No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Spying With Ritz Crackers
Episode Date: August 25, 2022James, Anna, Andrew and Dan discuss emu eggs, exciting eclipses, musical machines and medical mishaps. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Clu...b Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at nosuchthingasafish.com/apple 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 Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber. I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Anna Tashinsky, and Andrew Hunter Murray.
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.
Okay, my fact this week is that in the 90s.
1330 World Cup semi-final between the USA and Argentina,
the American medic accidentally chloroformed himself and had to be carried off.
It's very funny.
And it raises for me a lot of other questions.
Like, who was he trying to chloroform?
Is that legitimate tactic?
And was it like a classic like a movie where the bank robber or whoever is trying to steal someone puts the rag over the, was he like holding his face?
There is so much wrong with this.
fact, I think, and we might go into all of it, but it's basically, it's on the FIFA website,
so I think it counts as a fact for us.
But I can't see it mentioned in any contemporary part, and chloroform doesn't really work
like that.
It's an incredible self-drive-by on your own fact.
I know, I know.
So he was called Jack Cole, is that right?
Jack Cole, yeah.
And there are a few versions of events on there.
So one is that he ran on the pitch, trying to help another player, and then his thing broke in
his bag, and he had chloroform in his bag, and then.
that broke and then the fumes the fumes raised and knocked him out yeah yeah that's one version
another version is that he went on to the pitch to argue with the referee about something
and threw a bottle of chloroform onto the ground in anger and that it came up and the fumes knocked him out
that's a red cord that's a red cord from the headlock um the earliest i've managed to trace a story back
is to a journalist called brian glanville and a lot of people think he's the greatest football
writer of all time he's really really famous but he was born in 1931 so he
couldn't have been at this match.
But it is on the FIFA website.
But the other thing is, if you look at contemporary reports from the newspapers at the time,
it's not mentioned.
And I found an interview with Jack Cole, which was done about 15 years later.
And he doesn't mention it in that interview.
You might not, though.
I couldn't remember.
It's amazing.
The self-knockout is just phenomenal, right?
It's one of those things where you don't know what to do when you see someone do it.
And Ash, who wrote the theme tune for our song,
He once was in a bar fight.
It's very weird.
Ash was in a bar fight.
Exactly.
You can't quite imagine it.
And he's the most Zen person.
He's so Zen.
So this was, I guess, just pre-Zen.
Just pre-Zen, Ash.
And he went for the first punch against these other people.
Wow.
And he took the swing.
And as he took the swing, he took a step forward, slipped, fell on the ground,
knocked himself out.
And that was end of fight.
Is that his only ever fight?
Yeah.
He caoed himself on the first go.
So he actually has a 100% record of knocking someone out.
Yes.
One win, one loss.
and his only match.
Another source I found this is a book called
Angels with Dirty Faces by Jonathan Wilson
which is the best book that I've ever read
on South American football
and he mentions it in that.
It's like such a big qualifier.
Like this is the best book I've ever read
is what they'll use on the camera.
Well this generally,
so we haven't really properly said
but 1930 World Cup was the very first ever
World Cup and it was set up
because the Olympics weren't taking football
seriously and they weren't having it as recognized as an official sport. So this was set up in South
America, but as a result of that distance, it meant that a lot of countries around the world
didn't come and play because the journey there and the journey back as well as the subsequent
tournament would mean they were out of play for like three months, which didn't work with their
local tournaments and so on. Also expensive for a lot of countries. And also the home countries,
so England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales, they thought that actually
really they were more important than FIFA
and so they had their own kind of home nations tournament
and they didn't really see this as a proper World Cup
so they weren't in it.
So I read that the American team
who were playing in this semi-final
was mostly made up of English and Scottish professional football
mostly Scottish, yeah.
I did a count.
I made it to be five Scottish players
and one English player.
That's a lot.
It is a lot.
It's more than you're normally allowed, I think.
I don't know what I think.
And Cole was Irish.
I think, wasn't he?
Yeah.
In fact, he was Irish brought up in Scotland,
and he'd just gone to America to track down his father
who'd run out on him.
And he found himself in America,
and they were like,
God, are you from the British Isles?
Yeah, would you mind playing for us?
But it's weird, because America were quite good then.
So I don't know why they had to poach.
This was like a heyday for American football.
And it sort of plummeted after this
because of the football wars or the soccer wars,
I think, where they, it's so unexciting.
It's the most boring war ever.
It's like there were two bodies.
Everyone just clover for them.
themselves. No, there were two bodies trying to manage football who were competing with each other.
It was like the USFA and the ASL and they fought so much that everyone was like, well, this is tedious.
You're all arguing so much. And the depression came, which didn't help. So, and the American team,
they were known by the French as the shot potters because they were so big. They were like really
big, strong players. But they got battered in this game. They lost 6-1 to Argentina. And one of the
reasons might have been because one of the players got a broken leg in the first half. I so don't believe
this. Look, I've seen people with broken legs and it's really painful. It was a guy called Ralph Tracy
and apparently afterwards he was diagnosed with that. But I reckon it was a tiny chipped bone max.
You're saying he played on? Yeah, he played on the whole game. He got broken leg, yeah,
really early on. It was really weird because there was another player, Andy Old, who ripped his
lip open. Yeah. And the problem was, is that there were no sort of proper rules about how you could
treat the wound and so he played the rest of a match with a rag in his mouth to sort of stem the bleeding.
Unfortunately that rag had got chlorophon.
Yeah.
And so basically they were a good team, but they basically got beaten from pillar to post.
And in the end, by the second half, they really were just hobbling around and the Argentinians
absolutely battered them.
Yeah.
Although quite nice that they, because it was 6-1 and America scored their goal in the last,
in the 89th minute, I think.
Yeah.
Well, you think kind of what's the point?
Why are you still trying at that point?
It was a bit of honour.
Yeah.
In the final, which was Argentina versus Uruguay,
Uruguay won that final,
and in Argentina, they kicked off.
The Uruguayan embassy was attacked.
They did a morning parade through Buenos Aires,
and two people were reportedly shot for not saluting
as the parade went past.
Oh, my God.
Amazing.
One newspaper said that since they'd lost Argentina,
probably it meant that international football tournaments
were a bit useless, so they should just never do them ever again.
And eight players from that Argentinian team never played for the country ever again.
Wow.
This feels like it's about, you know, in a marriage where you have a massive fight about where you keep the spoons.
Not about the spoons, really.
I don't think it's about the spoons.
With me, it actually always is about wave you're doing spoons.
