No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As The Assistant Honcho

Episode Date: June 10, 2022

Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss the letters A (for Airport Complaints), B (for Birdman Cults), C (for Crafty Caterpillars) and D (for a Dodgy Dewey).  Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about... live shows, merchandise and more episodes.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 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 am sitting here with Anna Tashinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin. And once again, we have gathered round 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 Anna. My fact this week is that there's hardly any fresh water on Easter Island so the indigenous people drank straight from the sea. That's why they're dead.
Starting point is 00:00:48 They all immediately died. They landed there. A thousand years ago, all died. No, they didn't die. This is the amazing thing about it. So Europeans first got there in the 1700s, 1722. They noticed that the indigenous people there, the Pacific Islanders who traveled over there hundreds of years earlier,
Starting point is 00:01:05 seemed to be drinking straight from the sea. Very confusing. haven't thought about it again for 400 years and then scientists looked into it and they realized that actually fresh water kind of emerges on the shore so it's the fact that there's no fresh water
Starting point is 00:01:20 or very little fresh water because the soil is super porous and so it rains and the soil just sucks it in straight away no streams or anything but the rainwater goes down into the earth and then travels out to the beach underground and then it re-emerges like just at the shoreline So when the tide's out, you can kind of go and scoop up some of that, you know, water, which is in the very shallows of the sea.
Starting point is 00:01:44 And it's still salty. Don't get me wrong. I think it would taste like shit. Yeah. But it tastes like salt. It all tastes like salt. But it's not salty enough that it dehydrates you to death. So it's like a river, but it's underground, kind of, right?
Starting point is 00:01:56 Yeah. Yeah. How did they survive long enough to experiment with that to not be wiped out? Like, that's extraordinary, right? I thought initially that it would just be a body of water that was consistently there. You're telling me a tide. has to go out and then they find the water. Yeah, although the tide does go out most days.
Starting point is 00:02:11 Yeah, true. But it's annoying. It's annoying having to wait 12 hours. Yeah, but it's annoying. Like this morning, I had to wait for Starbucks to open. That's annoying. That's the same. It's the same, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:02:24 We can empathise in a lot of ways. I guess you, you know, if you're thirsty and you're really dying of thirst and the only water that you can see is the water on the shore at the sea, maybe you give it a try. And also, it's a 1,200, they didn't know anything. It's very far away. from, can we just say how far away from stuff East Island is? The nearest inhabited island is 2,000 kilometres away. South America is 3,500 kilometres away. So it's in the very, very, it's in the
Starting point is 00:02:47 South Pacific, isn't it? And it's just so far from everywhere. It's kind of halfway between Chile and Australia. Yeah. Isn't it, really? Because when I went to South America, I thought, oh, we'll just pop over to Easter Island for maybe a couple of days. That'd be really cool. And then I looked about how the flight was going to be. I'm not going to get there. And that's the amazing thing, isn't it? How did people get there? How did people end up there? Well, we know. Well, we know it's the Polynesians, right? But like, how did they discover the island? What were they doing? There's a lot of origin stories. There's a lot of archaeological. Like, everyone has a different idea that they bring to the table. But no one can decide. Your idea would be the aliens one,
Starting point is 00:03:19 I suppose, Dan. Is there an alien's one? Of course, there's an alien's. Yeah. I haven't read that one. Your mate, Dan, Eric von Dan. Is this the one you're talking about, James? Well, it's just the, that's the famous one, right? Yeah, yeah. Wow. He thinks that a race of superior intelligent creatures got shipwrecked, effectively on Easter Island. taught the locals how to make the statues, started making a load of them for their own amusement, then got picked up before they'd finished all of them, which is why some of the statues are not finished,
Starting point is 00:03:45 and then just left again. His basically theory is that if there were ever any really amazing structures made where white people weren't there, then it must be aliens. So you can be pretty sure that he would think that here. He's not my mate, by the way. Can I just quickly go? He's asked specifically not to be associated with me. But yeah, Andy, about the statues,
Starting point is 00:04:03 that's the famous thing, right? The statues, the big heads on Easter. Island. And there's a thing about the big heads that they tend to be clustered near the areas where you can get this water. And so some people think that maybe they were kind of a marker to tell you were the best places to get a little bit of drinking water work. Oh, wow. Yeah. They've recently realized that the positioning of the statues coincides with particularly these areas of freshwater springs. And even inland, it coincides with places where you'd be able to get a well and get some fresh water. It makes sense. If you're going to signpost anything as a bunch of rural
Starting point is 00:04:36 islanders, you're probably signposts water, don't you? But that's such big signposts, that's the thing. It's an amazingly, it's so much effort to go to to flag there is water here. But it was kind of their thing though, wasn't it? Like there's a thousand of them on the island. You know, they'd make it up in this hill bit where they used volcanic rock and ash that
Starting point is 00:04:53 it was called Tough and they would carve and then they would drag down and slide down with an amazing sort of hit rate of not damaging them as well, which is pretty extraordinary given their size. You know, there's people who've gone and visited and seen broken ones. But on average, it was said that they could just bring them down, these giant structures and walk them to where they needed to be. And some of them would be,
Starting point is 00:05:14 as you say, would be facing waters. Some would be facing inland to protect the land. Some, there's seven in particular, which were meant to represent seven different of Polynesian tribes that had come over. So a group of people facing the direction of which they all originated from. We don't know if that's true. That's just a theory on the island. Yeah. The big question is, when they were transporting them down, did they slide from the top of the hill on the moai, like they were sledges? On the moai?
Starting point is 00:05:41 They're called moai, the statues. Oh, I'm sorry, I thought you meant did the statues slide on? Yeah, yeah. On, no, no, no. But they might have been, the statues might have sledge. That's one theory. Mm-hmm. Or they might have been put on log rollers.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Well, Dan said walked, didn't he? And the other theory is that they walked into position that you put a big rope around them and just stroll them. You're like when you're trying to move a heavy bit of furniture. Like a fridge. Yeah, you lift one corner and move that, And then you put that down. And the aliens are going, pivot.
