No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Seatbelts On Your Sofa

Episode Date: August 3, 2018

Not live and not from Bristol, Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss indoor hot air balloon shows, McBaseball and what you'll find inside a giraffe's armpit. ...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:07 Hey everyone, welcome to this week's episode of Fish. Before we get going, just want to let you know. Thank you for all your feedback about last week's ultimate crossover episode. It was very enjoyable to do. In fact, so much so we've decided to do it again, except this time we've decided to cross over completely. A full crossover. A 360 crossover.
Starting point is 00:00:34 Done. We messed up again, didn't we? We lost an entire episode somehow. So if you were in Bristol, A few months ago, quite a few months ago, you will have seen an amazing show, guys. I've got to tell you, this was one of the best shows we ever did. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem like we recorded it. So only you Bristolians will have the memory of that show.
Starting point is 00:00:56 And then this is kind of the lesser version, can you say? Yeah. It's still worth listening to. I would say. Yeah, it's definitely one for the completest, I'd say. Yes. Yeah. It's amazing how negative you guys are.
Starting point is 00:01:08 We haven't even recorded it yet. So enjoy this week's episode. here we go. Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber and I'm sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, James Harkin, and Anna Chisinski, and once again we have gathered round the microphones
Starting point is 00:01:32 with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Andy. Okay, my fact is it's about Bristol actually. I just chose it completely at random out of all the cities I could have chosen. And I learned it about four months ago, surely before we performed in Bristol. My fact this week is that the first hot air balloon flight in Bristol was indoors. And people at home have to imagine the cheers and laughter of the Bristol crowd when they first heard that.
Starting point is 00:02:02 They went nuts when Andy said that. My God. So there's this firm in Bristol called Cameron Balloons, and it's the world's biggest balloon firm, basically. Bristol is the capital of hot air ballooning pretty much in the world. world, definitely in the UK. Yep. And the first flight was in 1784, and you had to go indoors to see it. And you had to pay a little amount to see it.
Starting point is 00:02:22 And if you paid more, apparently you could see it filled up with air. Apparently there was a pricing structural way. Wait a minute. So the people who didn't pay much, they just saw a load of canvas. It sounds like that, doesn't it? I can't quite believe that's true. Was this new to people at the time? As in how long did balloons exist before this happened?
Starting point is 00:02:40 That's a great question. Really good question. So they had. The Aztecs, they had, they made like balloons out of animal intestines. I think we know that. And I remember reading once that they made balloon animals out of those intestines. But I don't know if that doesn't sound very true, does it? So, I mean, how big were the animals back then?
Starting point is 00:03:02 What do you mean? As in did they make like a full hot air balloon out of an animal intestine? No, no, no, sorry. So just balloons in general I'm saying about the history of, not the history of hot air balloons. I see. And the Civil War they definitely had hot air balloons, because Lincoln had a hot air balloon balloon, balloon corps. Cool. Corps.
Starting point is 00:03:20 Why do I say corpse? Corps. Just keep throwing guesses that's just that you see. Corps. Corpus. Yeah, he had a balloon corps, and they had seven balloons, and they used to go over, and the Confederates actually tried to build their own balloons in retaliation, and then they stopped doing them because people found them really easy to shoot.
Starting point is 00:03:39 It was quite an easy target. So we know it goes back as far as a civil war in America, at least. Yeah, they were actually a huge deal in the 19th century hot air balloon flights. And I think in 1897 there was an attempt to reach the North Pole by balloon. That was three Swedish people who tried to get there. They disappeared. No one knew what had happened to them. There were these reports of silk falling from the sky. And then randomly in 1930, 33 years later, they were found in this Thor by Whalers, just by chance.
Starting point is 00:04:04 They found, as the Thor came, the bodies of these guys. And they'd crashed after three days. but they'd lived on these ice flows and they'd eaten polar bears for... Wow. That is hardcore, isn't it? That's amazing. I reckon I'd go hungry before I decided to go for polar bears. It was so sad, though, because they were convinced that they could steer their balloon over the North Pole.
