No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Squid Playing Games
Episode Date: February 11, 2022Live from York, Dan, James, Andrew, & Anna discuss squids, sticks, artichokes and arty jokes. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...
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Another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from York.
Dan Schreiber, I am sitting here with Anna Tyshinsky, Andrew Hunton Murray, and James Harkin.
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, life at this week.
is that actually, squid don't play games.
It's not so much a fact as like a passive-aggressive message to Netflix.
Yeah, got their IMDB ratings when James Harkin gets on to it.
I think you'll find.
Is that show, anything to do with squid playing games?
No.
Have you rumbled them?
No.
I haven't, no.
Okay.
playing. And I wanted to see what animals do play and what animals don't play. And for obvious
reasons, I thought I'd see if squid play games. And I found an article in the journal of current
biology called Fun and Play Invertebrates by Sarah Zelensky. And she says there is no evidence
in play for cuttlefish or squids as defined by Berghardt's five criteria. So there's like
these criteria you use in biology to find out if someone's playing or if something is playing,
I should say. So they do something that's not functional. They do something. They do
do it voluntarily.
They do it different to the way they normally do it, so it's slightly changed.
They repeat it and they do it when they're not under stress.
And if they do all those things, then that counts as play.
It's interesting that not under stress is a criteria for play,
because I think I was pretty stressed throughout the playground years.
Yeah, yeah.
You weren't playing when people were holding you down on the floor.
I was working, avoid being it.
And it was hard, and I lost all the time.
And I suppose one kind of interesting thing about that is,
Most invertebrates don't, so invertebrates things without a backbone.
Most of them don't play, but octopuses that are very closely related to squid, they do play.
So it's kind of interesting that those two related things do.
And so have we, have we, you know, had them in tanks and sort of like plop chessboards down and sort of like monopoly?
Like, have we actively tried to get them to play?
Monopoly.
No, they don't do that, but they, you know, they've studied them many times over the years.
And with things like octopuses, they've just noticed that.
they happen to do this.
So octopuses will,
they'll kind of get like a little crab.
And when they're full,
so they don't want to eat the crab,
they'll do it like a cat does with a mouse,
so they'll catch it,
and then they'll let it go and go it a little bit farther,
and then they'll catch it again and stuff like that.
So that counts as playing,
because it's just for fun.
It's like not exactly the same as catching a crab,
but it's very slightly similar to catching crabs.
Yeah.
Harsh.
I feel like Squit have a bit of reputation
as kind of the poor cousin of the octopus,
because the octopus is so charismatic,
They're so intelligent.
We keep being told they're as intelligent as a, you know,
a bright 12-year-old.
They can do GCSEs, all of this.
And Squid are sort of the...
They could bully Andy in the playground.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, and squid are kind of the, you know,
the thick cousins and sort of, you know,
they're just good for calamari.
But they're brilliant.
They're really brilliant.
And there are so many varieties of squid as well.
So one of them, I've found out,
in the course of this squid game thing,
Grimaldi-toothis Bonplandi, okay?
This is a particular kind of squid.
And it is a squid which uses a squid within a squid method of catching prey.
It is so cool.
It has these tentacles, right?
Yeah.
And, you know, nice long tentacles.
And they look in low light, and it swims in an area of the sea with quite low light.
In low light, the ends of these tentacles look like baby squid, okay?
And they leer in predators.
And it flaps them around like a baby squid bobbing around helplessly.
And it leers in predators, the kind of predators which like to eat baby squid.
And then, ah-ha-ha, it eats the predators.
which turn up expecting a helpless baby wheel.
That's nice.
But it might be quite confusing
if like your hand look like your child.
Would that not be weird?
Yeah.
Like you might accidentally feed it or put a napy on it or something.
True.
I don't know.
I think it's more like they're just doing finger puppet shows to each other.
Which is really entertaining.
But lethal finger puppet shows, you know.
Yeah, sure.
Well, you meet the audience at the end.
That's what mine always went as a good.
Yeah, they are great.
So there's one squid called,
confusingly called octopatius deletron,
but it's a squid non-octopus,
and I think it's the only squid they found so far
that intentionally rips off its arms,
and it does it to defend or attack,
and this...
So to attack, does he rip off an arm and hit someone with it?
I think it's more like distraction.
That would be distracting.
If you're in the middle of a boxing fight
with Chris Eubank Jr., and he pulls his arm off,
you'd be like, what?
Yeah, and then he can clock you in the head
with the other arm still attached.
But it's going to be his last fight.
So, yeah, this woman was studying them
and a quarter of these squid
have at least one blunt arm,
a lot of, as in an arm, which is missing a bit.
And they can ditch them at any kind of joint.
They can ditch them at various bits up the arm.
So you only need to drop the bit that's being threatened.
And it's so cool.
This researcher was called Stephanie Bush,
and she collected a bunch of squid
to put in tanks in her lab.
And loads of them immediately shed their arms at her,
trying to get away.
and she said there was one of them,
which was when in the lab,
it grasped the bottom of the container
with its arm hooks.
They've got little hooks on their arms.
It somersaulted repeatedly
and released ink
as it detached part of all eight of its arms.
Whoa.
And as they release the arms, they flash,
because you know they can emit their own light squid.
So all the arms got released
and then flashed lightning bolts through the water.
That is amazing.
This is horrifying.
They're also one of the few squid that has a penis.
Yeah.
The Octopartutis deletron was.
Yes. So yeah, they have a penis and they have sex by depositing sperm on the body of the
females, the males do. Although I say females, actually, they're pretty indiscriminate.
Because they live where it's quite dark and researchers have looked at all the different
squids that have squid semen on them and it's pretty much 50-50 male and female.
Right. They'll just, if they see a squid, they'll go for it.
Oh, cool.
They're desperate.
Yeah. That's amazing.
of these squid go their whole lives without meeting another squid.
Really?
This is why they're so desperate.
Yeah.
So when they see one, you can't blame them.
Right.
It's kind of sad.
Have, you know, have a chat first or, you know, some, a drink.
Just go straight in for the shag.
Yeah.