Starting point is 00:06:08 Yeah. The other thing about them, which I think you found out recently, James. I mean, you weren't the original person to find it out. But there's as much of them underground as above ground. Yes. Unbelievable. They're not heads. They're just statues of entire bodies.
Starting point is 00:06:22 But apparently over hundreds of years, soil accumulation and various bits of erosion and stuff buried the bodies. Isn't that incredible, though, that they didn't bury the bodies themselves? So it's not like they hid it. enough erosion has happened that all of them just seem to have a head left. Yeah. It's like a kid been buried in the sand and his parents have left him there. We haven't talked about the most interesting structures on Easter Island, I would say.
Starting point is 00:06:45 Oh yeah. Which is their chicken houses. Do you guys read about these? No, no. So they've got great chicken houses. They're called Haramoa and they were almost impregnable to robbers because obviously there was a time of long decline on the island. You needed to protect your protein wherever you could.
Starting point is 00:07:01 So chickens are kind of vital. They should have really pivoted completely to chickens, I think, but I'm not going to give them advice. Look, they've clearly been through a lot. Anyway, these chicken houses will really get. They were two metres high, up to 20 metres long, made completely of stone. It's huge can of stones, basically. And they are quite mysterious because the other thing about them is that human skulls have been found inside the chicken houses. Whoa.
Starting point is 00:07:22 Are we thinking the chickens, actually? We're eating the humans. That's what I'm thinking. Do you think the chickens made the massive heads because they thought human heads are so delicious? If we make some massive ones, then that will bring us more. I think that's it. Yeah. I think theory, and again, it's so much theorising.
Starting point is 00:07:39 I think it's that they were chief's skulls and that they were believed to have a fertilising power, these skulls, to increase the egg yields. So pretty goth. So pretty goth. I knew you'd like those hen houses because they're like dry stone walls, aren't they? They're very, very similar. And you said how they're impregnable. The interesting thing about that is they're made like dry stone walls. So they're made of loads and loads of stones going.
Starting point is 00:08:01 all the way around. But one of the stones, you can pull out and use it as a door. But unless you're the one who built it, you don't know which stone it is. And so you can, you can get in and get your chickens out, but no robber can get the chickens out. That's fantastic. So good. I'd love to go to East Raland and only photograph the chicken houses. I would really come back with a slideshow for my family. There are 1,233 of those chicken houses and only 887 stoneheads. So I think we're Concentrate it on the wrong thing? I couldn't agree more. And do you think they should have pivoted to chickens because of the other thing
Starting point is 00:08:36 that formed the basis of their protein diet, which was rats? Oh, another good reason to pivot to chickens. I think so many reasons to pivot to chickens. They've done some studies recently, some analysis of the teeth of skeletons, and it shows that their source of protein was rats and they ate loads of rats, although apparently Pacific Island rats are slightly tastier than European rats. Who studied this? Who said that?
Starting point is 00:08:59 Just registered new scientists or something. So I don't know how much all the researchers have gone to compare them. I've still not going to Kentucky Fried Rat. That's what I'm saying. But as you say, Andy and Dan, the theorising is out of control. Yeah. We know almost nothing. So pretty much everything we've said so far is just, you know, based on a few bits of
Starting point is 00:09:16 evidence and we piece stuff together. The stuff we know for sure is stuff that's told from living memory. And so the stuff we know for sure is actually about the cult that followed the big head cult, which is the Birdman cult. And we do actually have information about the. that. And this is another theory about who knocked down the heads. So basically, Westerners arrived and sometime after Cook went there in the late 1700s, then the head cult was replaced with this Birdman cult. So they just tore down the heads because they were like, we're the guys
Starting point is 00:09:44 in charge now. But the cool thing about the Birdman cult was how they elected their head poncho. Do you read this? Did you say poncho? Oh, poncho. I said poncho. Oh, good. Oh, I heard poncho as well. It's weird because head honcho is a phrase, but head poncho isn't afraid. That's why we were surprised to hear it. It's almost a better phrase. I'm the head poncho here. Especially if you've got a really awesome puncho whenever you get become head. I think it would need that. Is it just for your head?
Starting point is 00:10:10 Are you wearing a poncho for your body and then you've got a head poncho on top? Yeah, double poncho. This is what they wore on the islands. Because I know what a poncho is and that's why I like the phrase, but I don't know what a honcho is really. Some guy. You never hear about honcho when not preceded by head, do you? You never hear about the second honcho and not.
Starting point is 00:10:25 No, you never do it. No, no. Vice honcho. Yes, I'm the assistant honcho. Well, look, the head honcho competition in the bird man cult was to elect the Tangata Manu, who was the birdman of the year, happened every year. And essentially, it was the first person to find the first egg that was laid by the sooty turn every year. And the way they did it was. It's not.
Starting point is 00:10:51 Did they go, like, just whisper in his ear, like a little bear? What's that sooty turn? You were the honcho last year. it sweeps turn out. Maybe all the statues are hollow inside. It's a massive Matthew Carbett who comes along. With incredibly strong arms. They're the finger puppets of the gods.
Starting point is 00:11:13 That's what they are. That is a Vondanican book I absolutely would devour. Sorry, they're trying to find the egg. Yeah, it does feel like we have wandered off course. They're trying to find the egg of the city turn. And the way they do it is the main competitors would either compete themselves or they'd elect a hoopoo, which was someone who, competed on their behalf. And what they had to do was they had to climb down this cliff.
