable so that you could move him and carry him.
And there is an incredible, I think it's a book on this.
It's about 300 pages long.
It's huge.
It's called animated sculptures of the crucified Christ.
And it's incredible scholarly work which denotes every single one all across the world.
There are 126 which exist still.
The vast majority were made between 1490 and 1530.
It's as though they became huge and then immediately disappeared.
Wow.
Like pogs.
Like pods.
Like when pogs are used in Easter to represent the crucified Christ.
There's that really gruesome statue in Mexico, isn't there?
which is a statue of Jesus,
and he's covered in blood and stuff,
and it's when he's just been crucified.
And they recently did an x-ray of it,
and they realized that his teeth, a real human teeth.
Whoa.
And we don't know why.
It's really disgusting.
Is it like human-sized, or does he have a massive mouth?
What do you mean?
Is he like a tiny doll, Jesus?
Yeah, I realize how I threw that.
He probably is life-size.
He's life-size, yeah, he's normal human size,
and he's, yeah, it's a grotesque statue.
But why are there human incisors in it,
I read about that and supposedly it was a custom a few centuries ago to donate body parts of yours, not for science, but for religion.
You donate them to the church.
So you could have like a statue of Jesus with lots of different body parts from different people.
I don't think that was ever done because that's incredibly gruesome.
Although this teeth one is real.
Yeah.
And it was 18th century and I think they were donated by people as a way of showing their gratitude to Christ.
So what other ways could you give your body to?
So people would give their own hair
and that could be used as sort of wigs and things like that.
Another statue of the baby Jesus has rabbit's teeth in it.
It's really peculiar.
So Jesus has got these two buck tooth.
Teeth out of the front of funny.
What's up, God.
So some of these other ones that were in churches in the Middle Ages,
some of them have movable arms, as I say.
Some of them had mechanisms to open and close Christ's eyes.
Wow.
Yeah.
And some of them were quite.
detailed and sort of advanced in terms of modelling and puppetry.
Just out of curiosity, is this like an early action man?
Like, would that have inspired how toys move?
Well, okay, is not as silly as it sounds because early marionettes were based on the Virgin Mary.
Is that why they call marionettes?
Yes.
The marionette comes from Little Mary because it was a model of the Virgin Mary,
which was used in devotional plays to show, to teach children about religion, basically.
And some grown-ups.
Yeah.
So depictions of Jesus.
Yeah.
Early depictions of Jesus, quite interesting because in the very early days,
people were very iffy about depicting him as a person because it was thought of being idolatrous.
And that was a no-no.
So he was shown as a fifth.
He was shown as a fish.
As a siff.
He was shown as a fish because, you know, Icthus was the acronym that they used.
Is that right?
Yeah, it was an old way of Catholics talking to each other about Catholicism.
Yeah.
Supposedly you'd draw a fish and that was the sign that you were Christian.
someone else dotted the eye, that was a sign they were a Christian, and then you could talk properly, you know.
And in some depictions of Jesus, these are about 5th century AD, he has a magic wand.
Wow.
Which he uses to do all his miracles.
No, no, no, no, it's not.
He uses it to turn the water to wine and to raise Lazarus from the dead and to create the loaves and the fishes.
Wow.
That's so cool.
Do you know, years ago, James was telling me that there were lost gospels, and within those, one of them, Jesus fights a dragon.
Yeah, they're called their infancy gospels.
and they're like gospels which were written around the time of today's gospels,
but they were never used in the official Matthew, Mark, Luke and John kind of thing.
And there is one where he kills dragons, another one where he explodes snakes.
And another one where he kills a boy who accidentally brushed against him.
Wow.
These sounds much more exciting.
Why weren't these the guys that were being published?
I bet they were disappointed.
They sound a bit like young Jesus.
adventures. You know you get young Indiana Jones
and young James Bond things?
Yeah. It sound a bit like the adventures of young.
Like fan fiction.
The idea I think is that
he does like slightly
with the child brushing against him I think the idea
is that he started and he was quite angry
but then eventually turned into a good
peaceful person. I think that's the transformation.
But you can see why those were not
sort of turned into proper gospel doctrine.
I can see why they left the dragon ones out.
Yeah. Censorship is what that was really wasn't it?
I think this is cool, speaking of statues.
The Statue of David, Michelangelo's Statue of David,
three of the four turtles were involved in the making of it.
Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello.
Yes.
So Raphael wasn't.