I was looking up squid games and I actually found something the opposite to what we're talking
about, which is humans trying to get squids in competition.
So there's an all-England squid championship that takes place.
It's an annual chance.
annual championship.
So what this is, is there is 74 competitors that go out,
and they spend five hours hoping to catch over 100 squids
during the course of the day.
Five hours.
And then, yeah, they find the longest one.
In 2012, it was won by a guy called David,
who was a reigning champion.
He'd won the previous year.
But in 2012, there was terrible weather conditions,
and it was really, really rainy,
and no one was catching any squids.
And he happened to notice,
just before he was sending him.
his reel back out that right on the tip of his little hook was a tiny squid, a third of an inch
long, and it was the only squid caught that year. So the 2012 winner of the All-England Squid
Championship was a third of an inch long. I want to watch that documentary and put it on
Netflix called Squid Game 2.
No one must have believed that squid when it got back to its friends and said,
guys, I just won Squid of the Year.
Yeah.
He would have got semen all over him
from every rich way, didn't he?
Well, while we're on that.
We're good.
And we were obviously going to be at some point.
At some point, at some point.
Let's get there now.
The northern pygmy squid,
did you hear about this?
Oh, yeah.
So this is a squid
where the female fertilises her own eggs.
Okay, it's bizarre.
So, as James said,
the male kind of attaches the sperm
to the body of the female.
So it's not a kind of mating
as we would understand.
understand it, but this...
You would understand it, maybe.
I like my sperm to spot as it on my shoulder, and, you know, I can dip in whenever I like.
Well...
You know, female choice.
I'm just going to cut that out, by the way.
And when Dan goes, fact number two, Anna Tashinsky, it'll just be like, my fact is, I like
seepah on the back of my shoulder.
It's just less effort.
Sorry, Andy.
No, no, no.
Well, you would fit in like a charm
into the Northern Pygmy Squid Society, Anna,
because the male attaches the sperm to the female,
and then it goes through.
It sort of gets into her body somehow.
I'm not exactly clear on the mechanism,
but it gets into the female's mouth
when she's ready to inseminate,
and then she bites a hole in each of her eggs
and just, you know, deposits a bit,
squirts a bit of sperm into each of the eggs
to fertilize the,
eggs. Wow. So she is doing the fertilising
at that point. Bizarre. That's
very cool. That's like in
in Vecho or it's like a
test tube baby. Kind of. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Those guys are pretty cool. They have like
a sticky patch on their back and when they're
kind of swimming around if they get tired
they can just stick themselves to a bit of seaweed
and they just watch things go past and then
unstick themselves and then swim around again.
That's so cool. And we say they don't
play. Come on. Yeah.
Did you guys ever do a fly wall when you were kids?
where you would do a somersault against a Velcro wall.
That's just like that.
Well, we didn't have a Velcro wall in our house, sadly.
Which room did you keep your Velcro wall in?
It was next to the bouncy castle drawing room.
So on actually how they reproduce,
there's this really interesting thing that they've recently discovered,
which is it's about the egg mops.
So I quite like this, that when the female deposits all her fertilised eggs,
they're called mops, and they're in these big piles,
and she sticks them to the ground.
And then male squid are attracted to these.
And that doesn't really make any sense
because they've already been fertilized,
so they're no use to the males.
But what it means is there are fertile females in the vicinity
because they tend to kind of hang out together.
And not only this, the male squid are attracted to the egg mops,
and then they come up to the egg mops
and they kind of hug them.
Very weird and sort of stroke the eggs.
And we didn't really know why they were doing this,
but it turns out that there's a chemical on the eggs.
And as soon as the male squid sort of stroke and hug the eggs,
they get this chemical on their arms.
and it turns them into like raging maniacs.
So they go from being really chill
to being super agro.
And this means that they fight other males in the vicinity
and the woman's just back there,
the female's just back,
the way we're going, okay, yeah, all right,
he's got some good biceps, they'll take him.
And yet, yet, when I go and hug the children
at the local playground
and then get into a fight
with another bloke just outside it,
I'm able to leave the park.
Wow.
It's a good trick.
It's amazing, that's so cool.
Do you know a squid have won two Nobel Prizes?
Have they?
Yep.
No, they haven't.
Someone's won a Nobel Prize, and it's been about them.
They don't play it because they are all work, and they follow that work into the Nobel Prizes.
They did all the work, really.
The humans got the, you know, the humans, Andrew Huxley and a few others and Bernard Katz got the awards,
but basically it was from cutting up squids.
So I think the squids deserve a bit of credit.
Okay.
And the reason is they have massive nerve fibres in their body, right?
Our nerves are really, really thin, really tiny.
You can hardly see them.
But in a squid, they're massive, and you can see them.
And originally they thought they were blood vessels.
They're so big.
But that means that you can do loads of stuff to these nerve fibers,
and you can learn about how they move electricity from one place to another.
You can see what's inside them and stuff like that.
And so people studied them, and they won Nobel Prizes for it.
That's very cool.
Yeah, cool, nice.
It's cool.
I'm still giving the human sum credit for that.
Yeah, fair enough.
50-50.
We need to move on to our next fact in a second.
I read an article on something called Mel Magazine online.
I think they were a bit short on ideas
and they wanted to piggyback on Squid Games.
So they asked a group of squid fishermen
who are in the Squid Game
if their job is anything like the TV show.
Oh, boy.
One of them said that in the show
most people are looking out for themselves
and that's very similar to Squid Fisherman
because they have
secrets about how to attract squid
and many of them will not share the
knowledge with other people.
Well, that does happen a bit in Squid Game.
Exactly. Does it? Okay.
It's still a bottom of the barrel commission
for this magazine.
Another person said
squid fishing is actually really fun
and it's a family-oriented sport
so it's nothing like Squid Game.
The only asshole thing I do
in Squidding is when I'm pulling up
a squid, they tend to squirt out the inn
because they come out of the water.
so if you aim that at the person next to you
who tend to get covered in ink.
Wow.
That's really fun.
They're their own little water pistols.
Yeah.
Cool.