Starting point is 00:11:33 They'd have to swim a mile out to sea, very rough seas, mile out to sea and land on this island. And it was the island where all the birds came and laid their eggs every spring. They wait there for a few weeks on this island. And then eventually the birds would arrive. The first one to spot the first egg would signal back to the main island and say, I've got the egg, you win, master. And then the rewards, here's where it gets really exciting if you're the first one to get the egg is you get to shave off your, eyebrows and eyelashes and your head, your hair, not your head, and you took a new name that was adopted as the name of the year, and then you danced and sang your way to the royal residence
Starting point is 00:12:09 where you had to live in total seclusion for a year. And that's what you get. That's quite good, actually. Living in total seclusion for a year. Yeah, and people brought you food, actually. Did they? Yeah, it's the dream. But the food was rats. It was tall rats. But, but nice rats. All of the statues were knocked over. Yeah. At some point after first Western contact, when the first sailors arrived, which was 1722, there was a Dutchman called Jacob Rogavine, he visited on Easter Day in 1722, which is why he gave it the name East Riland. They were all standing. They were all fine. There were no descriptions of any that had fallen over.
Starting point is 00:12:43 And then a couple hundred years later, they're all knocked over. And it would have taken a huge amount of effort to knock them over. The people clearly decided, we don't want these anymore. Yeah, I think they felt, well, this is one of the many theories. Let's go. There's many theories. Yeah. But this is the theory I think on the side of the kind of more mythological side is that they were idols to the gods.
Starting point is 00:13:02 And because the island had been so ravaged in terms of the deforestation that they'd done and so on, because that's the main thing, isn't it? There's hardly any trees there left anymore. And so they couldn't make canoes to go and fish. And so they ran out of food. And so it was anger. And they knocked down the statues to say, fuck you, God. Wow. That's quite angry.
Starting point is 00:13:22 Because I can imagine being angry and having a pen in your hand and things. throwing it to the ground and stuff. But actually, to be so angry that you knock over a massive statue, and then another, and then, like, hundreds and hundreds of them. Wait, when they lined up like dominoes, it's impossible? You only need to get one over originally. That would be amazing. Maybe that is it?
Starting point is 00:13:41 It was a mistake. It was a mistake. It was a mistake. It was a mistake. Some dude was just leading on and chatting up, girl. Mr. Bean went to Easter Island, didn't we? Okay. It is time for fact number.
Starting point is 00:13:57 And that is my fact. My fact this week is that last year, Dublin Airport received 13,569 noise complaints. 12,272 of those were made by one person. Oh, no. One single person. 15,000 in a year. Yeah, it was averaging basically 34 a day, roughly. That's basically presumably every time a plane takes off.
Starting point is 00:14:24 I think so, yeah. We don't know who this person is. the way. They've kept them anonymous. I don't know why. But it's something that they've done before many times. They've doubled their amount of complaints that they previously had done. So this isn't like they just popped out of nowhere. Right. They've been complaining for years. Weirdly, obviously due to the pandemic, you know, flights have been down, but the complaints have been going up. Yeah. They did kind of pop out of nowhere because they came along, I think, in 2018. In 2018, there were 628 complaints.
Starting point is 00:14:58 In 2019, 3,147 in the first six months of the year. And then not that many since then, but some. And then, like you say, this last couple of years, they've really picked up again. Is it someone who's erected a tent on the runway? Is how... I was wondering. Or someone who set up an automatic system
Starting point is 00:15:17 that every time the noise goes over a certain volume... So that is possible. Now, what this did happen in Heathrow, In 2015, Heathrow found that some people had automated software that could generate complaints. And they found out because when the clocks changed, they didn't change the clocks on their system. So they started complaining about flights that hadn't taken off yet. Wait, that's so cheeky. They were, what they were.
Starting point is 00:15:43 They would find out when a plane was taking off and automatically their computer would just send an email. That's, I think that is, I think that is cheeky because I think it's got to be, you've got to have the noise. You've got to have experienced noise. I think that's what Heathrow thought as well. Do we know if they bother to make each email different? Like, did they write a thousand different word of emails? Dear sir, dear madam. Hello, further to my previous email.
Starting point is 00:16:07 That's amazing. Or this one, were they all clones of each other? This person? They haven't said, yeah. I imagine it's pretty much the same email that would come through. Well, this person doesn't actually live that close to the airport either. That's the double personal. You know where they live.
Starting point is 00:16:22 How do we know with it? Ongar, which is about 20 miles away from the airport. And the interesting thing about that is, Dublin Airport are actually quite good neighbours, if you look into it. As far as I'm concerned, they seem to be. And they'll offer to buy your house, for instance, if it's too much on a regular basis, especially since they got their new runway. But this person is outside of that distance. They can't be helped by any of these systems. So that could be why they're complaining.
Starting point is 00:16:47 And flight path can be, you know, devil's it. If you're like, West London, it's so much of it's under the Heathrow. fight path that you get so many planes a day. It also does seem that you do get these individuals, like these singular individuals that make it their mission to do it. Heroes, I call them. Heroes, exactly. So the same thing happened for Reagan airports in Washington.
Starting point is 00:17:06 In 2015, they had 8,670 noise complaints, and 6,500 of those were from a single person as well. Yeah, it's just some heroes, as Andy say. There's a secret society. There's a masons for complainers somewhere that we didn't know about. Do you think that these people have time to go to a secret society? To me, I don't think they do. Noise complaints are just ridiculous sometimes in terms of when you read the headline.
Starting point is 00:17:32 You think, how's that possible? My favorite one that I've read recently, a Canadian city made a noise complaint against an American city. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Wow. So this was Windsor, Ontario, and they were making a complaint against Detroit. And it was because, yeah. So the Detroit River is a, there's a one kilometer waterway between Windsor and.
Starting point is 00:17:52 and Detroit. And they were having a festival on the riverbank, they said on Windsor's side, the sound system facing directly towards them. And so they received all these complaints from about 1.30 to 2.30 in the morning when the music was still playing. And all the complaints directed on the Windsor side to their council to say, we want you to write to Detroit's council and officially log this as a noise complaint. And they did. Yeah, they got an official, a city got an official noise complaint from another city. That's great. Yeah. And this, imagine if this was the France's first. and moment for the civil war between Canada.
