No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As The Lemur Police
Episode Date: September 14, 2018Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss earwax grubs, armadillo sex and selfies with sunflowers. ...
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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 Shriver, and I am sitting here with Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna Chazinski, 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 you, Andy.
My fact is that it's very hard for scientists to spot our own.
Armadillos having sex because armadillos have sex while running.
Yeah.
I mean, how fast do they run?
Too fast to see them.
They would show up on film and in photos.
But it's just a mating habit that they have.
So whenever the armadillo female is in heat,
she starts, males start chasing her,
but then she starts running away.
So it's all the matter of the fastest armadillo who can catch up with her.
But she doesn't stop running when he's caught up.
So they engage in, yeah,
In sex, mid, like passing a baton on to a kind of baton.
It's a disgusting baton.
Dunn, in relays, did you used to hold onto the baton all the way around?
No, but he used to hold on to the penis of the guy in front of him.
Well, we got there quite quickly, didn't we?
Yeah, it's amazing because they look like little battery-operated toys,
because the female's just running along and you can't really see their legs moving.
And the male mounts the female, but he then has to run along only on his hind legs
while he's mounted her.
Yeah.
Like a wheelbarrow race kind of thing.
Your spot's name must have been awful.
Is this all amadillos?
Because there's quite a lot of different types in there.
I am not sure.
This was only observed in one species.
So I don't think we can say for sure.
Or I certainly can't.
Do you know?
Is it the nine?
Which one?
I think it's the nine?
The nine.
It's amazing.
They've got such boring names.
But yeah, they sound like golf irons, don't they?
Like the nine or the...
the three.
I mean,
the full name is the nine banded armadillo.
To be fair,
I'm not sure anyone's ever called it
the nine before,
but henceforth.
Oh,
I really hope it's on it.
I'm going to check,
though.
Sure.
Yeah,
but yeah,
presumably they don't massively like it
because they generally don't like each other,
do they armadillos?
They're very solitary, right?
That's true.
Yeah, because the women,
the female armadillos are always
kind of, I was going to say beating off,
but they're trying to get the male away,
aren't they?
Yeah.
Most of the time,
until they're on heat,
and then they kind of accept it a little bit.
Yeah.
Well,
they're running away. That's true. It is a bit like the
Benny Hill show. Yes.
So the nine banded armadillo
if that's who we are talking about.
The nine? The nine. Yeah. Don't
always have nine. Did they not?
Sometimes have seven or eleven.
Yeah. I think that's just a mean average
that they have. That is a mean
average you got there.
It's the six.
No. I'm sorry. This is the six
banded armadillo. Okay.
Is that? Because the one you
generally hear about is the nine banded, isn't it?
which is the one that lives in, like that's the one when people talk about amadillos.
It tends to be the nine-banded amadillo because that's the only one that lives in North America.
It's true.
And then maybe we could talk about nine-banded amadillos.
The one that kind of goes into a ball is the three-banded amadillo.
Yes.
Or the three, as we call it.
Yeah, there are 20 species of amadillo and only two can roll themselves up.
Yeah.
Or swizz.
Indeed.
Have you guys, my favorite amadillo, and this is the armadillo I mainly read into, is the, which one is it, guys?
Oh, is it the three or five?
The 29.
No, my favourite armadillo is the pink fairy armadillo.
And they are so amazing.
Get up a picture of a pink fairy armadillo while you're listening to the rest of this.
And for the rest of your life.
They're the cutest thing I've ever seen.
So they're the smallest kind.
They're six inches long.
They've got a pink shell, this little pink shell, like baby pink, a fluffy white belly.
And they're just so cute.
And they've got these massive front claws, which are almost a bit grotesque because they're only for digging.
So they can't really walk properly.
they can only dig.
But yeah, they can bury themselves
in a couple of seconds.
So if something comes along,
their shells are actually useless.
In most armadillos,
they're not very good protection in the shells.
Really?
But they just bury themselves immediately.
And yeah, they are so cute.
And they're really fluffy.
They sound like Pokemon.
Yeah.
They're a bit like Pokemon.
They're very soft shelled.
And their shell is pink
because they use it for thermoregulation.
So they can pump loads of blood to it
and that just gets rid of all the excess heat
in their body.
And they've also, they've got a bum plate
when they're digging.
When they're digging.
the earth. They have a little bump plate which just compacts
all the earth behind them. So that
means that it creates like a really strong burrow
doesn't it? And also it means that they get the earth
out of their face so they can breathe. It's got a square
bum basically and it bumps up against the earth to compact it like you would with a
spade if you bashed a spade on earth. Yeah yeah yeah.
And the opposite of that, have we ever talked about the glipterdon?