Starting point is 00:04:25 And it was partly funded by Alfred Nobel, their attempt. Oh, was it? Yeah. But unfortunately, the drag ropes didn't work very well, and in a few minutes they fell off, so they had no way of steering. So they lost lots of ballast, and they kept on just bumping along the ground and leaking a bit. and then rising a bit and it took them 65 hours to land and they didn't get to the stores in time. So what's that? The other thing about eating polar bears is their livers contain so much vitamin A that they're poisonous.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Yeah, that's awful if you're diving vitamin A poisoning once you've survived the hot air balloon crash onto an ice flow and then fought a polar bear to death with your bare hands. This is quite cool about hot air balloons. So usually you're not allowed to fly in rain and so on. So it's all weather dependent, isn't it, if anyone tries to fly. They can actually fly in wet weather. I guess it's just not recommended. But when you do fly in wet weather, the rain gets caught in and actually goes over the people inside the basket. So it makes its way into the... But because of the flames, it comes down like a hot shower.
Starting point is 00:05:25 So it's really warm water that drops on them. That's nice. Yeah. That's very cool. Have you heard of Splash and Dash while we're talking about water and hot air ballooning? Splash and Dash is a cool thing you can do if you have a hot air balloon. It's where you sink just low enough. to dip your toes into a lake and then climb up again.
Starting point is 00:05:42 Oh, cool. It's pretty risky. How do you get your toes below the bottom of the basket? Well, there is a trend for ballooning with no basket these days. No way. You have a sofa. You have a sofa. What?
Starting point is 00:05:53 Yeah. No way. I've never seen that. It's not very common. It's a trend, though. It's a trend. You're serious people can go up in a sofa. You have to be strapped in, right?
Starting point is 00:06:04 I think it's really recommended that you track yourself in. I don't know. though, because I'd never fallen off my sofa. That's true. I mean, I don't know if that's true, but I used to. You look to me like the kind of guy who wouldn't. The type of things that are easy to kind of say on. That's true, yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:21 Not if it's swinging in high winds from a balloon that's 1,000 feet up. I don't have belts on my sofa, so I think mine wouldn't be safe at all. I've had belts fitted to all my sofas in the home. Just in case. Just in case. And they've saved my life on countless occasions. Well, speaking of no baskets for a hot air balloon, Have you heard of they're called smoke-hot air balloons?
Starting point is 00:06:43 It was a carnival attraction that used to happen. So this is during the 1800s. And this footage that you can see of this online, and it's honestly incredible. This was a daredevil thing. So what they would do is daredevils would attach themselves by a rope to an inflating hot air balloon with no baskets, so simply the balloon.
Starting point is 00:07:02 So the balloon would completely fill up. They would untether it, and it would rock it off into the sky, and these people would just be dragged behind it on the end of the ropes and would fly up after it. And when they got to a certain height, they would loosen themselves from the rope, fall down and parachute back to earth. Very cool.
Starting point is 00:07:20 It's absolutely incredible. You see them lob up. These people, they're surrounded by people in the videos and they just go fong and disappear off into the air. But you have to loosen yourself up before it gets too high, presumably. Yeah, I think you obviously know when you've had enough. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:34 I thought you were going to say they shot the balloon down. Why? Because I didn't imagine that they had a parachute on when you were describing it. So I was thinking, how would I get myself out of this one? Yeah. And my first choice would have been a gun instead of a parachute. What one item do you want to take up with you? I read a brilliant account.
Starting point is 00:07:59 This is actually the sources from 1838, but it was about something that happened in 1785. And it was when Jean-Pierre Blanchard, who was one of the first people to go up in a hot air balloon, went up. He went 6,000 feet up. And then he dropped from his hot air balloon a dog attached to a parachute just to kind of see what would happen. And this whirlwind, apparently, swept the dog away above the clouds. So it kind of disappeared. And Blanchard is in his balloon. This is what the account says handed down through the ages.