Starting point is 00:18:25 Ironically, that's the music they were playing. I was looking about the history of filing sound complaints. I think the earliest I could find the earliest official sound complaint, which resulted in action being taken, was in 1302. This was in the UK, and it was a petition by a bunch of friars. And it's just so fun because it's just exactly the same as we would say today, exactly the same kind of complaint. So they requested that this courthouse, the courthouse,
Starting point is 00:18:52 Catatoll should not be rebuilt to the damage and nuisance of the friars. Their complaint was that when it rains, people who are going to the courthouse seek refuge for themselves and their horses in the church of the friars while the friars are saying mass, which actually does sound quite annoyed. It sounds annoying. Yeah. And so it's quite hard to shout mass over the noise and the press of the people. Especially if they take a vow of silence or something.
Starting point is 00:19:16 That would be really annoying. Yeah, they can't shout them down. To sit there swearing at them. I read another study by Manchester Met, and this is going back to the airports. This was complaint data at Manchester Airport from between 1998 and 2000. They found what we found, which is that there is a subgroup of serial complainers out of all the complaints. So they described as... Is that like, cornflakes, not quite cheap enough?
Starting point is 00:19:38 Exactly. Gosh. Where can I address my complaint about that joke? I think if people are complaining about our jokes, then they would be serial complainers. Because a serial complainer is someone who makes more than 50 complaints a year versus a normal complainer who is someone who does less than that. But they profiled serial complainers. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 00:20:00 And they found really interestingly that a serial complainer would tend to send all of their emails between 10pm and 1am. And then again in the morning from 7 a.m. to about 8 a.m. So they do it just before they went to bed or just before they got up. Whereas a normal complainer would do it at any time of the night. they might do it at 1 a.m. 2 a.m. 3m. 4 a.m. So what that suggests is that the normal complainers are actually being woken up by the planes and got oh for God's sake and sending an email versus serial complainers are doing it just before they go to bed maybe after a few drinks I don't know
Starting point is 00:20:33 and then first thing in the morning when they remember oh that was really annoying last night kind of thing. I can you sort of understand the late evening one where people are stewing you know I'm I've got to complain about this I'm so annoyed where at early morning I don't get at all I wonder sometimes it's like you want to send an email at night time and you're like if I send it now people will think I'm drunk sending it so I wait till the morning and I'm going to send it then it's a schedule send well let me reread the draft that was furious in the evening I'll write an angry email but I normally end up not sending an email yes or instead sending an apology instead of the airport love all the noise thanks Andy keep it up turn it up I can take it
Starting point is 00:21:16 This fight was about Dublin Airport. Yeah. Most famous Irish airline. Erlingus. Come on, Andy. Ryanair. Yeah, Ryanair. It's got to be Ryanair.
Starting point is 00:21:29 I know Airlingus is a very famous one. I only named the National Carrier. I'm afraid I say that against probably. Sorry, Ryanair, Ryanair. Really interesting thing is that Ryanair is founded by a guy called Tony Ryan. He's really famous. He leased, he owned a leasing company first. And even today, Ireland leases about 40% of all the airplanes in this guy at any time.
Starting point is 00:21:51 So most of the smaller airlines don't own the airplanes that they own. They're leased from someone else. And a lot of that's from Ireland. And this was all goes back to this guy called Tony Ryan. He decided he wanted to set up an airline and it's called Ryanair, but it's not named after him. Isn't that amazing? He wanted to call it Trans-Tipperary Airlines. But his friend and someone who he set up the business with called,
Starting point is 00:22:15 Christy Ryan decided he wanted to name it after him. And so Christy Ryan said, I know, I want to name it after me and call it Ryanair. And Tony Ryan said, you can't name it after you. And he said, well, I'm going to do it anyway. And in the end, they decided and called it Ryanair. But Tony Ryan is the really famous guy who everyone. It's not the Ryan. No, because that's so interesting.
Starting point is 00:22:34 Because online, it always clear. I thought it wasn't named after Christopher and it was named after Tony. Because, yeah, it always says it's named after Tony Ryan. But secretly it's the Christopher. That's very funny. That's amazing. I was reading a very tiny bit about noise on planes because obviously we're talking about noise
Starting point is 00:22:50 when you're on the ground from an airplane but it's huge when you're inside and they do a lot to try and fix it make it better make it more manageable one of the things that affects is your food on a plane they've found in research when you're eating food the noise can mess with your taste buds and so British Airways in 2014
Starting point is 00:23:08 released a little thing called sound bites so the idea would be that the food that you ordered on the plane You could go into the system, your little entertainment system, and you could find a track that plays a curated bit of noise to listen to while you're eating that meal to match the taste and help you out with the food. That would work. I've been to the Fat Duck, you know, Heston Blumenthal's place, and he plays music sometimes to you when you eat a certain thing. You'll have to wear headphones and listen to the sound of the sea while you eat some seafood and stuff. Yeah, exactly. So it'd be like Verdi would be playing, you know, while you're eating on.
Starting point is 00:23:43 the airplane. It's a pasta. Exactly. It is that. It is that. If you're on your way to Easter Island, just the sound of rats screaming. I've got a case study for you.
Starting point is 00:23:53 I'll go on. Okay. You live in a seaside flat, right? Yes. In Italy. Oh, lovely. Lovely. It's a block of flats.
Starting point is 00:24:01 And then your neighbor. Yeah. It's a flat. It's not one of those solo flats. Oh, it's in the Bay of Poets, I think it's called. Oh. Remote. So there are four brothers who are.