I think it's a very clear place where they should be.
Yeah.
Andy's liked to his wife, you've had an affair.
She's like, this is about the spoons, isn't it?
Yes, it's about the spoons.
Yeah, there was a ref called John Languangelo.
goodness, Langanus.
I think he's pronounced long anus.
Long anus. Sorry.
I imagine that's what the fans sung to him.
Yeah, John, long, anus.
He was Belgian, right?
Yes.
And he was the head ref of the, so he was the one who officiated the final.
And he was really worried about the tensions are running really high, as James says,
like even post the match.
So one of the Argentinian players, Louis Monti, he got a death threat sent.
And the referee demanded a quick escape.
route to get back to his ship.
Not a secret tunnel, but as near as damn it, safe passage.
Exactly, because he thought whatever call he makes.
So Longganis asked for a safe passage, did he?
Yeah, so, I mean, it did sound like it was a bit of an intense atmosphere.
And there was a controversial goal in that final as well.
So, yeah.
Well, Louis Monty, for instance, he was like the hard man of the Argentinian defense, but he did
get this death threat.
And afterwards, there was a suggestion in the Argentinian media that, you
it was one of the Uruguayan players who rang him up with a silly voice and said he was going to kill him.
But in the end, he still played.
He didn't think he was going to play.
But all the way through, he would kind of try and ingratiate himself with the crowd.
So whenever a Uruguayan player went down, he would sort of go and help them up and stuff like that.
What, in the hope that the guy who was going to kill him with holding the revolver somewhere in the crowd and thought, oh, he is a nice guy.
After all, yeah.
I'll put it away.
One of the other things about the crowd that was there.
So it was 90,000 plus.
But that was only five days into the tournament
because their main stadium, the Estadio Centenario,
was not ready in time.
And because of the weather as well would raining.
So there were two other smaller stadiums where they ended up going to as well.
Yeah, it was the grass hadn't grown properly, right?
And so they thought that the studs would kind of dig it up.
The cleats for American listeners would kind of dig up the ground.
Was this because of the weather?
Because one thing I read was it had rained for 92 consecutive days
before the first game of this world car.
Oh, imagine the state of their reservoirs.
Lovely.
Yeah, gorgeous.
Lovely.
Very green lawns.
Yeah.
We could do it 92 days of rain right now.
It's like that.
Do you remember that summer when Rihanna's umbrella was in the charts and it rained for like three months nonstop here?
Did it?
Yeah, yeah.
Is that why the song did so well?
There was a suggestion of that, yeah.
I remember it was like they had real problems at Wimbledon because they couldn't play any of the matches because it just rained nonstop.
And is there a suggestion that Rihanna did some Cloud Seatsy?
I think there is.
I think the label did.
Yeah.
She probably didn't know about it.
She flew the Cessna herself.
Chloriform?
Yeah.
I've got a sample here.
That's enough of your chat up lines.
So, yeah.
Chloriform is really, really interesting stuff in that.
I just love the story of how it was first used.
It was first properly introduced to surgery in the UK
by a doctor called James Simpson.
And before that they were using ether,
but the dose is very hard to get right
and it smells horrible and all of this.
So, you know, chloroform was an improvement.
And in 1847, Simpson had two other doctors
who were called Keith and Duncan,
their so names, I think, round to dinner.
And they decided, he said,
look, I've got this stuff, do you want to try it?
And they tried it, got lightheaded, laughed a lot,
and then all just fell unconscious.
And then someone came into the room and they were just...
I imagine one of them went,
ha, ha, your surname's also a first name.
Oh, yours is as well.
Yeah, exactly.
They actually had witnesses for the whole thing.
It sounds like they had really fun parties, these guys.
And they'd spent an entire summer trying to find a better replacement for ether.
So they'd spent an entire summer inhaling various concoctions of gases
round their dining room tables of collapsing and having fits and stuff.
And then they remembered that I've got this thing called chloroform that a friend told me about.
I think it's under some waste paper.
picked it out, they tried it.
And yeah, apparently unwanted hilarity
seized the party for a while
and their conversation was of unusual intelligence
for a few minutes.
The first woman who took it was actually at the party that night
because there were family and friends there
who were finding them all so charming and entertaining.
And so once they sampled it a few times,
the guests decided to say, well, can we ever go?
And she apparently gallantly took her turn
and then fell asleep while crying,
I'm an angel, I'm an angel.
actually I think she wasn't the first woman to take chloroform
so this is that so it had been discovered
it was discovered about three times by three different people in the same month or so
and a little of my I should say a lot of my fact that it's come from a book called chloroform
by linda stratman which is great and rollicking
absolute knockout
again on the comments for the cover so Samuel guthrie was a doctor in Massachusetts
and he thought what he had was this thing called Dutch liquid
There was an existing recipe for
which involved chlorine and, you know,
chloric ether.
So he had made it, but he'd kind of accidentally distilled it one extra time
or there was an extra ingredient in the mix when he made it.
So he had chloroform without knowing it.
But because he thought it was a known substance,
which was already being used for medicine,
he just kept some in his lab
and would distribute bottles to friends and family.
And his daughter, who was 8-year-old Cynthia,
would often run into the lab,
dip her fingers in the liquid, taste it,
and that was just a little treat for her.
On one occasion, she took too much of it,
and she fell over completely asleep.
And so she was probably the first person to be knocked out by chloroform.
Wow, what a claim.
Yeah.
And Strattman writes,
it is probable that he simply assumed she was drunk.
It's all right, everyone.
It's all right.
My eight-year-old's drunk.
She's not to self out with chloroform.
Don't worry.
And what do we use it for today?
Is it used still to put patients under?
No.
We use it for manufacturing.
I think it's used to make Teflon.
It's a sort of primary ingredient for Teflon, yeah.
Right.
But no, it sort of fell out of use.
It started falling out of views in the 19th century
because people started to question.
Because it kills people.
Yeah.
Also, I think it gets a bad press.
Like it kills, they did a massive study
and found that it killed one in 2,500
of the patients that had been used on in the 19th century,
which it's not great, but it's not terrible for 19th century medicine.
For 19th century, yeah.
And then there was another study which found it killed like four in a thousand.
But I think the first.
400,000 one was done in the Civil War when everyone was quite injured anyway.
So you're not at your best.
What a journey it's had, you know, in terms of its repurposed uses.
Like if it was on who do you think you are and you were like, your ancestor used to like
kidnap people, you know, and then you're...
Is that something to be proud of?
Well, you know, in movies, that's the classic thing.