Starting point is 00:08:27 Blanchard was in his balloon and he met the dog who was in his parachute above the clouds. This is rubbish. Do you remember that thing that dance talks about the loop, the loop guy? Yeah, which is true. He fell out of his plane during a loop of the loop and then fell back into it once it had finished during the loop. Yeah, so he was upside down. He fell down. He thought he was doomed, but his plane, which was mid-loop the loop, met him at the bottom.
Starting point is 00:08:50 So do you remember how obviously false that was? Look, your thing sounds similar. Dan's defies physics. Mine, imagine a really small dog, like a little terrier with a parachute in high winds. It could be swept away into the clouds. And then old Blanchard saw his dog above the clouds, who barked with joy apparently at saying his master. He tried to grab him and they both had landed 12 minutes later separately after which the dog ran away. When you say barked with joy, do you not mean barked in absolute terror?
Starting point is 00:09:16 Parked in like, why the fuck did you just drop me out of that balloon, mate? He then shit himself with jai. Ben Franklin patented a balloon-related thing like he painted everything else. He patented a refrigerator that tethered to a balloon and it was meant to lift food up into where the air was cool. And that's how you'd refrigerate your food. I have heard of that before. That is so cool. It's inconvenient though.
Starting point is 00:09:40 It is. If you're going for a late night snack, it's... But all you have to do is pull it down. You just kind of winch it back down. You get your food out and then you let it go back up again. Again, I was thinking of shooting it down. I forgot to buy the anti thing.
Starting point is 00:09:53 These eggs are broken again. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Chuzinski. My fact this week is that in rage rooms, where people pay to smash things up, the things people want to smash things. up the most are printers. Yeah, they hate them. They hate printers.
Starting point is 00:10:16 So Raid rooms are these things that are kind of popping up all over the place. Quite a few of them in America and in Canada, where you pay to go and you can either smash up their possessions so they provide a bunch of stuff or you can bring your own stuff and they're becoming increasingly popular. Better to do with someone else's stuff, right? Well, I think it depends how much you just like that person. If you just like your own stuff a lot,
Starting point is 00:10:37 why did you buy it then? I know, but let's say you've got a pen that you really don't like. You're not going to smash up a pen. That is the most pussy rage room attendant I've ever seen you turning up with one viral. I'll have an hour with this guy, please. It keeps leaking. I do it really psychologically, though. I put it in a chair and then I shine a light in its nib.
Starting point is 00:10:58 I'd ask a load of questions before I beat it up. I'm holding a pen. I'm sorry, I've got a poor imagination. I love at the end of the hour you come up slightly beat up somehow. Just got stuff drawn all over his face. Penn strolls out nonchulately out of you. Hails a cab. But no, this is the thing.
Starting point is 00:11:21 If you go through the Rage Room site, there's one called Battlesports in Toronto that says it goes through 15 printers a week. The same in New York and the fragment room in Singapore. They all say printers are our most sought-after objects. We need to provide lots of them. People want to break them up. I like there's in America, in New York,
Starting point is 00:11:38 there's the Wrecking Club. and the Wrecking Club it has, you know, you can get packages that you can buy. So I want it all is a package you can get, which is $149. You can even buy gift certificates for people. So, you know, birthday presents, go for an hour in the Rage Room. They should have called it the Reckfast Club. Yes, they should have. Very nice.
Starting point is 00:11:56 Why didn't they? Yeah. We should start our own. You and your pens only. Yeah, so what's nice about this is it's the same, obviously, like every Rage Room. You go in and you destroy stuff. But what I particularly like is when they start. There was a guy who runs it called Mr. D-A-L-Y, or D-A-L-Y.