Starting point is 00:24:13 own the flat next door. Right. They install lavatory, okay, in one of their rooms. Yeah, it's fine. But it's right next the headboard of your bed. And it's so loud. Yeah. Whose side are you on? But I'm the person. Well, you live at the flat, actually. So someone's taking a shit next to your head every day. Pretty much. Or every night. I think I might consider moving, flipping my bed around so that my headboard isn't right there. This is the thing.
Starting point is 00:24:37 The couple said of, our home is so small, we can't rearrange the furniture. Okay. So this, get this. This happened in. In 2003, the couple who owned the flat, which I put you all in, said the noise is intolerable. They took it to a judge, got thrown out. They went to an appeal court. The appeal court judge said, actually, that is bad for your quality of life. Okay. The brothers fought back and took it to the Supreme Court.
Starting point is 00:24:57 Wow. This year, in 2022, 19 years after the original complaint. Oh, my God. And they've been holding a shit in all that time. It's been settled. On whose side? In favour of the couple, who owned the flat? The brothers have had to pay 10,000 euros almost.
Starting point is 00:25:13 So what do they do now? The brothers? Outdoor WC? I don't think they could sound. I don't know if they could sound. Maybe they have to use their loo. Move the loo? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:25:22 Put lots of loo roll down before you do a number two. I think it was the flush. The plot. The plot's one and the problem. But the journal newspaper said, in far less time than this case took, Albert Einstein wrote the theory of relativity explaining the whole universe.
Starting point is 00:25:37 It's hard though, isn't it? I mean, you can see both sides. Yeah. I think. You're going to have a place. to have, you've got to have a tie. You've got to have a Lou. But also, you're going to be able to sleep somewhere and these are small places.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Yeah. Is it four brothers? Yeah. It's a bit of the story that no one's picked up on. What? There are four brothers? Living together for 19 years? I think that's a bit on.
Starting point is 00:26:00 I said that. That's quite a good. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Get a life. Move out.
Starting point is 00:26:05 Why hasn't one of them got married? Yeah. What is happening with that family? I think they're doing it deliberate. Is that what you're saying? They've clubbed together and deliberate. than deliberately said they'll devote their lives to torturing this couple. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:26:16 I just think when it comes to court, when it's four brothers living together for 19 years, I would think something weird's going on there. I'm going to leave you guys alone. Okay. I'm with me. There are further questions, Your Honor. The prosecution rests. Four brothers.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Do me a favor. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that in her life. lifetime, Emily Dickinson was better known as a baker than as a poet. She thought it was a really good baker or a really bound poet? Probably an unknown poet. People didn't really know that she did poetry and people did know that she did baking. If you don't know who Emily Dickinson is, she is probably one of the most famous American poets.
Starting point is 00:27:06 In her lifetime, didn't really sell or publish anything, just one or two little things. People didn't really know about her. She didn't want anything to be published. But what she was famous for in her area was making loads of cakes, loads of delicious things that she used to give to all the children all the time. And so there's a new book that's come out called the Emily Dickinson Cook Book by Arlene Osborne. And in that she says she was better known as a baker than a poet. Although there is another book that I've seen, which is about Emily Dickinson's gardening. And in that book, it says she was better known as a gardener than a poet.
Starting point is 00:27:42 So it kind of feels like whatever you're writing the book. about you can say that. She basically wasn't known as a poet. I think that's one of saying. But what's amazing, though, is like she's known for the gardening. She's known for the bakery. But actually, she was kind of a recluse for most of her life, wasn't she? I think kind of is a weak way of referring to what was extreme recluseville.
Starting point is 00:28:00 So how do we know about her gardening and her bakeries? Hang on, guys. Hang on. She had some pretty public experiences in the baking sphere. And I'd refer you to the 1856 Amherst Cattle Show, where her round loaf of Indian and rye bread won second prize. So before we say she was a recluse, just think about that.
Starting point is 00:28:19 She was living in the public sphere, in the blazer publicity. To be fair, her sister Vinnie was one of the judges for that competition. So it's slightly, yeah. Makes me think she actually wasn't a very good bacon. Your sister's in the competition, you still can't buy first prize.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Come on, mate. She used to make gingerbread, really good gingerbread, and she used to lower it down for neighbourhood children. So she loved children. Emily Dickinson and they kind of the people in the area in the neighborhood kind of knew about her. She was a recluse as you say later on in life post this great competition triumph thing. But the children knew about her and they'd run to her window and then she erected a kind of basket which she lowered down on a string.
Starting point is 00:28:59 And one of the people, one of the boys remembered her later on doing it and she'd do it and make it like a game. So she'd do it very, very gradually and gingerly, gingerly. Brilliant. So as not to let the domestic servant. No, because otherwise domestic servant Maggie would be very angry. And then the kids would have to creep through the grass and then grab the gingerbread and leave her. It sounds like Maggie is getting ideas above hesitation if she's stopping the lady of the house from giving out free gingerbread. Well, you know, that's good to know what side you're on.
Starting point is 00:29:26 What's the way of the children of gingerbread? I just think Lady of the House is a little bit. She was a lady of the house. Maggie hasn't made gingerbread for the children. She's made it for, you know. Was she giving away gingerbread that Maggie had made? Yes. So why is Emily Dickinson getting the credit for all this baking when she's giving away someone else's gingerbread?
Starting point is 00:29:44 Sorry, you're right. This boy said, I don't know if Emily Dickinson had made the gingerbread or if Maggie had made the gingerbread, but she seemed to be afraid of Maggie telling her idea about her. So you're right, I think Maggie is getting ideas above her station. It's actually quite a good spot for literary figures. this Amherst place, because you had not only Emily Dickinson, who obviously found out that she was amazing after her death, but you had people like Melville Dewey was there. Was he from the Decival System? Yeah, he was, yeah. Where did he live? He lived. From number one to number 121.14.
Starting point is 00:30:27 So he came up with the system while he was an assistant librarian at the Amherst College in 1876, looked into him a bit. Terrible human. Yeah, I think he's been terrible. We're not supposed to use the system anymore, I don't we? Wow, really. I believe he's been cancelled. He's been cancelled, but we've cancelled the system now.