Raphael wasn't involved.
Where was Splinter for all of this?
He was masterminding the whole thing.
So the Statue of David was commissioned about 100 years before it was actually built,
and Donatello was one on the sort of committee that decided it had to be built,
and his students had some attempts, and they cocked it up.
And eventually there was a sort of people applied to be the one who got to design the statue of David.
And Leonardo da Vinci was considered but rejected.
And Michelangelo was accepted.
And he made it in two years and everyone agreed it was this masterpiece.
But I quite enjoy that.
That is totally awesome, dude.
Except Leonardo wasn't like that because there was a committee that had to decide where to put it.
So at the moment it's outside the huge entrance of the Duomo Cathedral in Florence, really prominent place.
and the committee decided to put it there,
but Leonardo da Vinci was on that committee,
and he suggested that they put it in a little niche
on the side of a much less well-known building
where it would be completely obscured.
Wow.
Because I'm guessing a little bit of professional jealousy.
Yeah, it must be right.
Yeah.
That's great.
I was looking into a statue that I've known since childhood,
which has been a famous one for me.
Do you remember when Michael Jackson released his Hiss Story album,
and he made those huge giant statues of himself?
Do you remember?
I don't know, but okay, yeah, yeah.
So they made 10 massive statues of Michael Jackson,
which became the cover.
And it was on the Thames.
They floated it through the Thames.
Wow.
I mean, it was, anyone, except you know.
Well, I hope they got permission from the Port of London Authority.
So I was just looking down water slides.
I was just looking into it, like where, because those are huge.
I think they were like 30 feet high.
where have they gone?
And nine of them,
we don't know where they've gone,
which is really interesting.
Wow.
Yeah, exactly.
We do know where one is.
It's at the Best McDonald's,
which is...
Is that a personal opinion?
No, it's actually a town called Best
that bought it.
Excellent.
The nearby town of worst.
And in between the two,
second best.
Yeah.
So it stands currently
at McDonald's.
Donald's best parking lot, and it's become a big gathering place for Michael Jackson fans.
And actually, I've got it slightly wrong.
There are two that are known of that still exist.
The other one, the pedestal that they made to put Michael Jackson on, was using all of the
statue stones from a very famous Stalin monument called the Q from Meat.
Do you remember that?
It was an extraordinary famous Stalin monument.
I think I know the one you mean.
Yeah, it's, if you Google Stalin monument, it's incredibly famous.
And they use that to make a thing for Michael Jackson to stand on.
Did you guys read about the Ottoman statue taking a selfie?
What?
There was a statue that was recently erected.
It was in the city of Amassia.
Amassia, I don't know to pronounce that anyway.
It's on the Black Sea.
And it was a statue of an old Ottoman prince,
and he's taking a selfie of himself with a smartphone.
And I guess it's supposed to represent the glory of Ottoman princes
and also meant to be a bit hip and down with the times.
It's not that great because people were really angry about it
and thought that it kind of demeaned
the Ottoman
So within 24 hours of the statue being put up
They've broken off his smartphone
And most of his sword
It's been destroyed
There was a thing though
There was a trend of taking photos
Because you know how ancient statues
Are often stretching out of hand
There's a trend for taking photos
In that position to show what the selfie
of the statue looks like
Yeah, great.
That's a good trend
It's a great trend
Well done the people
Did you guys read about the 45-foot statue of Pope John Paul that was commissioned by this guy called Lezek Leysen?
And basically, this guy saved the life of his own son, who fell into a lake when they were on holiday in Croatia, I think, or fell into the sea.
And he decided that that was thanks to the Pope.
And so he commissioned and paid for a 45-foot-tall, fiberglass, bright white statue of Pope Jean-Paul II to be erected.
And it's disgusting.
Why did he think it was thanks to the Pope?
Because I guess it's God and the Pope is God spokesman.
Came to him in his hour of need and gave him the courage to save his son?
Yeah, I guess so.
Cool.
I mean, I think he should give himself more credit.
But I like it.
So another...
Yeah, but you can imagine the headlines.
Local Dickhead builds statue of himself after saving son from drowning.
Local Dick.
They should do that more in local papers.
Okay.
that's it. That's all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you want to get in contact
with us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, you can get us on
Twitter. I'm on at Schreiberland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter M. James. At Everard Digby.
And Shazinsky. You can email Everard Digby at QI.com.
We'll be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then. Goodbye.