Starting point is 00:12:14 D-A-L-Y. He's called Tom Daly, I think, actually. Oh, is he? Mr. Tom Daly. So when he was in there, and they say this was an early setback, he was in the room showing a couple of all the things that they could do via his laptop of video. And then he left the room, but he accidentally left the laptop in there. They smash it up.
Starting point is 00:12:30 Yeah, so he came back in at the end. He was like, oh, and he didn't tell them because he thought, oh, I don't want to ruin their experience. But he, as of then, started labeling everything is, don't smash this. I went on the Wikipedia for rage rooms, but I did it about four months ago, so it might have been changed by now. But they said that the concept of an anger room is at least 20, at least 2,000 years old. Is it? Well, that's what Wikipedia says, and who are we to doubt them?
Starting point is 00:12:55 What do they say it is? They say it was Queen Kikei, who in an old book was said that she was going to the palace anger room. And actually it was a sulking chamber when I looked it up. That's how it's usually translated. Apparently it was like a dark room where you would lie down and sulk. Okay. Yeah. I do like the sound of that though.
Starting point is 00:13:16 Yeah. Yeah. Because people manifest, their rage manifests differently, doesn't it? Some people just want to lie down in the dark and be really pissed off with the world. Some of us like to smash our ex's stuff. Actually, the most, I say that because I think the most common thing for people who do bring in their own things are people who have had a breakup and they bring in all their ex's old stuff. This is what the Toronto place said. So it said for $20 extra, you can bring your own stuff to smash.
Starting point is 00:13:41 And the founder said that by far in a way, the most common thing to do is to bring in your ex's stuff. And he said, the people often come in and you'll hear them screaming and shouting in there, things like, oh, you think you're so good, arg, and then you'll hear it smash. Or you think you're always right. I think that's pronounced a. How do you pronounce, how do you spell arg then? Is it without the age? I don't think there is a word. Who says org?
Starting point is 00:14:03 Pirates. No, they don't they go, ar. Oh, yeah. we've not been hearing the end of their sentence one of the first ones that was set up in Dallas in 2011 by a lady called Donna Alexander and she just started charging five dollars to smash things that she collected from curbs in the area
Starting point is 00:14:22 she sort of picked it up so it was very ad hoc at the beginning and then she'd get people knocking on her door kind of like a fight club saying is this way you go to smash stuff up and her insurer had to invent an entirely new category just for her very exciting yeah And what do you mean by just picking stuff up, like, as in flight tipping? You know, when people leave things out, exactly, fly tipping, like leave an old fridge out or drop a lot of pens that they don't want anymore because they're faulty.
Starting point is 00:14:49 That's really cool. Yeah. Stuff on printers. Oh, yeah. I was reading about printer jams. And everyone finds them very annoying. Apart from people who work in printers who find them really exciting, they say it's the, it's the elemental. struggle between the natural and the mechanical
Starting point is 00:15:08 because paper is made out of trees and printers are made out of metal and shit and plastic. I think the ultimate challenge is throwing a dog with a parachute out of a hot air balloon and then catching it again. Do you guys know about the first printer ever to go into space? No. This was
Starting point is 00:15:26 a printer that was sent up on the ISS in 1998. Sorry this was the first color printer ever to go into space. So it was sent up in 1998 with a discovery mission and it was used solely to make Halloween masks. So it was sent up, it was kind of a secret thing. So John Glenn, who was by then a senator, was on that mission.
Starting point is 00:15:46 But he'd been the third person, I think, to orbit the Earth in 1962. And so he was this big space hero by that point. And so on that 1998 mission, the whole crew printed color portraits of him off this floppy disk. And they made these portraits into Halloween masks. And then they all went around pretending to be John Glenn in a nod to his greatness. Cool. I'd print out a full alien costume and then sell a tape it to myself and then freak my crewmates out. Do you think they'd fall for that?