Oh, I so want to know
what the techniques are to lure a squid in.
Like, do you put, like...
Oh, you get little kind of...
The old Japanese way, what they would do
is they'd have lures that look a little like baby squids kind of things.
But when they squirt the ink,
it produces a thing which is roughly the size and shape of a squid.
Oh, yeah.
And it's called a pseudomorph.
And so the predator is momentarily confused.
What am I going for?
Which of these two?
It's so clever.
It's like leaving a hole in the wall
that's the shape of you or something.
Yes.
If you run away.
Can I just say one thing about animals playing?
There's a woman called Linda Sharp
who studies lots of different types of play in animals
and says basically we all say
we know why animals play, social bonds,
preparing for adult life, but actually we've got no idea.
It's probably just because it's fun.
And case in point, she said she was watching some elephants
and there was an elephant at the top of a slope
and it saw another elephant, it was a muddy slope,
saw another elephant at the bottom of the slope
and it starts walking up towards this elephant
at the top of the slope.
And when it's halfway up, the elephant at the top
gets on its bum, like tucks its legs in
and sort of toboggons down the slope
straight into the other elephant.
So it takes them both out,
they rolled down to the bottom of the hill,
they tumble around, have this big old fight,
and then eventually she saw they've sort of dusted themselves off
and then they were like, okay, we'll climb up the slope now.
They climbed up the slope.
They got halfway up.
There's a third elephant at the top.
It's not exactly the same thing.
That's amazing.
We need to move on to our next fact.
It is time for fact number two, and that is Andy.
My fact is that in 1935, New York issued a total ban
on the possession or supply of baby artichokes.
This was sent to me online.
actually by at Fodsox, so thank you Fodsox.
This is a fact about the 30s war against the baby artichoke
or specifically against the mafia through the medium of the baby
artichoke.
It was the main war of the 30s, wasn't it?
The artichoke.
It was the main war for most of the 30s
and then there was a very strong late entrant, unfortunately.
I think in America it was the main war for all of the 30s.
That's a very good point.
But are you giving the Ardichoke credit here in the way that James is giving the
squid a Nobel Prize?
No, you're not.
I'm not giving the artich any credit.
I'm giving the mayor of New York,
who was Fiorella LaGuardia.
So LaGuardia Airport at New York, named after him.
He was a big deal.
And in 1935, he walked into one of the biggest markets in New York City,
and he announced baby artichokes, they're off the menu.
And it was going to start the day after Christmas.
And he said, I like artichokes, particularly with Hollandeauce sauce.
But the ban will remain in force until the grip of the racketeers is broken.
And basically, it was because the mafia controlled the big.
baby artichokes supply and made a load of money supplying New York with baby artichokes.
And it was one of their major things.
You know, it was illegal alcohol, drugs and then baby artich.
And they kind of forced the restaurants to buy them, didn't they?
And made them really, really expensive and cornered the market in them.
It was just like, yeah.
And they bought them at cheap prices, too.
They squeeze the farmers at one end, and then they squeeze the restaurants at the other end.
It's a lot of squeezing.
Very clever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Didn't he lift the ban within a few days?
Oh, yeah.
Because he was like, actually, I really like,
Artichoke.
No, no.
No, no.
He won?
He beat the Mafia in three days?
Yeah.
Because basically, there was this one guy
a mafia boss called
Zero Terra Nova,
and he was known as the
Artichoke King.
But the only thing I know about artichokes
is they make you fart,
so I don't know.
But anyway, so he was the one
who was in charge of it.
And when LaGuardia said,
you can't sell artichokes,
then he had no one to sell his artichokes to.
And all the shops said,
okay we're not going to do it. One or two people did carry on selling them, but they all got
their licenses taken off them. Right. And then within three or four days, it was obvious that
he wasn't going to be able to apply his words in New York anymore. Okay. Cool. It was a rapid
turnaround. Yeah, it was really. And it was because most of them were coming in from California.
That's where they were all grown. And there were stories that mafia agents would go to California.
They would intimidate the growers of the farmers into lowering their prices. They would even,
this is reported at the time. I don't think it's true. Threatened aerial.
gas bombing of the farming fields.
I saw reports in the newspapers
that that happened, but again, it might not have been true.
But the interesting thing was,
because that was happening in California
and this guy was working,
the Artichoke Chow King was in New York,
suddenly it was in two states, which meant
it was a federal case,
which meant that they could get all their federal
people involved, which suddenly made it a really
big deal. If it was just in New York, it would have been
hard for him to do anything about it.
I remember we did a fact a very long time ago
about Marilyn Monroe,
being named artichoke queen.
Yeah. There was a theory that the reason she was named that
was because they were trying to give a bit of sort of gloss
back to an industry completely dominated by the mafia.
I thought you were going to say it was because she was married to the artichoke king.
Okay.
They ruled it.
Rule the artichoke king.
I've just realized artichoke king sounds like something
that a mafia boss would do to you, doesn't it?
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
Subjects.
Subjects.
By stuffing those weird...
white from things in the archichoke down your throat.
That's how you'd do it.
You'd make them eat that middle white bit.
I know, you are terrified.
I just, I'm frightened of artichokes.
The sperm shoulder bandits struck again last night.
And it was just baby artichokes then.
It's very specific, isn't it?
Yes.
Because they're quite similar.
The mafia could have branched out into just the slightly bigger ones,
but they didn't think of that, I guess.
Not so smart.
Yeah.
Because I think actually the only difference is that baby artichokes don't,
even have the choky bit. They don't have the
annoying fuzzy bit that I don't like, right?
And they're not even younger.
It's a real misnomer. They just grow lower down
on the antichoke plant. So I think they're
from the same plant, but they don't get as much sunshine, so they don't grow
to be as big. And yeah, they're just more tender and nice, easier to wait.
Is that like how baby carrots are not really a different
kind of thing? They're just...
I think they're just chopped up carrots, aren't they?