It goes to fumigate grain.
That does it?
Yeah, yeah.
It's fun use of it.
God, it actually feels like you've fallen from grace from the great glory days of kidnapping and curing people
from the Civil War.
You're not like a farmer.
Now you're in like the cooking industry with Teflon.
We don't know that anyone was really kind of kidnapped using it, right?
Because it's really hard to use.
Yeah.
We might have said this before, but basically you'd need the exact correct dosage.
Otherwise, they would just feel a bit woozy or they would die.
You'd have to get the exact thing in between.
And also it would take around five minutes.
Did it even happen in movies or is that one of those mismanories?
It happens in a Sherlock Holmes story.
It happens in Dickens, I think.
Or Wilkie Collins, I think, maybe?
That's weird, because Dickens' wife used chloroform to give birth.
Yes.
So, Dickens was well into chloroform, right?
And it's in one of his books.
And I can't remember which one it is, unfortunately.
But it was in one of his books, but he doesn't call it chloroform because whenever the book was set, it was before chloroform had been invented.
So he talks about this kind of special thing which knocks someone out really quickly, but he doesn't specifically say it's chloroform.
Because he was so into chloroform, we're pretty sure that's what he meant.
That's great.
Like you say, it is quite hard to administer.
It does have this really dark Goldilocks phase where it works.
And then on either side it's a bit useless.
But even so, there was this massive spate of crimes reported in the 40s.
As soon as it became popular.
1840s.
In the 1840s.
Yeah, the 40s.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Yeah.
I think you're ashamed.
When I say the 90s, I'm usually referring to the 1790s.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're the 90s club night.
How's it going, then?
There's a lot of baroque music or something.
A lot of ether.
A lot of fun actually.
But yeah, there were things, there were all these stories about, you know, a handkerchief would be waved in the face of someone and they would collapse or a lot of stories of women coming up behind men and putting a handkerchief to their face.
Women, chlorofer roaming men.
Yes.
Blow for equality.
I know.
Score, right?
But there was one doctor, actually, who got so annoyed by all these stories by, I think, the 1850s or 60s.
Because he said, this doesn't make any sense.
It takes minutes and minutes for it to work.
That he eventually soaked a handkerchief in chloroform and waved it in front of.
his aunt's face until he was absolutely
exhausted of shaking to prove that it
couldn't do anything.
Was he proven that to his aunt?
Maybe though, I don't know the argument that
came before that.
Something give a spoons.
Okay, it is time for fact number two
and that is Anna.
My fact is that there's a group of astronomers
called Solar Wind Sherpers
who drag their equipment around the world
to watch every single solar eclipse.
Wow.
Cool.
I think these guys are so cool.
They've been going since 1995, so they visited every single eclipse since then.
Eclipse has happened.
Total Eclipse were talking about once every 18 months.
It was set up by this woman called Shadir Rifai Habal, who's a scientist.
And yeah, they take all their equipment and they go and watch eclipses.
And they want to see the corona, which is the bit when you see a totality in an eclipse.
You've got that little bit of ring of light around it.
And that's basically the stuff that the science.
is emitting and it's always too bright.
The rest of the sunlight is too bright for us usually to see it.
It must be hard for them to Google Corona these days.
It was a struggle with the beer, but I think the last few years has made it a lot worse.
And so how long they've been doing this?
How long have they been trekking?
Since 95.
Since 95.
Yeah.
That's 1795.
Yeah.
They're called umbra files as well, aren't they?
They got called coronafiles, eclipsaholics.
Yeah, you don't want the coroner files nickname
Catching on it.
You really want to shed that.
I got these from the website
Being in the Shadow.com,
which is an eclipse chaser.
Set that up.
Who's seen 12 now?
Cool.
You've seen 12.
That's so cool.
It's a lot.
People get really into it.
Yeah.
You know, they see their first one.
You think if you've seen one eclipse,
you've seen them all.
I know I'm...
I know the Eclipseophiles
are going to come up from now.
I'm going to throw some shade.
But yeah, I would have thought
they were all the same.
You'd think so, but I guess it's such a unique event even for our solace system.
Well, obviously, not if they've seen 20 other than.
No, I guess I mean like saying your first cocaine high, once you've done that,
you've done all, you know.
Some people do, I guess, be going back.
They do chase them.
They get addicted.
They get addicted.
They do get addicted.
They do get addicted.
They do.
They do it.
They do it.
Yeah.
Well, Matt Parker, a buddy of ours, who's a friend of the podcast, Steve Mould, who's on
last week.
They're in a group together.
He goes chasing eclipses.
Yeah, sometimes on cruises with his wife, because Lucy, his wife, is a
actual solar physicist. She looks at coronal mass ejection for her, for her livelihood. And actually,
just speaking of them as a couple, there's a thing that gets done with eclipses now. So it's called
Bailey's Beads, right? And that is an actual phenomena of an eclipse. It's like a corona, but they're
just really beads rather than a full circle. Exactly. It's, it's so it looks like diamonds.
When the moon is over the sun. When the moon is over the sun. And it's to do with the fact that I believe
because the moon obviously has bumps and lumps all over it, it's sort of like when the final bit of the
eclipse is covered, a little bit will come through a bit that's a bit lower. So they look like
little diamonds and people propose to their... But you won't be able to see you're being proposed to.
Oh yeah, good point. Because it's a totality of an eclipse. It's totality of an eclipse. How much that's so
distracting? I'd definitely say no, regardless. You've only got six minutes to watch it.
But wait a minute, you can see people in the dark when there's a new moon or something. You can still
see people. But I thought the whole point of a totality in eclipse was that you can't see anything.
You can't see how course you can. It doesn't go pitch black, Andy.
Do you not remember the eclipse?
When there's a solar eclipse?
Yeah, it just goes quite dark, like a light night.
Do you, 99, we were all alive.
Oh, yeah, but I wasn't in Cornwall wherever it was.
I actually was in Cornwall and it wasn't that dark.
It was quite dark, but you could make out someone proposing to you.
If someone's somebody marrying me, I wouldn't be groping around the front of the going.
Who said that?
There are so many possibilities.
Wow.
Oh, okay.
I thought it weren't really dark.
Well, when there's no moon at nighttime, you can still make things out.
You can still make out, like, shadows.
I've got my phone torch on.
Was that the thing?
Was it the last time a full eclipse was in the UK?
It was 1999.
Yeah.
That were anywhere in the UK.
I remember seeing footage of it.
And wasn't it lots of people were taking photos with flashes on their cameras at the time?