Starting point is 00:16:13 Because I don't think anyone was flossing around going, oh my God, it's John Glenn. Oh my God, it's John Glenn. It's true. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact. My fact this week is one of the first things that McDonald's founder, Ray Croc, did when he bought the baseball team San Diego Padres, was to sign a player called Big Mac. Good. Did he do it because he was the founder of McDonald's or was he just a good baseball player? Big Mac was a great baseball player. Willie McCovey was his real name. He was a very good player and obviously Ray Kroc who built McDonald's from a very tiny brother operation of the McDonald brothers into the global success that it was, had an eye for franchising, for merchandising, for commercialization. He saw that by getting Big Mac in, he could do a lot of cross-promotion. So for example, during the first season, They did Big Mac Sundays.
Starting point is 00:17:13 So the idea would be that you could take a ticket stub and get a free Big Mac after a match if the Padres had won. Unfortunately, when the promotion started, they lost 11 straight home games. And so as a result, they had to change it to whether they win or lose, you get a free Big Mac. Yeah, they were terrible, weren't they, when he first took over? Yeah. Was it not a thing about him shouting at them on the pitch or something like that? Yeah, the first match, he went, he was very excited because the idea of him signing this new player and the fact that Ray Crocker taken over.
Starting point is 00:17:43 He got the attendance right up. For their opener, they drew 39,000 people, but they totally sucked in the match. And as a result, he went into the booth where the commentators were commentating on the match took over the tannoy. And he said, I have good news and bad news. The good news is that the Dodgers drew 31,000 for their opener,
Starting point is 00:18:03 and we've drawn 39,000 for ours. The bad news is that this is the most stupid baseball playing I have ever seen. He said that. to the players heard, the fans, and the friends cheered, they loved it, they loved that he was being honest, and then someone ran on the field a streaker and he yelled, get that streaker off the field, throw him in jail. So he was just commenting to the whole stadium of 39,000 people, his thoughts. It was amazing. He was angry.
Starting point is 00:18:30 Just before we did this show in Bristol, the night before, or the day before, I watched the founder for research for this, which is a really good film about Ray Kroc, but I can't remember any of it now. The only thing I remember is that when the brothers who founded McDonald's, so this is not Ray Kroc, their idea was called the method, I think. And they worked out the size of their kitchen and where everything went, so it was a most efficient possible way of running a kitchen. And the way they did it is they went to a tennis court and they had chalk
Starting point is 00:19:03 and they drew all the different possibilities. And they got people, hide people for very little money to try out pretending to cook all these burgers pretending to do milkshakes pretending to do fries until they got the exact one and they did this for days and days they eventually found the right one and then that night it rained and all of their chalk marks got washed away and they had to do the whole experiment oh no the whole sort of the design of the kitchen right like the choreography that's very cool oh wow do you know that red croc was in the same red cross company in the first world war driving ambulances as Walt Disney wow was it really yeah and they both went on to be
Starting point is 00:19:40 very successful in their own ways. And they both lied about their age to get in. Oh, really? Yeah. He had a really weird relationship with his wife, didn't he? Did he? Joan Croc. So she, Croc suddenly becomes a funniest her name when you attach it to Joan.