Which was the prehistoric armadillo.
Which was so big that humans used its shells for shelters.
Whoa! Whoa! So we lived inside the shell.
Oh my God.
Pretty amazing.
And it had like a, it was about the size of a car.
What?
And it had like a club tail that it would bash humans with.
My lord.
Yeah, no, I would do that as well as someone was living inside my shell.
Do you think they took the armadillo out first?
I think death took it out first and then it was just, I don't know, actually.
That is incredible.
Because today, living inside your car is seen as sign of someone who's down in her luck.
Do you think in the old days living inside an armadillo shell was the same thing?
Oh, he's living inside his armadillo shell.
He's had a rough time.
I reckon.
Have we ever lived in a shell outside of that?
I can't think of an example of another animal where that's so cool.
You always find the most weird angles on the example.
I mean, probably not.
Wow, the first instance of humans living in shells.
It's so cool.
Yeah.
Can I take us back to the nine for a second?
Oh, yeah.
So they have a really interesting, this is just, I was looking into the sex life of the Armadillo
off the back of your fact, Andy.
and so the nine has quadruplets every single time.
Oh.
Every single time they have a baby.
So the baby basically splits a single fertilized egg,
but it splits it so that they're effectively clones of each other.
Yeah.
And they're just, but every single time.
Loads of them do it.
I think most armadillos might have quadruplets every time.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's bizarre.
Because they're identical.
It's to prevent inbreeding, is that right?
Or prevent incest and accidental.
But how would that prevent it if they're all...
Well, if all four quads that you have are males,
then they won't be able to interbre with each other at least.
Got it. Yeah.
The nine band did is the state small mammal of Texas.
Is it? What's a large one?
It's...
I didn't write it down. It does have one.
I think it's a kind of deer or something.
So there's a state small mammal of Texas. There's a state large mammal.
There's a state flying mammal, which is a kind of bat.
And there's also a state whelk.
I didn't even know there was more than a...
one kind of wealth.
Everyone stay well because of the same.
Something that's very cool about armadillos is that they have two ways of crossing water
and both are equally groovy.
So they...
Tell us more, Nana.
They inflate their stomach and intestines with air if they want to float.
So they fancy looking at the view and then they just float across the water.
Or they can deflate themselves and sink right down to the bottom and then they just walk along
the bottom using their claws.
And they can hold their breath for five or six minutes.
Do you think they have races?
Of course they do.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like when there's two escalators in the tube going up,
you always go one on each so that you can see who goes quickest.
Do you?
No.
I thought there was usually one up and one down.
Otherwise, how does everyone get down the stairs?
So there's often three in tubes.
Wow.
And it's always two going up and one going down.
And that's because people coming down, they come at a regular amount of time.
But people going up, they all come off the train at the same time.
more people at the same time.
That's really interesting.
Well, I think that's really interesting.
That makes more sense.
I thought it was for rush hour when, you know, if there are loads of people going into
the station, like at the end of the day, you'll have two, you might have two going down
because...
It would occasionally do that, but almost always they have two going up.
A whole lot of sense.
Have we talked about the leprosy thing?
No.
No.
No, but you should get that checked out.
So the leprud...
They got the disease from humans.
We know that.
So this is Hansen's disease, as you're supposed to call it, but most people call it leprosy.
Exactly.
So they're native to the New World, the Americas.
So when humans first arrived, we know that they brought over leprosy, Hansen's disease, with them at some point.
But as a result, they're really good at carrying it because their body temperature is 34 degrees Celsius on the inside.
And the leprosy bacterium loves that temperature.
It's ideal for it.
We're actually not ideal for the back.
We're 37 or something else.
But for some reason, oh, they live in our skin, the bacteria, which is a bit cooler, so they can survive there.
So a lot of people eat armadillo in Brazil, but unfortunately 60% of the armadillos in the forest have it.
And it's okay as long as you cook it all the way through.
But some people have the liver raw, so you can get leprosy that way.
Or some people keep them in their homes to fatten them up.
And obviously, the more close contact you have with an armadillo, the more likely you are.
And actually, most humans are immune to leprosy, aren't they?
But the ones that aren't.
You're bugged.
You're bugged.
So I think the lesson is, I mean, I was always taught you can eat rare steak and rare lamb,
but don't eat rare chicken and rare armadillo.
I think that's all you need to take away from this, isn't it?
Armadillo shells can rebound bullets, people have found out in America, to their detriment.
Which I find it.
It seems like most people are basically okay.
But yeah, in 2015, a man was taken to hospital with injuries when he was woken up by armadillos.
And they're a bit of a pest in America because they destroy your gardens.