It was just incredibly annoying because, you know, obviously you're trying to see the wonder of...
Yeah, that would have been the pain in the ass with a massive torch.
I've lost my diamond ring.
There was a big solar eclipse in North America in 2017.
But at that time they had a load of monitoring station.
and they were checking the bees in North America.
And at the moment of complete pitch black,
all of the bees went silent,
apart from one bee.
It was one bee who buzzed.
And they don't know why.
This is a Disney film.
I know.
That's really?
Isn't that so funny?
Just one bee didn't get the memo.
And Candace Galen at the University of Missouri
says that maybe he was slow,
getting back to the hive, or he was a bee with particularly good eyesight, who wasn't affected by the eclipse.
That's so funny. There was a story about a squirrel going nuts as well during the eclipse.
Really, really, really spitty. Sorry, I missed my own thing. And afterwards, they were like,
do squirrels go crazy in the eclipse? Or was it just the fact that we only saw one squirrel and we're
basing all the knowledge now on that? So on this point, there has been a study from 2020,
titled Total Eclipse of the Zoo,
which is all about how all the different
animals in the zoo react.
It's not a...
Why does that work as a pun? It doesn't rhyme with heart?
It's not a pun. It's a reference
to eclipses, and...
But it's a reference to the song?
Yeah, it's a reference to the song, total clips.
Then it's a bad reference. If you're going to make a reference,
make it a good reference.
Total eclipse of the heart, but you take out the E
and then you just study deer.
That's good. That's really good. That is good.
Well, they wanted, I think, of a slightly broader remit for their study.
Total eclipse of the heart.
other deer and other animals
All sorts of animals actually
Wart hogs anecdotally show no reaction to total eclipses
Komodo dragons move around a bit more than usual
Giraffes huddle together
Yeah
That's so good
Spiders dismantle their webs
Yeah how weird's that
Well like one specific species of spider rights
Yeah the orbweavers
Yeah just takes it down
Total eclipse of taking you're a web apart
There we go
It's closer
Lovely there you go
much closer
oh dear
there was a
from in August 2017
the I think this is the eclipse
that you were talking about
there was a story went round
which it turns out wasn't true
but it got picked up by everyone
we think it's we think it's not true
it's not confirmed entirely
where a bunch of people
were hospitalized
because their eyeballs were really hurting
because they weren't able to get their hands
on the proper glasses
that you would wear
to use to look at the event
so instead they thought
they'd put sun tan lotion on their eyeballs
stop.
And that would help.
No, that's not true.
That's the story.
And it was reported by Forbes and Snopes tried to get to the bottom of it.
And they called up all the places.
They never heard back from the one lady who was quoted, who was called Trish Patterson,
who gave a quote saying that this had happened.
So it's inconclusive.
Because people have sunglasses.
I mean, that's the thing.
But these people didn't have sunglasses.
I mean, normal sunglasses, not special sunglasses.
Because I know you can't get special.
Are they lined with a particular?
Yeah, yeah, they are.
But as Andy says, you would have thought before you go to the suntan lotion on the eyeball,
you would go for a pair of sunglasses.
Like an ordinary pair of sunglasses.
Yeah, but you might just be out in the beach that day or whatever.
You've got your suntan lotion.
You haven't got access to glasses.
You've forgotten as a solar eclipse happening.
You're going to...
Someone said you could use a ritz cracker because there's little holes in the ritz cracker.
So if you hold two ritz crackers to your eyes, I don't think that works either.
No, no.
Is it ultraviolet?
It will still let the sunlight onto your retina to burn it.
I think you might be able to hold a ritz cracker and then put a sheet of paper behind it.
And I reckon you'd see the...
Because then the image of the sun appears on the paper.
but don't put the cracker over your eyes
Well, look, lots to test out when the next solar eclipse happens.
I'd never thought of using a ritz cracker for stuff like that, though.
You could spy on people with a ritz cracker or, you know,
when they have newspapers on a bench and a park as spies.
I think the idea is that you think someone's reading the newspaper,
which is a completely normal thing that someone might do,
whereas putting two ritz crackers over your eyes,
it's going to automatically arouse suspicion.
You'd have to spend years normalising that activity,
And there could be a really fun viral
like a real like Crackers did.
Like the Ice Bucket Challenge.
Yeah, yes.
Putting Ritz crackers over your eyes.
Yes.
Everyone does it.
Get Ritzy.
Yeah.
And then it's all part of the long game
for that bench moment.
If anyone from Ritz Crackers is listening.
Or MI6.
Please do get in touch.
It's unlikely brand partnership in history.
Ritz Crackers and M.6.
So another famous eclipse chaser is Cecilia Payne Gaposhkin.
In 1919, when she was
19 years old, she went on a solar eclipse expedition to Africa.
She later became the first woman to chair a Harvard department.
So she's a very famous academic.
And she is a person who proved what stars are made of by spectroscopy of the light emitted.
So she worked out that it's made of helium and hydrogen, mostly all the stars, the sun and all stars.
Oh, so we only found that out.
When did you say?
In the early 20th century.
Oh, early 20th century.
Yeah.
So before that, they thought it must be made of metal.
some kind of maybe some meteorites are flying into the sun and that metal kind of burns and burns and burns.
That's what they thought.
Anyway, she worked out that it was made of mostly hydrogen and she wrote this paper about it.
But everyone thought it was obviously bullshit.
How on earth could that possibly be true that the stars are made of hydrogen and helium?
And so when she wrote her thesis, at the very end she wrote,
this result is almost certainly not real.
What?
Because she wanted to protect her career
She thought that if she did this
Yeah, she didn't back herself
And it would be another 10, 20 years
Before people realised that that was true
That's terrible
Well, all you're hedging your bets and cheating, guys
You can't say, oh, here's what I definitely think
Except I may be just joking
Have you guys heard of Donald Liebenberg?
No
From Clemson University in South Carolina
A very well-established
Umbrofile, eclipsych,
Call him what you will
nerd
So he's not seen more eclipses than anyone else
There is a group of people who as of 2017
Had seen 33 each and they were the front runners
Which is a lot
Do you reckon there's going to be like a murder mystery
Where they all knock each other off so that one person has the most
Or there's another eclipse but it's in a difficult place
And they all stop each other from getting there
And like it's a mad mad mad mad mad mad world
Oh yeah yeah this is great
Anyway Leavenberg he's
Okay riddle me
this. He's not seen the most eclipses in the world. He's only seen 26. Yeah. But he's spent more time
in the totality of eclipse than anyone else, even though other people have seen several more than him.