Starting point is 00:19:58 So I think first of all, they were married when he said he wanted to buy the Padres and she said, is that a monastery? And then it seems like they must have had some tensions because first of all, she launched an alcoholism charity called Operation Cork, which is Croc, his surname spelled backwards. And she used to produce TV dramas about the impact of alcoholism on families because I think he was an alcoholic. So she'd raised awareness about that. But also, when he died in 1984, she immediately gave away the estate and distributed all the money to all these, like some great charities. And also she gave a million dollars to the Democratic Party, which is a slap in the
Starting point is 00:20:36 face because Ray Croc was a massive Republican. He'd given like quarter of a million to Nixon's re-election campaign. So, yeah, she was, she sort of undid his legacy in some ways. And she was amazing for the baseball team as well, because after he passed away, she took over, but she knew virtually nothing about baseball. But in that first season, after she took over, her team made it to the World Series. Well, it sounds like she knew a lot about baseball unlike her husband. Well, she learned, yeah, she learned on the go.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Yeah, he definitely didn't like it. He at one point, after the Padres had lost, 102 games said, I bought the team to have some fun, but it's proving to be about as enjoyable as a wake, your own. That was his public comment about his own team. Your guy called Big Mac, I went on the internet and searched for some other names of baseball players, and I found that there was a guy called Thomas Lewis Fries, and another one called Philip Douglas Coke. So you can have Big Mac fries and Coke as players. Some of the players, cannonball titcomb.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Johnny Dickshot. Lovely. His nickname was ugly. So people called him Ugly Dickshot. And Wonderful Mounds. Nice. Nice. Wonderful. Sorry, that's a nickname, surely. His first name was wonderful. His second name was terrific. What? No. That doesn't sound like that. Actually, wonderful Mons.
Starting point is 00:21:58 Okay. I mean, it wasn't the surname that I was quibbling with. Wonderful terrific Mons. That's a good. good name. It's a lovely. Well, there's a guy in basketball called Meta World Peace.
Starting point is 00:22:10 That's his name. He's playing for China now and he's changed his name to panda. Okay. It just keeps,
Starting point is 00:22:16 yeah, it keeps going for name changes. There is an American footballer called Lion King. So, name king,
Starting point is 00:22:20 first name Lion. Yeah. That's so good. Do you know chicken McNuggets were almost onion McNuggets? They had trialed
Starting point is 00:22:27 the two. I'm not realizing that people might prefer chicken. They almost made them onions. That might be nice like an onion
Starting point is 00:22:32 bargy. I think so. Or an onion ring. Yeah, absolutely. It's like an onion ring, but it's an onion ball. Yeah, fine. It's like an onion bargy, in fact. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:42 There's a point. Do you know there's a secret rebel McDonald's operating in India? This is very cool. And he was blown their cover. Yeah, well, sorry, guys. There was a big kerfuffle between McDonald's global and the Indian version of McDonald's. Do they make McChicken barjys?
Starting point is 00:22:59 I don't know if they do. I hope they do. They do do a thing called McSpicy Panir. Which is very popular. It sells out every day. But they cancelled their franchise agreement with 150 restaurants. They said, oh, it's not working out for whatever reason. And the restaurants kept on going, selling the food. And no one's stopped them or intervened.
Starting point is 00:23:17 And they've left up the golden arches and everything. And they're still trading under the McDonald's name. Yeah. The arches aren't always golden. There are a few exceptions. One of which is in Sedona in Arizona. And they're turquoise. Why?
Starting point is 00:23:32 Any guesses? Why? Because the yellow. blends into the desert. Exactly. No. It was actually said it sort of clashed too much with it. So the opposite.
Starting point is 00:23:43 You're the right kind of lines. Yeah, the government said, look, that kind of clashes with our desert. It looks silly. Do something else. Yeah. I read that the guy who created the Golden Archers was offered a deal very early on in the day of a cut of it forever on or a one-off payment, which was a very low sum. They always take the very low sum.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Yeah. They always go in and they say, we'll offer you this very low sum. I'll offer you money for the rest of your life. And they always take it. They never even specify the low sum, do they? They just say very low sum. You want it? Okay, it is time for a final fact of the show, and that is James.
Starting point is 00:24:25 Okay, my fact this week is that the yellow-billed oxpecker bird sleeps in giraffe's armpits. So cool. Nice. We've known for a long time that they kind of hang out on these African animals. like giraffe and water buffalo and stuff like that, but they've only just found out that they stay there overnight as well. And that comes from a multi-year camera trap study in Tanzania Serengeti National Park. And so they're putting the cameras on these animals in the middle of the night,
Starting point is 00:24:54 and they found that the birds stay there. And it seems that usually they stay there, and they have this symbiotic relationship where they eat all the little bugs that live in the giraffe's armpits, and they get the protection of the giraffe. Not just the armpits as well. It's the leg pits. It's all the pits.