Yeah, I think they might be. But I've never been confident enough to say,
and I really regret bringing it up now.
police has not a thousand people in York
looking at you when you're saying it's like an anxiety dream
but that's like Jerusalem artichokes as well
sorry Jerusalem artichokes
not from Jerusalem not artichokes
not even any kind of artichoke
fuck is going on yeah
the guy who first found them
decided they tasted a bit like artichokes
so they must be artichokes I think
yeah
don't know where the Jerusalem bit came from
well I love the Jerusalem bit
this is one of my favourite etymologies
this is because so they look like
Sunflowers, Jerusalem Artochokes, on obviously not the
like gross tube a bit, but the bit that grows out of them,
looked like sunflowers, and Europeans discovered them in the 1600s.
There was a French explorer and brought them back to Europe
and they got to Italy and they were called Girassol, as in sunflower,
as turns round with the sun, so the word for sunflower in Italian,
and Girassol gradually turned into Jerusalem.
Very good.
That's cool.
Like it.
Yeah.
Do you know that the Italian word for Mafia or for a Mafia clan is Koska or Soska?
And that means artichoke heart.
No way.
Interesting.
Is it because they're tightly bound together?
He's only gone and got it.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
So the Atterchoke leaves are all really close together and that's what the Mafia clan is like.
And they can't be separated.
Yeah, yeah.
Wow.
That's cool.
Very difficult to eat.
Do you know how...
But it can be done.
Can be done.
Do you know how we got the artichoke in the first place?
No.
Just screw it?
Well, it's from...
No. Actually, we didn't.
No. This...
Waitros?
No. It's a couple of thousand years old.
It dates back to ancient Greece, the artichoke.
And it comes from a time when the Greek god, Zeus,
fancied a woman called Kinara, or Sinara,
and he installed her in heaven as his kind of mistress.
But then she kept on sneaking back to the mortal plain to see her family.
And Zeus found out about this.
he got really annoyed and turned her into an artichoke.
Ah.
And that's how we have artichokes.
And that's how we have them.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, I actually believe James' version
about it's just growing them.
You choose what you want to believe.
Just very quickly back to the mafia,
I was very surprised to discover it
that they're just involved in so many different rackets,
aren't they?
And in 2014-ish,
they started getting into wind farms.
So they went green.
Oh, they're very ethical.
Always happened.
Yeah.
Yeah, so they're known as the Eco Mafia,
and in Sicily, wind farms are a massive deal there now,
and the money that is being generated
from selling all of the power across Europe
is such big money that that's their thing.
So, yeah, it's just such a bizarre.
I suppose those big blades can cut off the horse's heads, basically.
They're also into organic food as well, the mafia at the moment.
They're such hipsters these days.
Well, I say that.
They're into getting cheap food from Eastern Europe
and then relabelling it as organic
and then selling it up.
Oh, I see.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
I was shocked, shocked,
as someone who lives in East London
at the level of contamination
of what claims to be organic food by the mafia.
So believe you me,
if you think you've got extra virgin olive oil at home,
you probably haven't.
This is, because they're adulterating all this stuff.
And actually in Italy,
the police employ special tasters
who are specifically trained to spot
fraudulent food to taste lots of types of olive oil.
Really? What a sweet gig for the police to have.
They do things like they whiten mozzarella with detergent.
They make bread with asbestos.
Okay, is it getting less sweet as a gig as you say this?
Yeah.
Wow.
But extra virgin olive oil,
adulteration of that is the biggest source of agriculture fraud in the world
and 60% of extra virgin olive oil that's sold
is not that.
It's not extra virgin.
Wow.
So what is it?
Just straight up shit oil.
Oh, right.
It's just adulterated with less good quality oil.
It's not urine or anything.
You'll be fine.
You won't notice the difference,
but you're being bamboozled.
Okay.
That sounds fine.
And that's the spirit which broke the mafia in 1935.
I'm just a bit worried
that we're giving the mafia a lot of shit in this podcast,
and I kind of want to distance myself a tiny bit.
Oh, wow.
You keep giving me that shit, oh, I'm fine.
My family, like living.
Thank you.
Bring it all, lads.
Come on.
What's the other again?
This is an extra virtue over here that you will not get anywhere.
It is time for fact number three, and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that until recently,
in the Chinese city of Chongqing,
you could hail down a stick man to carry your bags
by shouting,
bang-man!
Which is a fun idea
and a mysterious fact to say without explaining it.
So I almost want to just leave it at that.
What do you mean by a stick man?
It's that like someone,
like one of those people that tells you
where the gents' toilets are.
That's not, they don't tell you where the toilets are.
They do.
They indicate where it is.
I think by the time you're seeing the stick man,
you found the toilet, James.
The one on the door.
I'm over here!
Quick!
Free me.
There's a soul free, quick!
Oh no, don't go in.
There's a guy having a massive shit, stay out.
It's not one of the toilet warning signs.
It's...
So these are men called...
It's actually bang-bang-bang.
But we discussed this, and we decide,
if you shouted bang-bang as an ignorant English person,
then they'd probably know what you meant.
And it's the name for these stickmen,
so they're people who carry sticks around,
And they were extremely populous
in like up until the early 2000s really in Chongqing
and they're porters.
And the reason that they remained in that city
is because the terrain is very hilly.
It's lots and lots of winding alleyways
and lots of steps connecting one place to the other
and you can't really get a car or anything around.
It's even how to get a bike around it.
And so all you can do is you can say,
I've got 17 heavy suitcases
and here's a small guy with a stick.
Can he carry them all please?
And they do it.
It's unbelievable the loads that they carry.
There's not as many these days as though.
They're kind of going out of business a little bit.
Yeah, there was a documentary quite recently called
The Last Generation of Bang Bang,
which was explaining that kind of these people have got other jobs now,
like delivery people, like, I don't know, Deliveroo or that kind of thing,
whatever the Chinese equivalent is.
And so a lot of people do that.
But they were really popular.
There was a soap opera called Mountain City Bang Bang Men,
which was all about them.
Really?
And there's also a drinking game.
If you're a student in Chongqing,
then you might play this game.
and the drinking game is basically whenever you see one of these guys you drink.
Oh, wow.
Wow.
Oh no, people are so much more sober now.
So sad.