Yes. How can it be? Is he a pilot? No, but you're so close to the right. Was he on a plane?
He's in a house. Yes, yes. No, for the 1973 eclipse, which is on June 30th of that year,
there was a group of eclipse experts who got on Concord. Yes, that's right. And they followed the path of it,
and they experienced 74 minutes of total eclipse at a thousand miles an hour.
Crazy.
How cool is that?
It is cool.
It also was a sign you've got too much money.
How did they see where they were going, Andy?
Surely.
Obviously, the plane had a torch on its front.
Planes have headlights, you know.
But to me, right, the whole point of an eclipse is it's over in like six minutes, right?
It's like, it's bright and then there's six minutes of weirdness, and then it's bright again.
if you're going for 74 minutes
you might as well just fly at night time
exactly but I think things might stay weird
and get really weird
79 you're going to have to replenish the
sun tan on your
on your eyeballs
I actually
I was wondering about the glasses
for people who can get hold of them
the special ones
and I found out that
there's a company called
American Paper Optics
who are the main producers of them in America
and their revenue
doubles in years of solar eclipses.
Wait a minute. What are people buying?
You'd think it would more than double.
You would think it would be an enormous spike in those years and quite lean in the other years.
They make other types of glasses as well.
They make 3D glasses.
So most of their custom is like, you know, you go to three-d cinemas.
Or you sell them in cereal packets.
They're mostly freebies that they hand out.
So they get branding deals with companies.
But in, like in 2017, for instance, their revenue went from.
million to $14 million.
That's doubling.
And that's that's doubling.
That's what doubling is.
And they prepared for two and a half years for the 2017 clip.
They doubled their staff.
And the guy who...
Well, they could afford to, couldn't they?
With all that double revenue they were counting on.
It works out perfectly.
It's good projection.
And they, the guy who runs the company is a guy called John Gerrit, who seems to be really
obsessed with eclipses.
He actually got his big glasses break in the cardboard glasses world.
In 1991, when this astronomer got in touch and said,
going to be an eclipse. Can you make some glasses for me? I hear that you make cardboard glasses.
And it ended up being a massive deal. And he sold a million glasses to Corona beer in 1991.
No. When the eclipse was in Mexico. Clever. And I think it must be that Corona, because of the
Corona and the Corona, perfect partnership. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Genius. That's very good. Yeah.
There was, you know, we spoke about Solar Eclipse's not on a podcast, but on a book.
2017, our book of the year. We had literally our.
scripted conversation in there.
There's a great fact in there, which is that NASA has two accounts, which is NASA Moon
and at NASA Sun.
And on the day of the eclipse, NASA Moon blocked NASA Sun.
It's on Twitter.
Yeah.
Brilliant.
Okay. It is time for fact number three.
And that is my fact.
My fact this week is that in 1906, there was a music streaming service which involved just
two people playing keyboards down the telephone.
So would I ring up and I'd immediately get piano music played at me?
You would, yeah, so this was...
Was there someone waiting for a call, basically?
And whenever the phone rang, they'd have to answer it and start playing piano at me.
No, this is phenomenal when you think about the sort of the scale of what this person had built.
So this was a lawyer called Thaddeus Cahill, and he's 1867 to 1934.
And at the end of the 1800s, he decides he wants to invent a machine.
whereby if you called up this one phone number,
you would get music just streaming to you.
And it was a subscription model.
So he was going to sell it to hotels and restaurants and so on.
What you would do is you would hold a paper funnel to the phone receiver.
So that would act as your amplifier to the room that you were playing it out to.
I think in answer to your question,
that they would be just playing Bach or whatever.
And whenever you phone them up, you would get whatever they're playing at the time.
So if they're playing chopsticks, you'd get chopsticks.
So he basically invented.
the concept of Musak, sort of background music that can just be playing. But he, to do this,
he invented a machine, which was called the telharmonium, which was as big as the office space
that we're in right now, a ginormous room in Manhattan. All these... Can I just say, Dan,
sorry to interrupt, but people at home don't know what the QI office is like. So I think at the
moment they're imagining like an aircraft hangar. We can now have clips on YouTube. You can watch it
You're so right.
It weighed 200 tons.
It weighed 200 times.
And it was 60 feet long.
So it's actually significantly longer than the bit of the office that you can currently see now
if you are watching it on YouTube.
Yes.
Yeah.
A picture more feet the other way from the video.
They had all these phone lines that would be hanging in front of basically a ginormous
gramophone horn, which was the music is what was being pumped through.
I mean, it's very complicated to get your head around what this machine was.
But effectively, what Cahill had invented was, was.
the first synthesizer. It was electronic music. I love the way of explaining how complicated
all the wires were and stuff. The Republican and Herald newspaper in Pennsylvania in 1907 started
off explaining how it works and then said, it would be useless to describe the more complex
principles of the telharmonium because it would require diagrams and mathematics.
I'm with him. It's really sounds I want to dance.
Yeah, what's the surname of that? Yeah. So this was in Manhattan, as I said,
say it was located on Broadway in 39th Street. It took up an entire floor of the building. He called
it the telharmonic hall. He also called it the music plant. And he advertised it as the music of
AD 2000, which really cool, really sci-fi. He knew he was onto something that was kind of looking
into the future. Now, there's no radio at this point. This guy is decades ahead of any other
kind of broadcasting of just playing music out. And there was a rumor that this was all generated
this music by two people who would supposedly play for 24 hours.
That was said in passing in an article, so there's no confirmation on that.
It might be a peer.
Yeah, but the music was being played by people.
And supposedly, this is where I get confused, could emulate sounds like the flute or...
Yeah, well, it was electronic.
That was why it was so amazing.
Yeah, but how, did they record the...
No, no, you add...
So I thought this is really interesting, because I've never known how, like, when you get an electric
keyboard and you press a button that plays a symbol or whatever, how do they do it?
And it's basically just you add lots of harmonics to,
one tone. So another amazing thing about this is it wasn't a normal musical instrument. It was
an electronic instrument. So I think if you stood next to it, I'm not quite sure how the gramophone
horn bit works. If you stood next to it, you couldn't hear it play, I don't think. You could only
hear it play when the electrical signals were transmitted through cables and they were interpreted
into sound at the other side. And the electrical signals through this very complex system, you could
overlay lots of different notes on top of each other. So you'd have like the main note, but then
they worked out that the reason a trumpet sounds different to like a violin.
is because there are kind of like harmonic sounds overlaying that main note.