Starting point is 00:25:10 The crotch is. It's every one of the pits. So you can get up to seven birds in a single crotch. That was that YouTube video we used to watch in the first year of uni, I think. So the birds are one crotch. But it's really good. Giraffes are great. They're great beds because they're off the ground, meaning you're a bit safer as a bird.
Starting point is 00:25:31 Whereas, you know, Buffalo lie down and they're unstable. Giraff is stable. Well, except when a giraffe sleeps. Because they've been seen in the wild to be sleeping while laying down. And what they do is they bend around and they use their butt as a pillow. So they bring their head right around and rest it on the top of their butts. I would say the best thing about being a giraffe, actually. That you can do that.
Starting point is 00:25:51 It must be right. I mean, we would all kill to do that. But oxpeckers, they eat the little animals, but they also eat the host bodily fluids, including mucus, blood and snot. And even the goop that you get in your eyes. They also like to live on zebras And I read one article I'll just read a bit of it
Starting point is 00:26:11 Still in its statue-like pose The zebra raised its tail quickly And held it out behind its body The oxpecker immediately scuttled down On to the hairless black shiny skin That surrounds the zebra's anal region And worked this area assiduously Sounds like an extract from six birds one crotch
Starting point is 00:26:30 Oh I've got a fact about symbiotic anus relationships. So there's a kind of leech called Placob Deloides Jagaschioldi which is a leech which lives inside hippo anuses. It spends most of its life in fact
Starting point is 00:26:47 inside a hippo's bottom and they live for about 2.6 years. So they were covered in the new scientist in 1995 and the headline was leech rides the tunnel of love because it's safe from Oxpeckers actually. It's safer if you go right into the bottom and they have to swim into a hippo
Starting point is 00:27:03 bottom to have sex. Do they swim into it or do they just crawl into it? I think when the hippo is underwater. Underwater. But it has special tools designed to push open a hippo's sphincter. When you say tools, it's part of its body. It's part of its body, yeah. It doesn't come along for the little shovel.
Starting point is 00:27:21 One really cool symbiotic relationship, I quite like. Crabbs and urchins. Oh yeah. So I didn't know about this, but... I hope we talk about Victorian street children here. If we're not, I'm going to be very disappointed. And genital lice I have. Of course.
Starting point is 00:27:37 Cool, blarmy, governor. So you a crab for a farving. Stop scratching your crotch, dodger. No, it's neither of those things. It's sea urchins and it's just crabs like normal crabs. And so urchins travel on the back of crabs, which is useful for them as it means they can travel. So urchins can't really travel very well otherwise.
Starting point is 00:27:57 See the world? Exactly. Get out of there, take some photos. On the gap, yeah. Yep. Write some urchin postcards. But it's good for the crab because they can suddenly use it as a disguise or a weapon if they need to. So they can sometimes get the urchin down with their claw or face something with the urchin
Starting point is 00:28:12 and act like they've got a really awesome spiky back. Yeah. Wow. I've got another one just while we're on the symbiotic relationship role. There's an ant which is called Campanossa Schmitzi, which is a great name. And it only lives on a single species of pitcher plant. You know picture plants? They're the ones that consume prey by, I think they fall in or they drown.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Yeah. So they look like a... Yeah, yeah. Oh, wow. But the ants swim around in the digestive fluids of the plant. They consume the nectar of the plant, and they also consume some of the prey that the plant eats, but the plants which have ants swimming around in their stomachs, basically,
Starting point is 00:28:47 get bigger than those which don't have them, because the ants keep the traps clean, and they hunt mosquito larvae, which would otherwise soak up more nutrients. So it's beneficial if you're a pitcher plant, to have ants in your stomach. Oh, really? And the plants also eat the ants poo. Nice. as well as eating the ants.