So Chongqing has, it's got a huge population.
It's like 32 million.
At the time where they were sort of at the peak before the decline,
there's about 30,000 stickmen that were in operation.
I was reading Chongqing in my head.
I was like, I know this place.
How do I know this place?
And it's because it has my favorite rail station in,
so a metro station, a train station in Chongqing,
which is they have them very high up,
kind of like monorails that go around through the city.
And one particular path that it needed to take
was going to be in the exact spot
where they were building a residential building,
which was 19 floors high.
Yeah, so between floor six, I believe,
and floors nine, I think those are the right ones.
They're suddenly, in a residential building,
a train that just goes through the building,
stops in the building as well.
So it's a stop in the building
and they had to soundproof all of the apartments
to make sure that all the noise
wouldn't get to them too much.
Yeah, how cool is that?
That's from Chongqing.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
I'm just sort of carrying extremely heavy weights.
Oh yeah.
It is kind of unbelievable.
So there are lots of people,
particularly people who are mountain porters,
so this is, you know,
very high altitude environments,
can carry unbelievably heavy weights.
So they studied mountain porters in Nepal.
there was a scientist from Belgium called Norman Hegeland,
and he was a muscle physiologist,
and he thought, I've got to know what is different,
like what is different physically about Nepalese mountain porters,
because they, on average, the guys he studied weighed about 56 kilos,
but they can carry 68 kilos.
They can carry more than their own body weight,
and they're carrying it uphill, steep uphill.
And he studied them, and he found nothing different physically about them,
except that they're just extremely tough.
That's the only thing you found.
On average, they can carry 90% of their body weight.
The heaviest load he found was 175% of the guy's weight that he was carrying.
By comparison, physically fit Westerners, you know, backpacking or whatever,
you can do about 25% of your weight for a couple of days.
And then it really, really hurts.
And these guys have just done so much of it.
Yeah, but the other thing that he said that he noticed is that they're incredibly slow.
They just keep to a pace.
And so, for example, if they were going to a Saturday market,
and they were running late,
they would get up late before, you know, early in the morning,
and they would just rather walk there at their super slow pace
rather than in any way be fast.
Like going through the night, kind of thing.
Yeah, they'll go through the night.
Like fast is just not an option for them.
They'll just, they pace themselves.
But basically, the lesson seemed to be,
we're really pathetic in the West.
I mean, that was his conclusion, wasn't it?
He was like, well, it turns out there's not a special gait that they have.
That's really great.
They're not actually using oxygen much more efficiently.
we can just actually carry way more than 25%.
So next time you offer to help someone with their bags,
think twice.
Okay?
Because we should be carrying this amount as well.
There are some people in Europe who do this as well.
So in Slovakia, in the Tatras Mountains,
there are a load of hostels that are really high up,
but there are no roads that get there.
And so they have to take everything up there.
So they'll take, if they need a refrigerator up there,
they'll strap it to the back and just walk up.
If there's a microwave, they'll strap it to the back
and just walk up.
And the record,
the amount
that the strongest person
that's ever taken
up to these hostels
in Slovakia,
it was going to
the Laco-Kulunga Castle Hotel
and this guy
carried 207 kilograms
on his back
to this place.
And that,
if you don't know what that is,
that's the equivalent
to carrying a red deer,
an upright piano,
or all of Little Mix.
Wow.
Whoa!
Wow.
That's really put Little Mix
into context
for me.
We've all learned something from that comparison.
All with Little Mix were the same as one Red Deer.
I reckon.
Either Red Deer are a lot bigger than I thought
or Little Mix are a lot smaller.
I mean, the clues in the name, the Little Mix, obviously.
Which Little Mix, because there were four,
but now there's three.
It's the four.
The four, yeah.
Which line up?
Which Sugar Babes line up could he possibly have taken?
I was reading about porters
generally and just seeing
what roles they've played in history.
And I found a really fun thing, which is in 1930,
a porter carrying some luggage
led to the creation of the Association
for Mutual Help of the French Nobility.
It's a bit late for them, I think, by then, is that?
Suddenly with that 150 years earlier.
This is the thing, right?
It's basically looking after all the noble people
who fell from Grace. So two people were walking along,
they were having their luggage carried,
and they suddenly noticed the person carrying the luggage
with someone of noble stock
and they thought, hang on a second, what's going on?
Why are you doing this menial job
when you should be glorified
in your family's right to be great?
And they said, we need to give you some money.
And they thought, what if this is happening elsewhere in France?
And so they set up this association
and people can still, to this day, apply for, yeah,
for, please send my kid to a good school
because we don't have enough money,
but we're from noble background.
Look at our surname.
And they bust a bunch of French people.
You know what, if you're going to give some money to charity,
perhaps there are a few others.
Of the posh French people.
Absolutely not.
I'm changing all my direct credits right now.
This is on believe.
They need another revolution.
Did they learn nothing?
I wonder how they noticed that the guy carrying the bags was of noble stock.
That's the big question for me.
Did he have a birth mark?
He was bleeding.
His hands were bleeding because of the blisters.
And I guess the blue blood does that give it away?
Maybe.
But what was?
Do we know what it was?
They just recognised maybe it was his manner,
maybe it could have been an old friend from school,
I don't know.
I bet he was just like, do you know,
my great uncle was the Baron of Orly.
Wow.
This is about carrying heavy weights.
It's not actually about humans carrying heavy weights,
but some Dunbeetles, which are called amphophagos torus,
they can pull 1,100 times their own weight,
which is very impressive,
and it's entirely evolved because of their sex life.
Interesting, because I assume that all they're carrying is dung.
Well, yeah, but I mean, the dung is big relative to them.
Oh, yeah, I'm not saying it is.
But in fact, you're right.
Sorry, it's not because of the dung moving.
So the females will dig a tunnel under a cow pat.
That's where they create this kind of tunnel of love where they're getting ready to mate.
It certainly sounds like a sexy tunnel.
For the dung beetle, unbelievably sexy.
And basically, so the female goes into the tunnel of weights,
and then a male will go into the tunnel, right?
two mate.
