No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Stare-Boxing
Episode Date: August 25, 2017Dan, James, Anna and Alex discuss mail-order portraits, the first ever Encyclopaedia Britannica, and the country with only five star hotels. ...
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Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden.
My name is Dan Schreiber and I'm sitting here with James Harkin, Alex Bell, and Anna Chisinski, 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 MyFact this week, my fact is 10% of the UFC.
is owned by the UAE.
That is quite surprising.
So the UFC stands for Ultimate Fighting Champions.
Yes.
Oh yeah.
What does UAE stand for?
United Arab Emirates.
And 10% of the UFC is owned specifically by Abu Dhabi.
It's a company called Flash Entertainment, which is owned by the government.
And in 2010, they bought 10% of this company, which last year, or perhaps even early this
year was sold again for $4 billion. It's a huge industry now, and they've retained their 10%.
So yeah, a government is part of the ultimate hardcore fighting machine.
Great. So let's explain what UFC is for the uninitiated like me.
Okay. Well, if you've been reading the news this week, you will see that the biggest
boxing match for a very long time has happened between a man called Connor McGregor and Floyd
Mayweather. When you say has happened, it's not happened yet in our universe, has it?
That's true. We're recording this on a Monday.
hearing this from a Friday onwards. So yeah, it's a... Let's take a pun. I think it's really sad that
Connem O'Regger died within 10 seconds of entering the Octagon. Yeah, so Conn McGregor is the UFC fighter in
this case. Floyd Mayweather is the boxer. And UFC is a collection of different disciplines of
martial arts brought together in a ring known as the Octagon. And it means that when you're
fighting an opponent, there are just many different ways that you'll be fighting against them
at different martial arts styles. It's no holds barred, isn't it? That was what it was.
originally always marketed as well. They used to say there are no rules, didn't they?
It says on the Wikipedia page and then it's immediately followed by a list of rules.
Yeah, there's a lot of rules. Yeah, yeah. It says there are no rules. And then actually,
even in its first fight, it banned biting, eye gouging, fish hooking, headbutting,
hair pulling and groin strikes. What's fish hooking?
Fish hooking is when you go for an already open cut. Or it's when you do like a right hook,
but with a fish, I think. With a slap in the face. Yeah. Like a Monty Python sketch.
But it was actually the first two of those that are banned, right?
So biting and eye gouging, and the other two are all frowned upon.
And then often I think the fighters will agree that when there were two fighters that had ponytails,
they agreed not to pull each other's hair and stuff because it would make a better fight.
But interestingly, the biting and the eye gouging are the two headline things that abound.
And that's the same two things that were banned in the ancient Greek pancration wrestling,
which was like 2,000 years ago, guys.
Is that deliberate?
I wonder if it is?
I don't know.
It's a very intellectual sport at UFC, yeah.
Well, yeah, I do nothing about it, so I'll believe anything you tell me.
Invented by Plato, was it?
Yeah, he was their first champion.
Do you know why it's called the Octagon?
It's got eight sides.
Yeah, yeah, I framed this quite badly.
The origin of the name the Octagon is a really, really bad Chuck Norris film from the 80s.
So the guy who was commissioned to design the pitch, are we calling it?
The Square.
The Ring.
The ring.
The pitch.
in which they fight.
Muhammad Ali will be fighting in the pitch
with George Foreman.
But yeah, this guy was commissioned to
design the ring. He was called Jason
Cusson and he didn't really know anything about
fighting or what he was supposed to do and he
just heard of this Chuck Norris film that was
about No Holds Bard fighting and it was
called the octagon. So he said,
sod it, let's make it an octagon.
That's so cool. It's quite, I mean it's as good a shape as any
right? In fact, you could say it's better than a square
because it's closer to a ring.
Like a ring is something with infinite sides.
and an octagon's got more sides than a square.
Compared to infinity though, it's like hardly more on the way to that many sides.
They should have a dodecahedron.
They should, yeah.
Just for the visual, if you're listening to this right now and you're thinking,
well, what's this octagon look like?
It's steel mesh all around it and the ring wall, as it were, the steel mesh wall goes up taller
than the, let's say, six-point person.