Starting point is 00:29:04 They don't eat the ants. The ants survive in there. The ants are tolerated within the system. Yeah, you get some picture plants, don't you? Where you get little shrews who sit on the side of them and then poo into them as like little toilets. Yeah. Yeah, and they eat the nitrogen of those.
Starting point is 00:29:18 What's the benefit for the shrew? Because they don't mind where they poo. Just gets a toilet. Is that enjoyable? Yeah, yes, because it can sit there reading its iPhone. Okay, that makes so. It's beneficial. You wouldn't like it if we took away your toilet from you, Dan.
Starting point is 00:29:31 But if the concept, of toilets didn't exist for us. I would just poo here right now. They've now got the concept of toilets, so they have to go as a picture plant now. I mean, Dan's asked a very fair question here. What is going on? No animal understands the importance of a good sewerage system
Starting point is 00:29:44 except humans. Why on earth is a shrew clamping up at the top of the flower in order to take a shit rather than just doing it on the ground? I think what happens is it eats something from the flower, maybe some nectar or something. And that is a lexative. And then that makes it poo. I believe that's true.
Starting point is 00:30:02 So it almost can't get out in time. It's kind of like he's eating something and it sort of has to poo in the flour. It's like a delicious restaurant but with very bad hygiene standards. But then they use your poo to power their electricity. Oh, wow. Where is this restaurant? I feel a startup coming on. Hey, I've got something on armpits.
Starting point is 00:30:22 In the 19th century in Austria, there used to be this thing where at dances, women would carry underneath their armpits a single slice of apple. and they would hold it there all night long. And the idea was at the end of the night, the girl would approach someone who they fancied a guy, if it was a guy that they fancied, they would go up and they would take the apple out and they would present the apple.
Starting point is 00:30:43 They still do that on Love Island, I think, don't they? I think I'm sure. He presented to the guy. He presented to the guy eats it, he's saying, I'm keen. Yeah. Wow. And is there any way for him to say,
Starting point is 00:30:55 I'm keen without eating the armpit, if you're not willing to eat the apple that's been inside the armpit of your loved one, you don't love her at all. You're not keen enough. Yeah. So women's armpits smell of onion and men smell of cheese, apparently. And this is...
Starting point is 00:31:09 Well, between us, we can have a delicious bag of crisps. You know those like salt and shake crisps that you used to get where they don't taste of anything, but you have to put your own... Oh, are you proposing that you scissors someone else's armpit with one crisp in the middle and you get a lovely cheese and onion... I'm going to go to an Austrian dance. I think it doesn't cost anymore just to buy cheese and onion rather than... just buying cheese and then wiping it up against a woman's armpit.
Starting point is 00:31:35 That's true. I don't see why you would. Those crisps, they used to be the same price as ready salted crisps, but you still had to put extra work in. That's so weird. It was fun. Yeah, it was fun. But this is about compounds in their armpits, by the way,
Starting point is 00:31:47 this isn't just people sniffing them and saying, oh, that's onion-y. This is the compound that women's armpits generate is something cool, is a thio-alcohol, which when it combines with a bacteria, smells like onion. And then men sweat has... Sorry, do you say alcohol? Yeah, but don't go licking.
Starting point is 00:32:02 women's armpits for that. Again, it's not worth it. I'll buy you a beer. Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, James. At James Harkin. Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. And Chisinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep, that's right. You can go to our group account at No Such Thing or our Facebook. page, No Such Thing as a Fish, or our website. No Such Thing Asof Fish.com.
Starting point is 00:32:38 Do go there. It's got all of our previous episodes. It's got links to our upcoming shows. We are always doing live shows. So check it out if you ever want to see us. It has everything from book links. It's just got it all. It's where we put our things.
Starting point is 00:32:51 Okay. We'll be back again next week. See you then. Goodbye.

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