That's insane.
It is unbelievable.
I'd love to know how realistic it was.
Well, the other thing is that on top of what Anna's saying,
there's quite a lot more,
but it would be kind of difficult to explain without mathematics.
So it probably won't go into all that stuff now.
And we don't have any recordings.
This is the other thing.
And it doesn't exist.
And it doesn't exist anymore.
It was dismantled. It was sold for scrap.
It's incredibly tragic.
And there were complaints as well.
So it interrupted other transmissions at various points.
Yes.
So many complaints.
The US Navy complained that they had secret wireless transmissions,
which they'd like to hear, but they were getting Rossini overtures instead.
Thanks to the Telharmonium.
Yeah.
Interrupted phone calls a lot.
I mean, that was one of the reasons that it didn't succeed in the end,
was that there were just so many problems with it.
People would be on the phone and music would bleed in.
And in fact, I read one newspaper article from the time saying it had almost broken up a marriage
because a husband had called his wife.
to say he was working late in the office.
But she heard the William Telt Overture playing in the background.
So of course, said, bullshit are you in the office?
May you're out at a concert.
Having sex to the William Telle.
The Lidlind, didlind, didlid, dillin, d'lidlid, didn't.
The US Navy one, I think, by the way,
later on, I think in 1911,
he worked with a guy called De Forest,
and they came up with a new system
that was basically the Tellharmonium,
but instead of going through telephone lines,
they would use radio technology.
and it was when the US Navy was using radio technology as well
they would get that kind of thing.
So it was a later bit of his career
where he was working on something else
where he was still interrupting.
He was still getting it.
And it must have been good because it did get good reviews
so we don't have any samples of it anymore
but Mark Twain basically said he would postpone his death
just to hear it again.
Wow.
How confident was he that he could do that?
Exactly.
That sounds like you're in a situation
where someone's about to kill you and you like,
no, no, just one second.
I just want to listen to the William Teller of Char.
One more time.
A last, yeah, like a last meal, a last song.
So he was quoted.
He went to a recital, basically.
He was invited to go to one.
And he said, every time I see or hear a new wonder like this,
I have to postpone my death right off.
I couldn't possibly leave the world until I have heard this again and again.
And so in 1907, at this point, the plan of Cahill was that he wanted to put it into
places like, as I said, hotels and restaurants.
But he couldn't get it into people's homes.
And Twain managed to work out that he could get it into his home because of his celebrity status and so on.
And so the Times reported that he was going to glory in the fact that he would be able to rejoice over other dead people when he died in having been the first man to have teleharmonium music tuned in his house like gas.
Twain seemed to really, really like it.
He said he wanted streetlights to be connected to it, which would play the funeral march during his funeral.
As his funeral procession went out.
He seems quite obsessed with death, doesn't he mark Twain at the moment.
Yeah, yeah.
He was getting old by this point, wasn't he?
Yeah.
Goddy, annoying, meeting him in the afterlife,
immediately going, yeah, in your face, I heard the telharmonium.
Well, you do know that got dismantled after two years, don't you,
and no one ever heard of it ever again.
What?
There was an earlier thing called the Teatrophone in 1881,
and that played, it was in Paris, and it was the theatre phone,
and it transmitted music, but also some theatrical productions over the phone.
Cool.
No, hang on a second, if phones exist in 1880s.
Yeah, there were quite a few.
There was only one.
Now there were some in 1880s.
When was it in 1870?
Was that when Bell patented?
Gosh, it's early, isn't it?
Well, because people thought with the phone,
weirdly, they thought the phone was going to be used for mass entertainment.
And they sampled this loads of time.
So, yeah, there was the 1881 thing.
There was, I think the longest running most successful version of mass entertainment via
phone was the telephone newspaper.
And this was in Hungary.
And it was invented in 1893, and it ran until 1944.
And it was a subscriber service.
And you just called it whenever, and you got either.
It started off just being a news service, so you called it and they tell you the news.
But then it was music performances.
There were, you know, like fun, new pop songs, whatever you played.
When was this?
Comedy shows, 1893.
So was it a live program?
Yeah.
So you didn't request.
So you didn't, you had to tune in at, let's say, noon for the headlines.
Exactly.
And if you missed the headlines, you might get the column later on.
the crossword.
Yeah, there was no record option.
You can go to it later on.
That's brilliant.
That's incredible.
Even in the 1920s, 10,000 people were signed up to the system in Hungary where you called
up to get your news.
That's amazing.
But do you remember when the internet first started and it was through telephone lines?
Whenever anyone was making a call, you couldn't use the internet.
Yes.
Well, it would be the same here.
If someone was listening to the news, you wouldn't be able to make a call?
That would be really annoying, wouldn't it?
Yes.
Yeah.
In 1896, telephone wires were laid between Buckingham Palace and a bunch of concert
halls in London so that the
royal family whenever they wanted to could listen
to a concert. Cool. Without having to
because it was a bit lowering to go into a music call for
instance if you're the Queen Victoria
you know. A music call? I mean you definitely
wouldn't go into a musical. Even having a
phone line laid to a musical is I think a bit
undignified. Wow you are
one of the snobs of the 1819.
If there's a raucous, naughty performance maybe
you can't see you're getting naked as well. She's probably just
enjoying the da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
great tune. But you'd, I guess if, yeah,
depends on the venues, I suppose. As in some venues
I'm sure were very reputable. There must have been
some reputable musical. She wasn't doing a
phone call to some, something like a pub
in South. It's going to be a guinea a minute
for this phone call, ma'am, are you sure?
It wasn't a sex line, okay,
but it was so that.
She'll say Queen Victoria didn't have a sex line
installed in Buckingham Palace. Not that we know
of, but we can't be sure.
But it was for the slightly more
improper performances that it wouldn't do to be
seen at. Who knows? That's so
cool on music platforms these days
okay so obviously
you know huge music platforms all over
you know like Spotify and yeah things like that
one growing and rapidly growing music platform
is Peloton bikes
okay yeah yeah like they've all got
they've got licensing deals and they've got their own
in-house music department specifically to license
oh do you mean exercise bikes the brand peloton
yeah yeah yeah as in they isn't
not anyone in the TARD France
anyone who's not in the lead
but in the men
group. They have to carry a big boon.
Yeah, there's the yellow headphones
and whoever's in the lead on the Tour de France
gets to listen to the music. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, but the Prince, as in
the musician prince, dead now, but
The Grateful Dead, confusingly, I think a lot of him
is still alive. And
Beyonce, they've all licensed their music
specifically to Peloton for massive
amounts of money. Yeah. Because it gets used in the
exercise classes. Yeah. So this is the forefront
of streaming is exercised bikes, basically.