Yes, it's China.
So they have to be lowered in by crane into the ring.
Yeah.
We were saying that it's quite no-holds barred.
It gets quite violent.
And people were kind of outraged in the 90s
when Ultimate Fighting and Mixed Martial Arts was invented.
And the thing that I think outraged people the most,
or the thing that became the epitome of it,
was the fact that it was done with bare knuckles.
So it was bare-knuckle fighting.
So people were saying,
this is so dangerous, look how barbaric it is.
And with bare-knuckles, you know,
that just goes to show how barbaric it is.
And so they banned the bare-knuckle element of it after a few years
and added gloves to make it safer.
And in fact, that made it much more dangerous.
Because the reason that bare knuckle is better than wearing gloves
is that if you punch someone super hard with your bare knuckle,
then you basically break your fist.
And so most people don't want to punch people too hard.
Whereas as soon as you've got boxing gloves on,
then you can punch someone much, much harder without damaging yourself.
So by adding gloves, you kind of save the hands,
but instead you give people much more severe brain damage.
So they screwed that up.
That was quite aggressive the way that you said that fact,
because you had a fist the whole time.
And you were kind of jabbing the air.
Yeah, it felt good.
I can see the attraction, actually.
There was a study done a few years ago where researchers worked out a coat for how intense somebody smiles.
And then on the day prior to a fight, when the fighters have that traditional face-off, like, press conferencing.
Yeah.
These researchers watched 152 different UFC fighters and worked out how much they were smiling.
And then they found that the more a fighter smiles, the more likely they are to lose the fight.
And they think it's due to the link of, like, if you smile more.
you have lower testosterone and you're like aggressive in nature.
And they worked out that whilst in the short term,
it means they're more likely to lose that fight the next day.
They're not more likely to lose all the fights coming up.
So it's literally how much you are smiling the day before your fight.
The day before your fight.
Well, this is interesting because Connor McGregor has been sparring against these pro boxers
to sort of get him into shape.
So one of them has come out because he...
Batsy, that's great.
That's really cool.
I just want to say, you know, congratulations, May.
Wish you all the luck and your love life.
No, he sort of was kicked out of the Connor McGregor camp,
and then he revealed a lot of the process of how he's training.
And one of the things he's doing is he is doing long stare-offs with these boxers.
So he's practicing the stare.
I just would say at his stage, I would not be focusing on that element of the game.
I don't care how important the stair is.
But isn't it true that we did say a few podcasts ago that divers,
professional divers, half of their job is climbing up to the top of the diving board. Exactly. Yes,
thank you, James. Really, half of his job is walking to the ring. This is high, if you were
diving from a high board, half your job. Yeah, I remember the fact down. I remember it vividly.
It's ingrained in my brain. And we use the word fact very loosely. Yeah. So we're using
half of a fighter's job is staring contest. Yeah, if you're really good at not blinking,
though, you could probably win the blinking competition, dry out your opponent's eyes and then they'd be
blinded. It's not a blinking competition.
It's not like chess boxing where you play a bit of chess and you play a bit of boxing.
It's like you fight for three minutes and then you just sit there and stare at someone.
I mean, I would watch that.
It would be amazing if he had just like a smaller belt for a blinking champion for the contest.
But it could be that you have three minutes of fighting.
Then you have a staring competition and whoever wins a staring competition gets one free punch at the start of the next round.
Oh, yeah.
Nice.
You should invent that as a sport and put it in a non-ogemonish.
or something and created something amazing.
The kicking can be really damaging, can't it?
So I think have we talked about the fight between Mohammed Ali and Antonio Inoki before?
So this is a fight that's seen as basically the precursor to MME to mix martial arts.
And this was when Mohamed Ali took on a Japanese wrestler called Antonio Inoki in the 70s in the 1970s.
In the 1970s.
Can you say MMA?
Yeah, MMA.A, not MME.
Oh, sorry.
Yeah.
this is the precursor to MME, mixed martial arts.
MMA.
Wow.
This is the precursor to mixed martial arts,
and this was when Mohamed Ali took on this Japanese wrestler called Antonio.