But sometimes a male
will get into the tunnel
and find there's a rival male
already there
and they have evolved
this unbelievably strong movement
where they fight,
they tussle and they lock horns
and they try and try and try
to pull each other out
or push each other out of the tunnel.
So as a result,
they've evolved the ability
to move a thousand times
their own weight.
Wow.
However, there are some males
which are not like that.
They're sneaky males.
They're not strong
but they are fast walkers
and they have extremely dense testicles
and they...
Fast walkers with extremely dense testicles
That's a hell of a Tinder profile is there
Because you think that it's slowing you down
Yeah
But it could be the momentum can pull you forward
You know like when you walk and you kind of move your arms back and forward
You could swing your testicles as you walk
Yeah, or standing long jump you propung yourself forward
Yeah
Anyway so they even sneak into the tunnels
Attempt to shag attempt to get out quickly
So that just, the woman turns out
she prefers the dense testicles
to the extremely strong ones.
Is that the idea?
How are they winning?
It's not clear what criteria she's applying.
I think if there's a male there, she'll mate with it.
I've not got my head around the dense testicle thing.
What is that doing?
Like, what is it?
Well, they've just got,
it just means they're producing a lot of sperm
and they can quickly get in, mate and get out.
I guess they've put their resources into sperm quality
rather than into physical power.
But how do you tell someone
that your sperm quality is great?
I don't think they're communicating on this level
that we're...
If there's a male there,
the female will mate with it
and he turns up.
It gets in there.
There's no flirting, I think.
It's a bit like...
You're in a tunnel under a cow pat.
I think the romance is pretty dead.
Oh, dear.
I was looking at other jobs
that you could describe
as being like porters.
And I was thinking
one of my favourite things
that I read a while back
is that Scottish fishermen's wives
were basically porters
of their husbands.
So this is, in the 19th century
the herring industry was massive in Scotland.
Everyone was a herring farmer,
herring fishermen.
And the fishermen, when they went
to get in their boats, they would usually
have sea, like, would go from a beach.
So they'd go off from a beach, get in a boat.
And they don't want to get wet because they're going to be out all day
and it's feck and cold in Scotland.
And so the wives would always carry
their husbands into the boat.
So you'll see their old photos of these husbands
with all their fishing tackle and their arms
and their wives just carrying them like a baby
and plopping them into that little boat
waving them off for the pack lunch.
That's amazing.
This is so great.
The man who has carried
the heaviest load for 10 metres
in history was a guy called
Patrick Bobonian and
at the end of walking the 10 metres he shouted
out, vegan power.
Nice.
Yeah. And he was trying to prove
that you can still be strong and have a vegan
diet. They interested.
interviewed him afterwards and said, it was a bit of a stupid thing to do, and it really hurt.
If only, I'd had a sausage sandwich before I said off.
Time for our final fact, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that in 1994, the music
group, the KLF, burnt one million pounds. 27 years later, they're still not sure why they did
it, and have even toured the UK asking audiences if they have any idea, why it.
they did it.
So this is, this was a very famous moment in 90s music.
KLF were a massive band, justified in ancient, was a huge, they were huge, their singles
were massive selling, but they were very artistic and they were very anti the industry.
And they decided that they were going to absolutely wipe themselves out in a way that a
band has never done before.
They were going to take all their music away from catalogs that were publishing it.
They were going to remove it from all shows.
and they were going to take the last amount of money that they'd made,
which was a million pounds,
take it out of their account and take it to an island,
a juror, which is in Scotland,
and they went to a boat shed, and they set it a light,
and they burnt a million pounds,
and there's a lot of controversy.
Did they really do it?
They claim they absolutely did.
A lot of people are very skeptical.
There's been a few investigations into it
where the BBC have seen that they've taken the money out from the bank,
and they've found little bits of burnt embers
that matched when little numbers
that would appear on specific bills
kind of match the ones that were taken from the bank.
But did they really do it?
Is a question a lot of people have?
I think they did.
James, I think you're a skeptical about it.
Just on balance of, you know, probability,
I think they didn't.
They might have done.
Quite often we have facts on this,
and I'm like, that's definitely bullshit.
This one, I'm about 6040, that it's bullshit.
Yeah, really.
For instance, the little bits of burnt notes that they found,
they were found by a farmer,
but it turned out that the farm,
Mama's son had gone to school with one of the band.
So it's quite a nice coincidence that they found it.
So I read an interview with the journalist who first wrote it up.
He was called Michael Pilgrim, who's working for The Observer magazine.
And he says that he still doesn't know for sure whether it was true or whether it wasn't true.
I think that was the journalist who received the story, but he wasn't there.
It was Jim Reid who was there.
And he was determined he was there.
Yeah, yeah.
So Jim Reed thought they definitely did it, I think.
He did.
And this guy reckons that they definitely burnt some money,
because he has some of the money that was burnt in his house,
but he thinks possibly not a million pounds,
which I think is where I stand on it.
In 2017, they were discussing it
at this festival that Dan was talking about
where they asked audiences why they did it,
and they got an economist to describe it as quantitative tightening,
which is a really good phrase.
And there are acts who are burning money today.
So there's an organisation called Burn Your Money,
which sent some members in 2017 to the island of
juror to burn some of their own money.
And they even have their own magazine, this organisation,
which is called Burning Issue.
Why are they doing that just to imitate the rates?
Why do the initial guys do it?
Yeah, exactly.
So initially, after they did it,
there was a documentary made about it
because they had a friend called Gimpo
who was with them, who filmed it.
So we do have footage of this.
That wasn't his real name, was it?
I can't even remember.
He's called Alan Goodrick.
Right, Alan Goodrich.
And so...
You can be sure if he's called Gimpo,
it's probably not his real.
name.
It could be a Marx brother.
I don't know.
To Mr. and Mrs. Goodrick, a son,
Gimpo.
So they took this video
around the country
and they asked these questions,
you know, why do you think we did it?
Because they genuinely
couldn't quite work it out.
But they are an artistic band
and there's a...
So I got this fact
from a book that's called
the KLF by John Higgs.