Starting point is 00:30:43 It's a hell of a system. The castle. Robert Frost, the poet, was from there as well. Noah Webster was from there as well. Of Webster's dictionary. Yeah, he lived there and he started writing it there. So not all these people were born there, but they did huge chunks. He lived in Amherst, and then he went to Baltimore, and then he went to Chicago.
Starting point is 00:31:02 I wanted to see how long you did. What was your next one? Denver? Yeah. Go on, what would be next? I didn't have one after that. An American place beginning with E. East Virginia.
Starting point is 00:31:14 Yeah? That's not a place? No. There's Virginia and there's West Virginia. Oh my God. I meant the east of Virginia, obviously. She was such an interesting character. So, I mean, first of all, she was really funny and fun.
Starting point is 00:31:31 I think that people, because they know of Emmy Dickinson as this person who only ever wore white, which she did. And she never left her house. other things. In fact, I think in the only picture we've got of her, she's not wearing white. Again, sorry, when I say only ever. It's weird because it's pictured in black and white, so she's making black, presumably. Just grey. This is after she became a recluse.
Starting point is 00:31:51 About the last 20 years of her life, was it? She became a recluse. But she was very funny if you read her poems. They are kind of witty or dry or pithetakey. I always thought one of the best opening lines to a poem was one of her most famous poems, which opens, because
Starting point is 00:32:06 I could not stop for death, he kind of stopped for me, which I just love as a bit of, I don't know, it's a humorous, it's dark, and it's an excellent poem. But I think she, she did think about publishing a lot. She knew she was great. It wasn't like she had no idea she was great. She wrote to all these famous writers and publishers who said, please let me publish your poems. And she would say, oh no, it would be dreadful being published.
Starting point is 00:32:29 I'm not nearly egotistical enough for that. How dreary to be somebody, how public like a frog to tell your name, the live long June to an admiring bog. So she had it in her mind. She was quite like Lady Doth protest too much about it, I think. Wow. Just a quick reminder, Andy's new novel, will be out. By the time you listen to, I'm regretting it.
Starting point is 00:32:53 For you. She admiring Borg for listeners. She wrote to a guy called Thomas Wentworth Higginson, asking if she could possibly, or if her poems were good enough to be published, I should say. And he actually thought that her poems were too accent. to be published at the time, but he told her to avoid sloppy dashes, which if you've read any, Emily Dickinson, it's just dashes.
Starting point is 00:33:15 It's almost all dash. It's just dash. It's like half of Morse code, her poetry. I would say go back and ignore the dashes because that, I remember when I was younger, that really put me off because it seems so jerky. But then if you ignore them, pretend their normal punctuation. Just quickly on the Higginson man who reviewed, sort of looked over her poetry. So he said her writing was, I'm quoting it, so peculiar, it seems as it.
Starting point is 00:33:37 if the writer might have taken her first lessons by studying the famous fossil bird tracks in the museum. Okay, this is interesting. Amherst, again, great literary womb, all of this, had these bird tracks in stone, which were the first dinosaur tracks ever found. And they were
Starting point is 00:33:54 found by a 12-year-old plow boy called Pliny. Really? Weird. And he was called Pliny Moody, amazing name. And this was 40 years before the word dinosaur was coined, really. But they were known, they were nicknamed these tracks. as the marks of Noah's Raven.
Starting point is 00:34:10 That was what they were called. This lovely sort of evocative phrase for dinosaur footsteps, Noah's Raven. And Emily Dickinson wrote, The Thing with Feathers, and Dinosaurs have feathers. Oh, my God. Is that where we're going?
Starting point is 00:34:19 What I'm saying is it's all connected. Oh, my God. Is that your favorite one of her poems? I don't really have one. I didn't know very much about her at all before this. I think there's one that you would like, if you ever heard it. All are overgrown by cunning moss.
Starting point is 00:34:34 Oh, there we go. I'm in. I'm in. She's a genius. What was her hit rate in terms of We now know that she wrote about 1,800, that's what she left behind, poems. How many of those have been published?
Starting point is 00:34:45 All of that. Well, now. But there's an incredibly weird story. Yeah. So the ones that you're talking about have all been published and we can see all of them. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:54 And I would say everyone I've read, I've enjoyed. Yeah. But. So, okay, her sister found them all after she died, Levinia, Vinnie. And she destroyed a lot of paperwork, but correspondence is stuff like that. So there was this mad argument
Starting point is 00:35:05 between two sides of the family. It's all a bit complicated because her brother was called Austin Dickinson, and her brother had a mistress called Mabel Loomist Todd, right? So some of the poems went there, some of the poems went to the family of her brother, and basically the two halves of Dickinson's literary estate were in different hands. Neither family owned all the manuscripts, and neither could produce a complete Dickinson. One side sold them to Harvard for about half a million dollars in modern money.
Starting point is 00:35:31 So then Harvard have claimed ownership of Dickinson in general, and for a while people have asked permission to Harvard to. quote lines of Dickinson. So basically it vexed. It feels like Amherst could be a good setting for a soap opera. Yeah. They shagged on Emily Dickinson's dining room table for the first time. Sorry, who's they?
Starting point is 00:35:48 Sorry, yeah, that should have been clear. Austin and Mabel, who he was having their fare with. Okay. With an Emily and the Vinian new seemed like a bit of an open... This is just gossip, I know. On the dining table. Ooh. Hey, we've got it in writing first hand.
Starting point is 00:36:02 So it's Austin and Mabel. Yes. Okay. And it's so weird because Emily never met. to Mabel, but, you know, they were having an affair of 13 years, and Mabel would come round to Emily's house, which was next door, and they'd have sex on the dining room table, and Mabel actually played piano for Emily once, and Emily listened from behind a corner in the house, and sort of delivered her a glass of sherry at the end to say, well done, lovely playing.