Muhammad Ali.
Anyway, the point was,
Mohammed Ali and Antonio Inoki had this fight to see which of the disciplines was going to win,
and Inoki caused massive damage to Ali.
So basically, he spent.
the whole time lying on the floor, I think.
Almost the entirety of the time, he lay on the floor and just kicked Mohammed Ali in the shins
really hard.
And Ali got blood clots after that.
And I think his legs were permanently damaged from then on.
He had to have surgery and stuff because of it.
But it was called a draw, I think, which was good because it meant that neither of them
had disgraced themselves in front of their fans.
Yeah.
And Inoki said afterwards that the reason he just kicked Muhammad Ali is because Ali had
such devoted fans that he'd been warned if he laid a hand on him, then his fans would
kill him. So he decided to go at him with the feet instead.
Yeah. Do you think when Muhammad Ali's
supporters came up to him later and tried to attack him, he's like, no,
no, I didn't lay a hand on him. I think that's exactly what he did.
Fair doze. You've got us there. Go back and read the small print of our threat.
I love though that, like, as fans would be going up, going, hey man, we're going to kick
your ass. Like, no, this guy just kicked Muhammad Ali's ass. Like, yeah, you stand no
chance together. Yeah. Exactly. And when the angry mob comes
he can just lie in his back and kick them away.
Abidabie's not the only investor in the UFC.
There are many other people who...
Well, you said they only have 10%, so I'm not surprised.
Exactly.
Other people who have a stake in the UFC are LL Cool J.
Who's named? Do you know where LL.L. Cool J comes from?
No.
It's short for ladies love, Cool James.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, that's very cool.
Does anyone ever called you that, James?
No.
You sound like you tried to make that take off first and no one would have it.
He just got there just too quickly.
Otherwise, that's all they become.
Also, Calvin Harris, flee from the Red Hot Chili Peppers,
Trey Parker of South Park.
Really?
Maria Sharapova, the tennis star.
And Sylvester Stallone and Conan O'Brien,
who is the late-night talk show host in America,
who's been having Connor Greger on a lot recently.
And I was like, I didn't know he had an interest.
He's got a business interest.
Yeah.
That's quite a who's who of sport stars and entertainment stars.
The buy-in was 250,000.
So I think they all bought the sort of the minimum of it.
But again, back in 2010 and the sport exploded.
So those guys are probably making some money.
I can't believe all those people are making some money.
Finally.
After years of poverty, L.L. Cool, Jay.
Well, I mean, you picked the one name.
That probably does need the money.
It's the only one I could remember.
there was a fact that coincidentally was doing the round on Reddit this week about UFC
which is that there's a fighter called Rory MacDonald and so at the end of all the fights they
have walk, no at the beginning of all the fights they have walkout music so when they introduced
each fighter and he was quite unhappy about a lot of the music he was getting and the guy
that was organising it but he didn't really say anything because he thought that his like
manager and everything were just organising it themselves and eventually he mentioned
something and the guy who was organising music was like no what I thought you were
requesting all of these and it turned out that
he'd had his phone number changed a couple of years ago
and a fan had got hold of his phone number
and was requesting
stupid music
like Rihanna's We Found Love
and M.C. Hammers, you can't touch this.
So, like, all these songs
that were kind of dissing him
and making fun of him a bit.
It was just somebody taking the piss
like three years.
I could think of worse songs
that you could have put...
I'd have sent the Teletubby's theme,
you know?
So was the Tancan.
I think...
I think whoever the fan was did a good job
to just about find that level
where they didn't get found out
for like years.
You're right.
I would have been found out
the first day, wouldn't they?
When it was just you making a fart noise over the channel.
Connor McGregor got in trouble quite recently for saying that he could beat Jesus in a fight.
Did he? Yeah, this was last year. He said, there's not a man alive that could beat me,
but Jesus isn't alive, so maybe he could and come back from the dead. But I don't know,
I'd still whoop his ass. But that's true, because you only have to lie down for like 10 seconds,
whereas Jesus would take three days to get up again.
Nice.