He was woken up at 3 a.m.
So he went and shot the armadillo and the bullet rebanded in him in the face.
He was okay.
He survived?
He was okay.
Wow.
How was the amadello?
They don't know about the armadillo.
They didn't find it afterwards.
Oh.
Well, that implies it survived at least.
It walked away.
No, it could have ricocheted away into another garden.
That's true.
I don't know if that's how armadillos work.
You're thinking of when you jump on a turtle in Super Mario and they go skating away.
I was thinking of that.
Yeah.
I thought so.
The walking underwater thing with the armadillo
feels a bit risky to me.
I would...
Would you do the floating though?
Because it feels like with the floating,
you're kind of at the risk of currents and stuff like that.
And predators, you're much more exposed.
Well, they can only hold their breath with six minutes.
So I guess if you want to escape a predator,
you could quickly deflate and sink to the bottom.
But as long as you're never more than three minutes away
from the edge of the river.
I guess you'd have to know, though.
That's the problem.
If there's a river and you get to a big rock underwater.
And you've got to take a detail.
There is a seat.
There is a scene just like a submission impossible five.
Yeah, there is.
Spiless.
Are you sure that's the five?
I thought that was the nine.
Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the Karwai people of New Guinea put grubs in their ears to eat their earwax.
So great.
And then what do they put in their ear to eat the grubs?
A cow.
Do they put it?
That's going right to the end of it.
Yeah, I just thought we didn't.
have time to do the whole rhyme.
So yeah, this is a thing.
These are a tribe from New Guinea.
There's lots of interesting stuff about them.
But one thing that a lot of people learned in the last year or so was there was a
TV show on BBC 2 called My Year with the Tribe.
presenter Will Millard, let a grub crawl into his ear and eat his earwax in this
documentary, which everyone thought was a bit weird.
Yeah.
Even the, didn't the tribe person, didn't the Kauruai tribesmen say at the time, the elders
used to do this, we don't really do it anymore, so we've forgotten how it's done.
But shove it in and see what happens.
Maybe it is one of those things that you just get foreigners in and you just make them do stuff
and say that it's traditional.
Is there a way of getting it out, though?
It just slithers out itself, apparently.
And it's slightly darker in colour having eaten all your earwax.
Wow.
That's quite cool.
And he said he could hear it eating it inside his ear, couldn't he?
If I can hear it munching away.
Well, that would be the spot that you would get the best access to hearing.
Yeah.
I mean, that doesn't surprise me.
Yeah, he's a...
I really like Will Millard, I realised, in the course of researching this.
He saw lots of very cool stuff.
But yeah, he went to Papua and lived with those people for a few months, I think.
But he had an extremely bad time.
He seems to have very bad luck.
And he's actually got PTSD now from basically doing all these documentaries in these extreme places.
But he said, at one of the points in Papua, he said,
I made a serious error of judgment that saw me not on an ancient intertribal trade route,
but trapped deep within a 400 mile square of...
uninhabited, snake-infested and extremely hostile forest.
We crawled out a month later, lacerated and covered in infections.
But yeah, he's had cerebral malaria.
He's been, you know, assaulted.
He's been robbed at bow and arrow point, which is kind of a cool life experience.
Yeah.
To overcome the trauma.
I thought, oh, it was a different program, wasn't it?
But the Beebe got in a bit of trouble because the Coralide traditionally live in tree houses.
Yeah.
And the Beeb made a program all about them building the tree houses.
And then it turned out that they'd sort of said, can you build a bit of trouble?
as a tree house for this program.
That was Will Millard who had discovered it.
Oh, really?
That was when he went back and did this program and they said when those last BBC
guys came, they told us to build that tree house.
And he was the one who said, well, that's not on.
I'm going to mention that, I'm afraid.
But they, so is it a myth?
It's not a myth that they live in tree houses.
No, they do.
No.
They do.
So I don't think that's that bad to ask them to build a tree house.
Some of them, no.
Those ones did not live in tree houses like that.
They said we would never build tree houses that high.
Right.
Got it.
Some of them live on the ground.
But some of them, I think, still live in tree houses.
There are only about 4,000 Coralai people alive.
Yeah.
There aren't very many of them.
Yeah.
So there were rumors that the Coralai people sometimes engaged in cannibalism.
Yeah.
But they got asked about it and they said, no, we would never eat a person.
What we would eat is a Kakawa, which is a witch who takes the form of a person.
Yeah.
And this doesn't happen anymore.
But 10 years ago, it was in living memory.
So it happened a few decades ago.