Starting point is 00:36:25 Just very quickly on the recluse and all wearing white and all that kind of stuff, Martha Nell Smith, who's like one of the main scholars of Dickinson, she works at the University of Maryland, And she says that actually a lot of the image that we know now of Dickinson is kind of Victorian propaganda. And that I'll kind of say, paraphrase what she says. She says, you know how right now if you have a rock star, you kind of have this idea of sex, drugs, rock and roll, wearing black, all that kind of stuff. Well, in the late 19th century, the idea of a woman poet would be someone who had a secret sorrow, someone who was reclusive, someone who dressed in white. And she reckons that a lot of the stories that we hear now are quite exaggeration. I mean, obviously she did stay in the house a lot,
Starting point is 00:37:08 but a lot of them were exaggerated because that was our idea of a poet at the time. That is really interesting. And the sex, drugs and rock and roll. I mean, to be fair, people used to accuse her, not accuse her, but say it was all about her lost love or she was spurned in love. And immediately after she died, like the 1890s,
Starting point is 00:37:24 people are saying, well, she must have been cheated on by some bloke. And actually, I think she might have shagged someone in her house. So we say she was over which table, Anna? We think that, I can't remember what he was cool, but someone came to visit, who was a great admirer, and she had a little dalliance, maybe. Actually, she was quite sociable for a recluse.
Starting point is 00:37:44 She was like, you know how hermits? We've done, we talked about hermits before, and they'd have people visit them constantly every day. And she did sort of... She did think it was Webster. And he was like, nice ass, nice boobs. Nice. Anyway.
Starting point is 00:38:03 Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is... My fact is that, as well as a caterpillar, which avoids predators by pretending to be a bird, there is a bird which avoids predators by pretending to be a caterpillar. It could pretend to be a caterpillar who's pretending to be a bird. Yes. And then you don't have to do any disguise. You just, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:38:23 You just say, I'm a caterpillar. Is it? Because that does sound like it's come up with this and it's walked into the room full of birds and thought, I've fucked up. How's that helping? These are two separate species. One of them actually we have mentioned before. I should fess up. It's called the North American Walnut Sphinx Caterpillar.
Starting point is 00:38:41 It's not a Swinx, but it's, it screams like a bird, which is the way it avoids predators. Weird Nelly Fetado version of that side. Yeah, it's like it makes the alarm call that a bird would make if it had seen a bird of prey. So the other birds that would be eating the caterpillar think, oh God, there's a bird of prey, and I? And just one extra detail on it.
Starting point is 00:39:02 The report on Audubon.org, great bird website, says that the insect can be, I'm quoting here, as loud as a freight train from 50 feet away. Slightly have my doubt it's about. It depends how close you move the caterpillar to your ear. So, you know, if you put the caterpillar right, right down, like shove it into your ear, and right next to your eardrum, it'll be the same as a train all that distance. I see what you're saying. I thought what they were saying here was that if you have a freight train 50 feet away
Starting point is 00:39:26 and you have the caterpillar 50 feet away, you might be. It feels like that's a pointless use of the word phrase 50 feet. Yeah. Okay, so anyway, the bird, just quickly, is called the Cinerius Mourner bird, and it lives in the Amazon, so it's probably not going to come across this caterpillar any time soon. And the chicks imitate poisonous caterpillars, specifically the chicks. They have these spiky orange feathers, and it moves, when its parents are away, it moves in this weird, slinky way, and it looks genuinely exactly like a poisonous caterpillar local to the region. It's, you've seen the... It's insane.
Starting point is 00:40:00 Yeah, it's absolutely insane. And it does this right at the beginning, so it's only the first 20 days that it means. mimics this caterpillar and it's yeah when you see pictures of it it just looks exactly like this caterpillar and when even the mother comes back to feed them so it's because the mother has to go away do all the foraging that they're open to predators it's only when the mother comes back and makes the actual like bird call like where that they go oh okay now we can give it up because if she comes back and doesn't do that they still pretend to be the caterpillars it's absolutely incredible i would bring if i was a predator i would bring back one of those caterpillars and i would make the
Starting point is 00:40:33 caterpillar do a bird call and then trick the chicks into thinking when it was their parents. Yes, exactly. But they sort of like, it's not even just a look. They're the same size as the caterpillars as well. They're 12 centimeters long. I mean, it's, yeah, it's, that feels important when it comes to camouflage. You know, if they make themselves look like an elephant, but they're 12 centimeters long, no one's going to get tricked by that. The caterpillar it looks like is from the family mega Lopigidae. And you might have seen that this cataportar. Pater or a related caterpillar on the internet because it's got very bushy sort of blondeish hair. They're actually pointy kind of venomous bristles that they have.
Starting point is 00:41:14 But they have been known as the Trumpa Pillar because it looks like Donald Trump's hair has fallen on. That's so cool. I didn't realize they were in that family. And have they evoked to disguise themselves as Donald Trump to escape? Prosecution. They do look like. The ones that they disguise themselves look a bit like that Donald Trump hair one, right? They're quite kind of bushy and...
Starting point is 00:41:38 Yeah, it's just the colour difference. These ones are orange, but they both look a bit quiffy. Yeah. Yeah. So this is a thing called Batesian mimicry, isn't it? The bird is definitely doing this, because it's where a harmer species looks like a noxious species, so predators avoid them.