So he'd get back up, but they'd actually converted the arena into a Little Makes concert at that point.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is LL Cool J.
We are not making a stick.
Okay, my fact this week is that Palau is about to pass a law, meaning that every hotel in the country has to be five star.
I will admit that I spent a good two minutes when you sent this by email looking for the footnote,
because I thought the star was an asterisk, and I was like, five what?
I was like scrolling through all the replies.
So what this is is a new law to try and make just high-end tourism in this country, Palau,
which is in the Pacific, and they're suffering from climate change more than everyone else, really,
like all these Pacific countries are.
And they have problems with infrastructure when they're getting loads of tourists in.
And so they think, well, if we only have high-end tourists, that means fewer tourists,
but still the same amount of money.
And they want new hotels to come in with their own water treatment system,
with their own power and stuff like that.
And so Palau is a collection of islands, right?
So is this every single one of their 280-ish islands having five-star hotels,
or is there a central spot to it?
Well, it will be if you want to put a hotel in any of those places,
it'll have to be five-star.
Yeah, and I've been to Palau.
Have you?
Yeah, I did.
We went when I was a kid because I lived in Hong Kong,
and that's not too far away.
It's quite far.
I mean, you didn't row there, did you?
No, we got the holidays.
The jet ski.
No, yeah, we holidayed there and it was in, I mean, this is, we're talking 15, 20 years ago.
So it was in huts by the beach.
So, but those can be five star, obviously.
I just know already that you're exactly the kind of person there now working to keep out, aren't you?
You're the person this policy is aimed at.
It took us 15 years to get the laugh.
through, but he's definitely not coming back now.
So I've got some stuff on hotels.
Okay.
There was, there's a really good article in The Economist about the various standards that hotels have to stick to.
And so, for instance, the Hilton chain of hotels, there's a manual that stipulates that staff have to answer the phones after three rings exactly, for instance.
Whereas Intercontinental, you have to wait four rings.
Is that right?
I used to work for Intercontinental Hotels.
Did you ever answer the phone before or after four?
I think I might have done.
Well, is that why you're working here?
I quite appreciate my rule actually because it is quite startling when you ring somewhere and they pick up really fast.
Yeah, totally.
They have, there's one chain which wasn't allowing itself to be named, which all of its hotels,
all omelets have to match a laminated model omelette that they have there, which is cigar-shaped
and they have to model it on that.
Right.
Yeah, Intercontinental also, you might remember this rule James, specifies that the rooms have to
offer at least four pornographic films.
At least four.
At least four.
You don't want to turn up and there's only three pornographic films, do you?
Can you imagine calling up reception and be like, hi?
Could do with a couple more.
I seem to be missing one of my four.
Sir, this is your first night.
I know.
It's been a long session and I just need one or two more to kick me over to the end.
Could you change the sheets while you're up here, please?
By the way, you picked up on the fourth ring and I don't know.
More a three ring guy.
We didn't ask about your sexual preferences, sir.
A hotel in Colorado downloads pictures of your family from the internet and frames them for when you arrive at the hotel.
Either brilliant or the most creepy thing I've ever heard in my entire life.
Yeah.
I think I know which one of those it is.
There's also just one more which is a hotel in Mexico, a luxury hotel,
where they do research into you beforehand
and the housekeeper matches the colour of the thread
in the guest sewing kits to the clothes that you're wearing.
And again, they get that from photos on social media, do you think?
I think actually it must be from when you've arrived.
So there must be an emergency you arrive at the reception desk
and they're like, she's got a red dress on, quick, get the red thread in the books.
That's good, because most of the pictures of me on social media
from fancy dress parties.
So you'd just get, I don't know, what kind of stuff do you wear?
You get some face paint.
Yeah, yeah.
There were a couple of zero-star hotels in Switzerland,
and the first one was in a Cold War bunker,
so there were no TVs, there are no separate bathrooms.
There's no daylight because it's in a bunker.
But it doesn't look too bad.
It's basically like a kind of low-end youth hostel.
The second one is just like a bed and a bit of a wall,
like upper mountain in Switzerland.