It is genuinely,
I think, the best non-fiction book
I've ever read.
Genuinely, it's my favorite non-fiction book.
It's magical.
And it's not just about this band.
It's about
what they encompass, the worlds of the occult, the esoteric,
everything that was going on in pop music.
It's just John Higgs, stunning.
And basically, what they decided was,
after they went round showing this video
and not getting anywhere, but getting a lot of people furious with them,
that they would not talk about it for years and years and years.
So they signed a contract on the side of a car, a rented car,
pushed it off a cliff as an official contract,
and didn't really talk about it for 23 years.
Cajely came up in conversations.
I bet it came up in conversations with the car rental firm.
That film was really interesting because they filmed it
and then they kind of destroyed the camcorder.
But then the person who filmed it, who was Gimpos, said,
oh, actually, I'd already made a copy of it so we can have that instead.
And he turned that into a little film.
And they advertised that they were going to show it in Brick Lane in London
and that anyone who turned up could get free lager.
Okay?
Okay.
So lots of people turned up.
But too many people turned up,
so they had to cancel the whole event,
and they were stuck with 6,237 cans of tenant super.
This was on Christmas Eve,
and they decided to give it to the homeless
before someone working for the charity crisis
said they were utterly irresponsible.
I mean, I was pretty hard to talk you with.
I think they weren't the first people to describe them as that, I suspect.
It sounds like the maddest experience to be on this money-burning expedition.
I wish I'd been that one journalist.
And they were so random in what they did.
They just picked this guy at Jim Reed and call him up.
He doesn't know what he's getting into.
He's told to get in the car with these two guys and gimpo in the back.
They go to a security firm.
Oh, they buy suitcases in London, two massive suitcases.
Go to a security firm and extract all of this cash.
And then disappear to juror.
And it sounds so annoying as well because he'd be so knackered after that.
long, confusing day. And they said, okay, we're going to burn all the money tomorrow. And then
Jim goes to bed, writes of his notes for the day, puts his head on the pillow. And immediately,
they bang on his hotel door at like midnight and go, actually, we're going to do it now.
Come on, we can't wait. They said it was like Christmas. You know, you're so excited. You can't
wait till the morning. And yeah, they went and they did it in this little, I think it was like
a little stone kind of structure. But he said the first thing you feel is incredibly guilty
as you're watching this money disappear. And then for the subsequent two or three hours, because it
does take quite a long time to burn a million pounds.
You are just really bored for a lot of it.
But yeah, so surreal.
Well, the line that someone said about it was,
it's one thing to start burning a million pounds.
It's another thing to finish burning a million pounds.
And that is something that has really made them really question everything
that the fact that they went for the whole thing.
It made people so angry because obviously they could have given that money to charity.
They could have given it to, you know, members of the first.
French aristocracy who would doubt on their life.
They could have just kept it and pretended
that they burnt it. Yeah.
You know.
Lots of people said that if you burn money by
spending it on cocaine or whatever, then you're
forgiven much more easily than
burning physical money.
It feels very, very
sacrilegious. But they are
constantly, they were constantly doing
stuff like this. They tried to spend their money in very
creative ways. So
after they'd had a really big hit of one or another
with their big hits, they tried to spend the money,
got from that, getting a massive helicopter and fixing Stonehenge, so that they could put it back
to work again, basically. Come on, let's fire up the motors. I think also a bulldozer, they were going to
bulldoze it down. They bought a big bulldozer to do that. And didn't they bury their
Brid Awards underneath, supposedly? It was conveniently found a few weeks later. Yeah, right.
You're very skeptical about this. You know, it might be true, but the thing is, they did have four
for lots of like little tricks and stuff.
So they did, they made crop circles, for instance.
There was one time where one of the guys
drove around with a massive sound equipment
in his car, which he claimed was powerful enough
to kill livestock.
Right. He was going to kill a load of cars
with his massive... Wow. I can kill one red deer
with this sound system or all four of living legs.
You decide.
And so it's two guys, the KLF. It's drumming and courtie.
Bill Drummond, I love reading about Bill Drummond.
His ideas are just so wonderful.
One thing that he did, and I don't know if this is still going,
I hope he still does it,
but Bill Drummond created a soup line across the British Isles.
And the idea was if anyone lives on Bill Drummond's soup line,
you can look it up.
If you live and your house happens to be on the soup line,
you can contact Bill Drummond,
and you'll come to your house and make you some soup.
No.
Did anyone, did it work? Can we do that?
I hope it's still going.
I'm not sure, but the soup line exists.
You have to plan it carefully so it didn't go through a major place.
Like Belfast.
That's incredible.
Yeah, the supline.
Wow.
He sounds wonderful.
The Guardian interviewed him in 2000, which was years and years after they burned the money,
and they asked him, have you regretted it since?
He said, no.
Are you financially stable now?
No, I'm not.
And then in 2004, he said, of course I regretted it.
And so you can't work out the truth about them.
It's really, really, really interesting people.
One thing about Drummond is he does like his lines,
and he believes that there's a lay line that goes from Iceland to Papua New Guinea,
and it goes through Liverpool,
and the energy of the earth comes down from space into Reykjavik,
goes all the way under the earth,
and then comes out at Papua New Guinea,
and also comes out of a manhole cover in Liverpool.
And this manhole cover is just out.
outside the Cavern Club and that's what he kind of thinks.
Matthew Street. Yeah, exactly.
And one time he was the manager of Echo and the buddy men who a lot of you will know a band
and he got them a gig and Reykiewick got them to play and then stood over this manhole cover
to listen to see if the music came out.
I did not come out.
But part of his evidence is, you know Carl Jung, the psychoanalyst?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So Carl Jung apparently wrote once that he'd never been to Liverpool but he had a dream of
about Liverpool. And he thought, Carl Jung said Liverpool is a pool of life it makes to live.
And there's a statue of Carl Jung on Matthew Street. Yeah, there's a, it's a bust that sits up in a
building because there was a guy called Peter O'Halligan who'd heard. So this was a game-changing dream
of Carl Jung's life. He was like the pool of life and then he said it's in Liverpool.