Starting point is 00:41:52 I think that and a type of owl are the only two that do the baitsian mimicry. There's an owl that burrows underneath the ground, and when it feels like a predator is coming in, it hisses like a rattlesnake, it's got like a tz. Oh, okay. Okay. There's a caterpillar called the Biston-Robustum Caterpillar, and it can make itself look like a twig. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:11 That's good. Standard camouflage. Yeah. But it can also make itself smell exactly like a twig. Isn't that cool? That is so good. So not only will, like a bird going past, we'll see a twig and not go and eat it, if there's an ant that goes past it, it'll walk along the twig, and then it'll just walk along the
Starting point is 00:42:28 caterpillar and think that it's on a twig. And the reason that we know that works is if you put the caterpillar on another twig that smells different, the ants will notice it. So it'll only hide it on this very specific thing. And they hunt by pheromones or they, you know, they detect things through pheromones and through smell. So does it have to smell like the twig of a particular plant? The one that it's on, yeah. So it needs that plant identification app, presumably, to work out which trees are three to get off into. I just got that app.
Starting point is 00:42:58 It's changed my life. Really? Because I find this. not very reliable in my garden, I must say. I've uprooted everything. You've bought yourself a horse chestnut scent and you lie on branches. That is so cool. That is amazing.
Starting point is 00:43:12 And they get their smell probably by eating bits of that plant. So that's... Okay, right. Have you guys seen the Great Potu? No. Such a good bird. It's basically big animals that are camouflaged. I kind of call it to us in a way, right?
Starting point is 00:43:25 And the Great Potu is a 60 centimetre tall bird that disguises itself as a tree branch. And it's such a great life because it just stands on a tree. It has exactly the right colourings to look like sort of broken up bark. And it has to stand at a bit of an angle because, you know, a branch will branch off the main trunk at an angle. So it leans forward a little bit, points its beak right upwards. So that it just goes up in a straight line. The only problem is it has these giant eyes, which glow. So it's really weird.
Starting point is 00:43:54 So what does it? What do people think that is? It just closes its eyes. It has to close its eyes the whole time. But then that's not very useful for catching. But it can't tell also if someone's approaching it. Exactly. If someone's approaching it or someone's nearby and it closes its eyes.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Yeah. Well, that's the problem. Then how does it tell if the coast is clear? So when it closes its eyes, its eyes open. If God closes one eye, it opens another. It's got a tiny slit on its eyelid. And it's actually able to move this slit around depending on where it looks to look. What?
Starting point is 00:44:25 So it can just peer through. That's amazing cool. 60 centimeters. Yeah. I would describe by itself. rulers. Why are you going to make yourself transparent? Well, I wouldn't rule.
Starting point is 00:44:36 If you're camouflaging, you want to be a transparent ruler, don't you? Yeah. Yeah. I would just, like, grow the word shatterproof on my chest. Shout boing all the time. They just eat unsuspecting, you know, school teachers. Humans camouflage, don't we? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:59 From time to time. In war? In World War 2, in fact. There was at least one American soldier who had put lace doilies on his helmet to camouflage himself whenever it was snowing. There's a piece of furniture. No, because it's white. It's right. He's not pretending.
Starting point is 00:45:14 That's what you put a doily on, isn't it? You put it over the back of an armchair, I think. Yeah. A little doily. He's not mimicking anything. He's just trying to hide themselves. There's a German disguised as a teapot sitting in some of the Brits. Barracks.
Starting point is 00:45:33 Closer, closer. That chair's moving. That'd be ridiculous. That's incredible. Yeah, I saw a picture on Reddit and I thought it couldn't possibly be true. But I found it in the Philadelphia Inquirer from 1945. So it definitely did happen. It's just to look, blend in with this night, basically.
Starting point is 00:45:51 Yeah, yeah. Definitely did happen. We don't know that definitely did work, do we? No, we don't. And this picture was in 1945. So we certainly got towards the... end of the war. Okay.
Starting point is 00:46:01 That's good. That's amazing. I was reading about a trend in parent stuff, parent clobber, a trend of, you know, baby carriers, slings that you put the baby. Like a papoose kind of thing. Like a papo. Yeah, yeah. But there's a growing trend for ones aimed at men to have them in camo coloration so that
Starting point is 00:46:21 men feel less uncomfortable carrying the baby around. Oh, really? Like full camo gear. So you feel like you're in jungle warfare, but actually you're just taking your baby. So no one's going, what baby? It's for men who still want to play the field a bit, maybe chat some people up, disguise the baby, yeah. Yeah, they're in bars, camo, shouting up women.
Starting point is 00:46:44 Yeah, pretty single and free needs to live it. What's that? Oh, it's my, uh, my pager. Pager. And these chatting up is quite a long time ago. Last time you were chatting anyone up. I think we've established these men are pretty old. cool.
Starting point is 00:47:01 He's a doctor. That's it. He's a doctor. He's a doctor. It's still used pages. It's quite Pears Morgany, isn't it? Was he not? Was he the one who kind of said, oh, I can't believe this celebrity man is carrying
Starting point is 00:47:13 a baby? It was Daniel Craig, I think. Yeah. Literally James Bond himself carrying a baby and Pierce Morgan was going, oh. He's actually doing it in every Bond movie. You just can't see it. Very responsible. Do you remember a few years back when Trump set up the Space Force?
Starting point is 00:47:28 Oh, yeah. The, yeah. They did the official uniform of the space force. It wasn't his idea, was it? There was a caterpillar on his head who was whispering the idea to him. That would explain. An awful lot. Yeah, when they released it, they got mocked a lot for it because it was camouflage gear.
Starting point is 00:47:47 Oh, like jungle camouflage. Yeah, jungle camouflage was space forces. Whereas what you should wear in space, I guess, is one of those kind of kids' pajama sets that has a black sky. All the constellations on it. Who attacked you? Well, I don't know. It looked like a Ryan, maybe. Okay, that's it. That's 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've said over the course of this podcast, we can be found on our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shriverland, Andy, at Andrew Hunter, M. James.
Starting point is 00:48:23 At James Harkin. And Anna. You can email podcast.com. Yep. You can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, or our website, no such thing as a fish.com. all of our previous episodes are up there do check them out also check out our upcoming tour dates they're happening later this year we'd love to see you there otherwise do come back next week we'll be here with another episode we'll see you then goodbye

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