And then there's a butler who is actually a local farmer
who comes and is responsible for giving you the weather forecast
and telling you jokes.
That's great.
It's all about, it's a sort of tiresome critique on hotel culture.
It does sound good though.
I reckon I'd pay for that in the hotel to have a farmer come and tell me jokes.
Yeah, me too.
Especially if they check my social media and so what kind of jokes I like.
Good point.
Yeah.
He'd be like, this is an easy one.
Poor Laboured puns.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is Alex.
My fact this week is that every Canadian citizen is entitled to a free government issue.
portrait of the queen. Of our queen. Of our queen. And their queen. They're actually entitled to five
portraits of the royal family in various combinations. Can they choose whichever members they like?
As in if you prefer Princess Eugenie and Prince Andrew, you can have those two. You know what? I don't
think they're on offer. I think it's mainly like Philip and the queen and I think Prince William. Yeah,
it's the big, it's the headline. It's the main characters. But there are just five different ones and
you can order up to one of each so you can get five in total. Right. So it'd be like, like,
Like Pokemon, you've got to unlock Eugenie with your dedication.
Presumably there's a prints, not original oil paintings every time you...
Yeah, no, yeah, these are just paints.
Oh, you can download them like free, so I've downloaded mine, even though not...
You're not Canadian.
I know, but there was no password.
So this is part of a lot of services that you can get from the governments of Canada.
If you ring 1-800-O Canada, you get...
Oh, I know, you get onto a helpline that provides that information on Canadian.
governmental programs and services and stuff like that.
It's really cool.
But the O, is that a zero, or is it the O in the keyboard?
The letter O rather than the numbers.
Really?
Because when you give someone's phone number,
you often use the word O to mean zero, don't you?
Like, 0,800.
It's really confusing.
A lot of Canadians getting through to some random pizza place somewhere
or demanding pictures of the queen.
They're like, what's going on?
Interestingly, when you go to the website,
I looked at the pictures as well.
I couldn't see as many as five, actually.
I saw you could have the queen or Philip or the queen with Philip.
So those are your options that I saw.
And they have lots of rules, though, for if you do download them,
for what you're allowed and they're allowed to not do with them.
So, for example, you cannot use the images on adhesive seals.
That's one.
What's an adhesive seal?
I guess...
Like a sticker on an envelope?
Yeah, that's what I was thinking, like, on an envelope.
I guess a stamp is what they're saying.
I see.
Or seal as in that holds the envelope together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you're not allowed that.
You know, all the time that rather than buying a normal envelope,
you just buy one and then use a sticker to.
I always do that.
But then I always put a sticker of the queen on,
so now I'm a bit worried.
Yeah.
You kind of recall all those postcards from over the ears, James.
Can you recall a postcard?
The postman just locks on your door.
Sorry, I'm just going to...
She doesn't wish you were here anymore.
Also, can I just say postcards,
the one thing you don't have to put in an envelope.
I know.
As the words came out of my mouth, I thought, I hope no one notices that.
The one final thing you're not allowed to use it for.
There's other things, but another thing you're not allowed to use it for is to advertise
if the Queen or Philip have visited your shop.
So the example they give is, for example, if the Royal Highnesses,
the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were to visit a cheese shop,
that shop could not use a photograph of the occasion to advertise its goods.
Is that like when you go into like a curry house and they've got like a sign photo of Gary Linnaker?
Yes.
Or like a laundrette.
But isn't it always Gary Linnecker in those things?
He just visits laundress and curry houses all the time.
It must be that Gary Linneka is going to a lot of curry houses with signed photos, right?
Yeah.
Or Arthur.
I mean, have you ever seen him on any linen?
I haven't.
Also, it's the same photo of Gary Linneke.
Right.
It's the same.
I think that he just doesn't have an oven or a washing machine.
So he always constantly has to use the laundrette and eat out.
He goes to the curry house, spills curry all over himself.
So he has a little.
to get everything dry clean.
Yes, an notoriously messy eater.
Something else that you can get free in Canada
that's quite cool is the flag
that's flown at the top of their equivalent of Big Ben, basically,
which is the Ottawa Peace Tower,
so it's a huge clock that's sort of part of their parliament buildings.