But it's not exclusive
tracks, is it? No, you can still get them on spotting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you can.
So in the early days, I think Palisong was just using a lot of music in their exercise classes.
And obviously, they're making money out of these exercise classes.
And I think it was a big old, the big old fuss about it.
Well, that's a big, I mean, I think we've said that guitar hero with certain bands like Erasmith were making more money from the licensing deal that they did for that than they would make on their records.
Yeah, that's a big industry now.
Would you want to, I don't know much Grateful Dead.
I know a bit of Prince and it's weird and I don't know if I'd want to cycle to it.
Beyonce can totally see the cycling.
I think, yeah, she's really the queen of
Peloton.
You can get Beyonce themed classes
specifically to do on your bike.
And riding a bike, of course, gives you an amazing
ass, which is what she already has.
So that's something to strive for while you're riding.
I just see that from someone who cycles a lot,
by the way.
You basically cycle every day and you're like, you know what?
People who cycle, amazing ass.
My God, that is rock hard.
I'm sitting on two boulders right now.
Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andy.
My fact is that Australian Aboriginal people sometimes built objects specifically to arouse the curiosity of emus.
Okay.
That's nice of them.
Well, it wasn't nice of them.
Oh.
It was naughty.
Well, it wasn't naughty either.
It was just a spicy.
Well, as they say in Australia, curiosity killed the emu.
Yeah, exactly.
And it did kill the emu in this case, but the unborn emus in the egg.
That feels worse.
Oh, in an egg.
Well, this is maybe the worst way I've ever introduced.
There are these things.
They're called emu callers.
And Aboriginal peoples were built them.
They're cylinders of carved wood.
And when you bang the end with the flat of your hand, it produces a sound, which apparently
is reasonably like the noise of a female emu.
And it has to be a female emu as well, because with emus, the male is the one who sits on the eggs.
and, you know, nurses them towards,
incubates them, that's the thing.
And so one hunter will hide in the bush
playing this thing, making the noise of a female,
banging away, and the male will say,
oh, a female emu, and go and explore.
And then his colleague, the man in the bush's colleague,
will steal the emu's eggs without being pecked to death.
And that is absolutely the name of the game when you're hunting.
And so then you've got a lovely emu omelette.
Feed for people.
Feed for people.
And the other way it was used sometimes,
is to distract a mob of females
and you can move them to one place
where you want them to go
so you can shoot them.
So it was used by hunters sometimes as well.
But I will say the father in Andy's case
kind of had it coming
because he was going to cheat
on the mother of his children, right?
Yeah, but you know what's happening
at the same time.
Like when a male emu is incubating the eggs,
the woman's off shagging other emus.
It's true.
And not only that, she shags the other emu,
gets a baby in an egg
and then slips in under the other emu.
the father.
Yeah.
Does she?
Really?
There's no villain in this piece.
Oh, no villain.
I thought the male was the villain.
I would go, Anna.
She can store sperm as well, right?
Like multiple different sperm.
No.
She got a sort of larder.
I don't know that.
That's what I read.
It sounds like Dan's saying there's a kind of cupboard inside the female
EMU.
That's kind of how it works.
But can she select?
I think I'll have a little bit of Tony today and then fertilised from him.
I don't think so.
I don't think there's a sort of like spice shelf.
I don't think.
But the male doesn't eat or drink or defecate during the incubation of the eggs,
which is 56 days.
I'm not going to judge him for hearing a female and thinking, oh, I wonder.
So he doesn't have time to poo, but he does have the child to shag another female.
It's all about priorities.
How appealing is he going to be to that female?
Hasn't showered in 50 days.
Bals on leash immediately.
There's a slight advantage for the males, I think, when the female.
can bring other eggs back and make him incubate them even though they don't belong to him.
Oh, interesting.
Because if he's sitting on his own eggs, but also some other dad's eggs, if the eggs get attacked,
at least it raises the chances that someone else's kids will be lost.
Oh, okay.
That's pretty dark.
I suppose one of the things is the first eggs to hatch will be his eggs, right?
Because he was the first one there.
And that means that when all of the kids have hatched, his will be the oldest and perhaps the strongest.
Oh, yeah.
So that might help as well.
Because the male looks after the chicks for, I think, about seven months.
It's a long old time that the male is doing the carry after.
And sometimes we'll take on other chicks which got lost from other broods.
Yeah, right.
This object that they make, if you can imagine a didgeridoo.
It's like a small didgeridoo.
And it's sometimes known as a woman's didgeridoo because it's a small version of it.
And they're made in the same way.
So they're not necessarily made by the humans.
they're kind of naturally made by ants eating out the middle of a trunk and then decorated.
And they do sound, if you listen to a didgeridoo, so I haven't heard what the emu cooler sounds like,
I imagine it's a slightly high-pitched version of a didgeridoo.
They do sound a bit like emu's.
Like the emu noise is very kind of like something grunting underwater, I thought.
Which is a little bit like a didgeridoo.
Right.
But it's not the only way to attract an emu if you're in the business.
Really?
Yeah.
I was reading.
There must be myriad ways.
Oh God, there are a lot of ways.
Yeah.
Des Fallon called himself
the world champion emu-caller
in the 90s.
I can't find any official record of that.
I think it might have just been self-styled.
But he said, and this does work,
and lots of people do it now,
you lie on your back,
and you wave your legs in the air,
kind of like a turtle that's been turned over,
and you sort of make a noise
like a strangled cat, sort of grunting noise.
And halfway between being in pain
and being in love,
I think one researcher said.
I heard a slightly different version or take on that,
which is that you lay on your back
and you put one leg in the air with your foot
in that position that it looks like it's an emu's head
and it confuses the emu into thinking it's another emu
and it comes over to investigate you.
Because they're so stupid. Apparently they're so stupid
according to a big research study that was done.
I can tell you that emus do really like,
they like shiny objects a lot.
So if you put a disco ball in a tree,
emus will stare at it for hours on end.
Really?
Hours on end.
Do they dance?
A bit of macarina?
Well, I think this has been,
a similar thing has been used in hunting them.
So again, traditional Aboriginal hunters
will lure emus by hanging a ball
of emu feathers and rags from a tree,
which I guess must catch the light.
I mean, it certainly looks weird
and it's an unusual object to them.
And they just gather around it and are captivated,
at which point you can throw a spear at them and kill them.