And Peter O'Halligan went around and he looked for descriptions that would match where
Young might have dreamed in his head. And he discovered that there was this manhole sitting at the end
literally 30 seconds walk from the cavern
which is why maybe the Beatles had such mystic powers and so on
have I lost everyone?
Presumably Drummond didn't believe any of this
but thought it was a chaos against anything
or really believes it?
I think he might believe some of it
although we'd have to get him here
and we're just supposed to.
I wish we could get him here.
On his 60th birthday he stood for 17 hours on that manhole
he didn't believe it, yeah.
17 hours.
Thinking about life, thinking about what he was doing
Yeah, it's an important manhole.
I think we've mentioned before
that Jeremy Corbyn also collects manhole covers.
He does.
Well, he doesn't collect them.
Sorry, that makes him sound incredibly irresponsible.
But he is an expert on them.
He knows about them.
He collects him trying to tug it from out from under drum and
you're not getting this one.
Like, just to draw us back towards the realms of the possible for a bit.
And that music is really interesting
because they were hugely influential in starting sampling other tracks.
Yes.
And they were one of the, you know, some of the first people to do that.
So in 1987, they sampled a passage from Dancing Queen by Abba.
And Abba were not happy about it.
And Abba sued them and said, you've got to destroy all the unsolved copies of this record that you've produced, all the unsolved vinyl records.
So then, the KLF, the two of them, they travelled to Stockholm to give Agnita from Abba a commemorative gold disc.
They couldn't find her because they were just walking around in Stockholm.
So they gave the gold disc to a random prostitute they met in the street
and came home, pausing only to throw the LPs off the ferry as they went.
And then they burned the rest in a field.
They love burning things in fields.
They love burning stuff and they love throwing stuff into the sea.
It's true. It's their gem. And I dig it.
That trip to Sweden sounds very entertaining.
They did sit outside Abba's record label in a police car that they managed to get hold of
and they blasted the record
that they made from which they'd stolen Abba's music
out at Abba's record label.
And then they...
Imagine being inside the office for that.
That's thrilling.
You know, the police are here.
What do they want?
It's hard to tell.
Is this a new siren?
Very confusing.
They killed a moose accidentally.
They hit and killed a moose on that trip.
And also they were shot at by a farmer
who didn't understandably
didn't like them burning shit in his field.
But they never getting permission for anything.
So the farmer's just looking out of his...
window and he's like, oh my God, two musicians
are burning huge piles of music in my
crop field. And so they
shot their car and they claimed they
had to be towed back to England by the
AA, which I didn't know the AA did call out
to Gothenburg, but...
They're very good.
So Andy mentioned
2017, they had a panel to talk about
why they did it. So there was this thing,
when they pushed the car off the edge of the cliff,
23 years, they said, we're not going to talk about
it, and we will, in 23
years' time, have the answer, why
why did we burn this money?
So they set up this big festival
where they were gonna answer the question in 2017
and there's an amazing hour of footage you can watch on YouTube
just from one person filming the whole thing
where the KLF return and they've got a big announcement
and they arrive in an ice cream van
and they've written a new book
and their big announcement outside of trying to answer
why they did the money burning
is that they're now no longer just musicians
but they're in the funeral business as well.
And what they've done is,
In Toxteth in Liverpool.
They'll burn you in a field.
They'll throw you into the ocean.
They've set up this idea that you can buy,
and I've seen it online,
and I almost bought a brick the other day.
You can buy a brick where you put in,
if someone's passed away, a milligram, I think it is,
or a few milligrams of the ashes of that person,
and it gets baked into the brick,
and they're building a ginormous pyramid in Toxteth,
where every year they add new bricks to it,
and it's going to be something 30,
They're hoping to do it, I think.
Like, they haven't started yet, have they, I think.
Have they got planning permission?
Yeah, from the people of Toxtiff.
Because I imagine there'll be questions about this huge...
Toxtiff Day of the Dead.
It happens on November 23rd.
It's going to happen this year.
I'm going to it.
Toxtest Day of the Dead?
Yeah, it's a big festival.
They walk through the streets.
It's not a big festival.
It's...
It's a lastonbury.
It's a couple of old rockers.
I've never heard of it, yeah.
No, it's new.
Yeah, 2017 was the first one.
Yeah, it was about 400 people
and they would walk through the cities of Toxteth
wearing like this classic Day of the Dead sort of stuff.
You would buy a ticket and you didn't know what to expect.
You didn't know what you would do.
And they would take the numbers and like if you were like number 1 to 20 or something,
you would have to form a band.
And then the next people would have to get a tattoo done.
It was like Taskmaster, really.
It's pretty much like that.
And another group had to commandeer as many supermarket trolleys as they could
and stuff like that.
But before they did this, before they started doing this pyramid,
which they will probably do,
and they had another idea where they wanted to build a pyramid
containing the same amount of bricks
as there were people born in the 20th century.
It's quite a nice idea, isn't it?
How is that?
Well, unfortunately, it's 10 billion.
The Great Pyramid in Giza has 2.3 million.
So it would have been a hell of a pyramid.
That's true, unless you had tiny bricks,
and then Lego bricks.
Are they selling those bricks?
Are they selling those bricks, isn't it?
Is it basically, is it a pyramid scheme?
Is what I'm trying to say.
Hey.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Very nice.
Hey, we've got to wrap up.
We can't end up.
I'm afraid I'm thinking of that.
That is it.
That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you would like, I'm sorry,
if you would like to get in contact with any of us
about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast,
we can be found on our Twitter account.
I'm on at Shreiberland, Andy.
It's Andrew Hunter-Rand, but please
don't write about the pyramid scheme.
I'm sorry.
James?
At James Harkin.
And Anna?
You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yeah, where you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, or our website.
No Such Thing Asafish.com.
All of our previous episodes are up there.
There's also links to all the upcoming tour dates of our nerd immunity tour.
Do come and see us.
But I just want to say thank you so much, York.
That was so much fun.
We had an awesome time, and we will be back again next week with another episode.
We'll see you then.
Goodbye!