And you can write off, you can sign a form and write off
and request one of those flags,
because every single day or about 250 days of the year,
they take the flag down and they change it and put up a new one,
and then they wash that one and iron it out
and they send it to whoever in Canada has requested it.
Really?
They must be massive though, aren't they?
They are big, yes.
And so there must be more than one person must request it.
Right, so this is what's happened.
I think you've hit upon a problem.
They've had at least 20,000 requests at this point,
which means that there's now a 73-year waiting list to get your flag.
So you can have it delivered to your grandchildren.
You've got to be pretty young to make an application now, don't you?
You really do, to be.
successful. But why did they keep giving away flags? Sorry, why do they need a new one every day?
I don't think they do. I think this was just an idea they had. It would be a nice patriotic thing to do to donate a flag each day or most days of the year to someone in the country.
So it's every day they replace the flag. Not every year. It's about, so it's every weekday, except bank holidays or apparently when the weather's poor, they don't bother changing it.
Every Canadian citizen is entitled to three hours to vote whenever there's an election.
In the booth? No, it doesn't know. So you'll have three hours off work to vote.
Basically, what are you doing in there?
Basically, if your work schedule means that you finish work at, say, 4 o'clock or something,
and the polls close at 7 o'clock, then that's fine.
But if your work schedule means you don't have three hours spare, they have to give you three hours off.
That's good.
Yeah.
It's good that, isn't it?
Yeah, that's a lot of time to get to a polling station.
Yeah.
You could probably have lunch as well.
Yeah?
I'd go to the pub.
I might not even vote, to be honest.
I got another Queen Canada fact.
So the Queen appears on the banknotes of Canada,
as she does in Australia and all around the Commonwealth.
But interesting claim that Canada has over it
is they were the first country,
even beating the UK,
to having the Queen on a banknote before anyone else.
Was it like as soon as she became Queen, they rushed it out?
No, it was pre.
This was in 1935.
Oh, she was a child.
Yeah, I remember this.
Nine-year-old.
You remember this?
I remember reading it before you just said it.
I knew it.
Time, chabler!
I went back to order my flag.
Did you know, in Australia, you can also get a portrait of the queen,
but you can also request CD and DVD recordings of the National Anthem if you want them.
Really?
So if you Google Constituents Request Program, you can just ask your local MP or a political representative for that,
and you can request a booklet on the flags of Australia.
You can get a booklet on Australia's national symbols.
And yet, you can get a DVD of the National Anthem for that?
So can someone listening to this in Australia, please do that and send us a photo of you with your DVD?
Please do.
Actually, I quite like a photo of someone from Canada with their free portrait of the Queen.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
If you're in a Commonwealth and you have this option, if you're listening in Britain, just a picture of Gary Lenico will be great.
And please post it to us on our QI account.
Okay, it is time for our final.
fact of the show and that is
Chisinski. My fact this week is
that the first ever Encyclopedia Britannica
said that humans were divided into five
categories. Those categories were
American, European, Asianic,
African and monstrous.
Jeez.
They're the five types of humans.
Did they believe that there were monsters? Is that what we're saying?
I read this in this really good book I've just started reading.
It's called You Could Look It Up by a guy called Jack Lynch.
And so what it was was that
there was kind of an age of exploration
and there were often a lot of rumours
about the kind of people you'd find in strange places
maybe there were kind of mythical
semi-human creatures around so there were reports
for instance of men who had feet backwards
or men who didn't have any noses
there were reports of humans who had dogs' heads
and who communicated by barking
and so there were kind of these rumours
about mythical monstrous beings
but you are describing Bigfoot and werewolves
and these are all still real
real things out there today Anna
right
So this was the catch-all term that they used just to cover themselves to be like anything we know.
It's miscellaneous, basically.
Yeah.
And this went back to Linnaeus who classified Homo sapiens 10 years earlier, so in 1758.
And he actually said that there was Homo Ferris as well as a different species, which was wild men.
And then Homo monstrous, which was monsters.
And yeah, so we're not quite sure what they are, but weird looking made up people.