Is that not because they're all going,
hang on, we're flightless?
How did that emu get up the tree?
Yes.
She's cracked it.
Barry, tell us the trick.
That's so good.
They can't fly.
They do when they run, they still sort of wave their tiny little wings that they have.
They think they're not fully sure why they do this from the article I read.
The suggestion is it's a balance thing to help them with the speed because they can go very, very fast.
But I did read that when they have, because they have predators like dingoes and eagles and so on in Australia.
and one way that they fight against a dingo is they leap into the air
and they just start stomping them,
sort of like just jumping on their head and shoving them into the ground.
They've got claws.
But it's just such a wonderful fighting style.
The tantrum.
It's a toddler tantrum.
Just on emu penises.
Yeah.
Which are rare.
But no, sorry, they're not rare for emus.
Every emu...
No one else has an emu penis.
I think about half of emuos have an emu penis.
Nobody else has an emu penis.
Okay.
But birds with penises are rare.
Yeah.
Because 97% of bird species don't have them and emies are in the rare.
But they don't have blood in their penises.
Or when they have an erection, it doesn't fill up with blood.
It fills with lymphatic fluid.
Which is very unusual.
And it's also low pressure.
Yeah.
So they can't keep an erection for very long.
Okay.
But one interesting thing about that is that the other birds that have penises also are lymph-based.
Yeah.
And so that means that the earliest ancestor of these two lineages of penis birds must have also had a limp, limp penis.
And what that means is that it was some time, a long time ago, and what came before the birds, the dinosaurs.
And so if we ever find out that a dinosaur had a penis, and at the moment we haven't found it in the fossil record, but if we ever do, there's a good chance that it would also be a lymph-based.
Ah, interesting.
Wow.
I saw a picture of an incredible penis the other day
and it was sent to me by John Blasters-Snell, the explorer.
Was that it?
You really should probably block him.
His only fans account is really, really cool.
This is a great explorer.
He's a friend of the podcast and he showed me a picture of a bat that he'd caught out.
I think it was in the Amazon somewhere.
Gynormous.
Like it looked like it was as tall as us basically.
Did he catch it by the penis?
He might as well have because this,
bat was hung unlike anything
I've seen. It was like a human penis
on a bat. It was
insane. I'll show you the photo later.
It's truly extraordinary.
Are you? Okay, handy. I'll get it to you.
I wonder, because they hang up so down a lot.
I'm just trying to think of... It would just keep bashed them in the face.
It was windy.
Wind chimes.
Did you guys read the emu story
from earlier this year? It was only a month ago, I think.
It was Moulms.
where I used to live.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Very exciting.
I wish I'd still live there for this story.
Well, there was a man who crashed his car into a shop front,
and he was with an accomplice,
and he ran away from the scene of the crash,
because he was incredibly drunk and incredibly high, I think,
and basically, in charge of a car,
crashed it into a building, legged it,
and the chef of the local hotel was a guy called Dean Wade,
saw him do this, thought,
I'm not letting someone get away with that, that's terrible,
chased after him, they ran away.
They ran for quite some.
distance and they ended up at the edge of the local wildlife enclosure
which has a field full of emus
and Dean Wade shouted, don't go in there, there are emus
and the guy said, I'm going in there, I'll take on the emus
and he was absolutely, they pecked him a new one.
They really, it really went for him.
He shouldn't have lain on his back and flailed around his legs in the air.
He was trying to do kung fu kicks and karate chops on this emu
and emu was absolutely just dodging all of it and packing and packing and packing him.
Yeah, and he was apprehended this man.
I think we're crediting the emu with the apprehension right,
Because the fact that this guy, the chef,
still in full chef's car,
he knew that the emus could take care of it,
so he was sent free to go get the police.
Was he sort of shepherding them towards the emus?
I'm not sure if it was a deliberate conscious thought,
but I think when it happened, he thought that's a stroke of luck.
I wonder if you're okay this guy or...
I think he's fine.
Yeah, he's been arrested.
He lived.
I wonder if the chef was torn to get the police
or to then go and steal the eggs from the nest.
Yeah, you were right.
Have we ever done the emu war?
Yeah, we have.
Have we on the show?
It was in an international.
National Factball, which I think isn't canon.
Isn't it?
Well, the interesting thing about it is when we mentioned it, did we mention that it's basically
a myth?
Is it?
No way.
So the idea is that, you know, Australia went to war against EMUs and lost.
Yeah, that's the story.
Far be it from me to back up the Australians.
But it turns out that basically it was one Western Australian governor did declare war
on the EMUs, but didn't send all of his guys out there.
He sent three people out to attack all these EUs.
emus.
Three men, a pickup truck and two machine guns, and that was against 20,000 emus.
And basically, what had happened was there had been the war, the Second World War,
and the Australian government had given land to a lot of veterans.
But the land was really dry, it was really barren.
They couldn't really even grow anything, apart from wheat.
And the emus loved wheat.
So the emus were going after the wheat.
And the governor of Western Australia decided, well, we're going to declare war on them,
and we're going to shoot them.
Because they've got all these veterans living there.
Well, that's what they thought.
They thought we'll send three of our actual army guys
and we'll get all of the veterans to come in as well.
But actually, really, I mean, there was no chance
that they were ever going to do anything.
I think it was Major Meredith, who was the guy in charge of them.
And he said, basically, the birds could keep running even after they'd been shot.
And so there was very little chance of them winning this engagement.
Well, the other thing is, like, if you had a big mob of emus,
let's say there's 100 in a mob.
As soon as you shot them, they split up into 250s.
And it was like the Gremlin's when they get water up again.
It's like being attacked by a worm and you chop it up and you just keep making it worse.
And Meredith said after it, he said,
if we had a military division with the bullet carrying capacity of these birds,
it would face any army in the world.
Yeah.
And really the reason that it became a big deal is because it was the time of the Great Depression
and the great emu war was kind of a funny story that they could have in the newspapers all the time.
Yeah, right.
It is funny.
It is funny.
Yeah.
Well, that's good.
That's not quite true.
I feel like Aussies get so much crap for the Emmy Awards.
So now there you go.
You can come back at people with.
We only sent three old blocs in there.
Exactly.
And I have to say, on Twitter, this is probably the most requested story that people sent to me saying,
have you guys ever spoken about the EME war?
It just constantly...
So there you go.
You're welcome Australians.
Yeah.
Considering you cheat so much at cricket, you should be very glad that I said.
Unbelievable.
Okay, that's it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
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