So I was reading up on the first ever encyclopedia Britannica, because weirdly it's, you almost feel like,
like the authors should be famous names.
And I didn't know a single one.
So there were two guys who effectively brought it together.
One was called Colin McFarca.
That's exactly how he pronounced it.
With the question mark at the end.
He never knew.
The name's McFarquah.
Colin McFarquah.
Yeah, he also set up with a guy called Andrew Bell.
And Alex, your surname is Bell.
I'm trying it all about it.
Yeah.
Well, what's interesting is for the Encyclopedia Britannica, he was the engraver.
He was the one who did all of the drawings, which on our podcast, when you're not on the
microphone with us, you are our illustrator for all the things.
So you both have the same surname.
That's exciting.
I like the way that you said Bell as if there was no exclamation points at the end of it as well.
So you got Medfagwa.
And Bell.
Yeah, I don't know what's going to go with my pronunciations.
But Bell was very interesting.
guy. He was quite small. He was four foot six and he had a big nose that he would sometimes try and hide
by wearing a paper mashay version in order to hide the bigness of his nose.
He was bigger. Yeah. You would think right? No, I think he was a joker and he did it whenever
anyone stared at his nose. He put a bigger one on top of it to say, are you looking at my nose,
bitch? I think it was like, because he was... Go to be in my book, bitch. It's an engraving of you.
and he also
he used to
so as well as doing
encyclopedia Britannica
he used to engrave crests
and dog collars
and he made sure
that he always rode
the tallest horse
that was available
so if he was going to
just rent a horse
he'd be like the tallest
one please
I like that of going to
hire a horse
they've just got the same options
like at the car rental place
but you're like colour
and heights
yeah compact or
do you leave it fully fed
or do you
someone else do that
So the oldest known Encyclopedia Britannica is still in use, apparently,
and it was only discovered in 2010,
and there's an 18-volume set that was from 1797,
and it just belonged to this family in Chelmsford,
and they'd used it growing up and stuff,
and they were still using it all the time.
They bought it for £15, the full set,
which seems unbelievable for 18 volumes of encyclopedia.
But now it's worth like 9, 9,000, right?
Yeah, understandably.
Seems like not very much money for the Encyclopedia,
oldest encyclopedia ever.
They don't seem to go for them.
Yeah, but you can get them on CD-ROM these days.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, it's why.
James, you're so with it.
I had no idea.
If Wikipedia was printed out on paper,
it would be about 1,900 volumes worth of Britannica.
Really?
That would be the most tedious.
I mean, encyclopedias are not exactly
the greatest read of all time, are they?
But imagine Wikipedia.
All those little pages for, like, high schools
in the middle of America and stuff.
Well, there was a project, like it was more of an art project,
but this guy called Michael Mandiburg in 2015 printed out some of it
and kind of did all the maths and worked to how much it would cost.
And it was called from A to ZAP,
so the A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, Clamation mark,
which is, like, the first Wikipedia entry he could find at the beginning,
to Z-Z-Z-Z-A-P, which was a really random kids TV show
that I remember watching.
Really?
Yeah, isn't that weird?
I remember watching, ah!
Yeah, it was a classic.
My favorite encyclopedia is the four-volume encyclopedia of lubricants and lubrication.
Nice. Have you read it?
No. It's not you couldn't put it down. It's you couldn't pick it up.
Okay. Well, anything else? I'm happy to wrap.
Yep. Let's hear that wrap. LL. Cool J.
Okay, that's it. That is all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening.
If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we have said over the course of
this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Schreiberland, James, at Egg-shaped, Alex,
Alex Bell, underscore, and Shizinski. You can email podcast at QI.com. Yep, where you can go to our
group Twitter account, which is at QI podcast, or you can head to no such thing as a fish.com
where it has all of our previous episodes. You can also buy tickets to our upcoming tour in October and
November. It's also got a link to buy our book, the book of the year, which comes out in November.
and why not join us every Monday on Facebook Live 5.30 p.m. British time, which apparently is not a thing, but London time. And we'll be there to chat about this episode. We'll see you again next week. Goodbye.