A decade in fact
A decade
Yeah
But the Kakaa is basically their version of germ theory
So when someone dies
They say well what's this
Because germ theory is not very well known
They assumed it was a witch
So when a clan member was dying
He would whisper to his relatives
The name of who he thought was the witch
Who had killed him
Such a good way to take out someone
He just kind of been pissing off for a while
I think this is a great deathbed practice we should adopt.
But then it's very much open to abuse, isn't it?
From the person who heard the whisper, the only person who heard the whisper.
That's true.
But this is, I mean, I think there are quite a lot of Corowai spread around and different groups of Cori.
And there was a guy, Paul Raphael, who famously went there in 2006.
And he went very deep in.
And he met one who was still a famous Kakawa killer, who showed him at skull and stuff and ate the skull in front of him.
and yeah so who knows apparently it tastes like
he asked what human flesh tastes like
and it tastes like cassowary
in case anyone wanted
so now you can picture it
I've got something on earwax
but I don't know if you guys like horror stuff
in the middle ages
earwax was used to colour manuscripts in
cool yeah or to colour the ink used for manuscripts
I was going to say for the ink yeah it was partly earwax
well partly stale beer
what do you mean they mix the ink up with
an earwax is one of the ingredients
Yeah. Cool. Yeah. So some of those ancient beautiful documents will be partly earwax, monk earwax probably.
Yeah. Some of the worst. Interesting you say about beer and earwags. We read once when we're researching for QI that if you put earwax in someone's beer, then all the froth will disappear from the top of the beer. And we try to do it as an experiment on the show, but it didn't work. But it did enhance the taste?
I don't think anyone actually drank it in the end.
Who's your wax did you get?
I can't remember.
I probably produce a Pierce Fletcher's earwax.
But yeah, we did try it.
But the idea is because it's got oil in, hasn't it?
And the idea is that oil would kind of pop the bubbles a little bit.
And was that a thing that Monks did too?
I don't think they did, did they?
Mix it with their bit?
They sort of, it was the best, well, when they were painting the manuscripts,
it was the way they prevented bubbles from forming in the liquid they used.
The liquid was called glare, which was what they used to make the paint.
and supposedly to stop the froth forming on the glare,
they put their airwax into that.
So was earwax sort of a lucrative business to be in
if you generated a lot?
It's huge.
It must be a traded thing, right?
You know, I'm writing a book at the moment.
I'm not sure it must be.
I think everyone has a ready supply, don't they?
Well, some people...
You can't corner the market in earwax, though.
Even the most productive earwaxer.
I guess you could go house-to-house collecting people's earwaxe.
and then selling a jar of it to the bonner.
Because they had gong farmers, didn't they,
who would collect people's poo for, you know, for fertilizer and stuff.
And everyone has a plentiful supply of that.
Yeah.
You might as well get earwax at the same time, you're saying.
I wonder where socially the gong farmer,
dun collector and the earwax collector are next to each other.
I think they have Christmas parties together.
Yeah. Because no one else invites them.
We could have traded earwax, though, with the Far East,
because they've got different earwax to us, don't they?
Which I don't think we've mentioned.
before, but East Asian countries, so in China and Japan, Korea, there's a gene, the gene
has changed, so their ear wax is kind of powdery. And I think doesn't taste as gross.
So, well, because it's like powdery and it doesn't have the bitterness that ours has,
and it's not as gloopy, the vast majority. But whose taste? Do you, is that a thing?
No, I've actually just assumed that because I've read about it and it doesn't contain the stuff
that makes ours be so bitter. No, it makes sense. It just sounded like that was a thing that
people taste. You know how like some people eat their
buggers? No, but you know sometimes when you put your finger in your ear and you
accidentally put your finger in your mouth and it's absolutely right.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They don't have that.
You know when you accidentally put your finger in someone from East Asia's ear?
And then accidentally put that in your mouth out of it's.
Wet Willys.
I'm not allowed back to Korea.
Well, there were people who tasted your red wax.
There were doctors in ancient Greece.
That was the whole theory because it was all about the theory of the humors, you
know the different substances that made up your body.
So Hippocrates said there were particular taste for bodily fluids.
So he would taste your earwax, your doctor, and he might lick your vomit or run his fingers through your phlegm to check the consistency.
So he properly got up close a person.
It's so unromantic.
He ran his fingers through her phlegm.
Do you know what's the most common thing, the most common living thing to get in your ear?
an earwig
You would have thought but they don't seem to do it as much
An ant
Larger in fact
Spider spider
No I'm gonna let you know
A wolf
A tiger
A monkey giant armadillo
Is it the nine?
It's a three
It's got me three
The furry little
The pink fairy
It's the 12 banded cockroach
No it's just a cockroach
Cockroach's love is
Oh my goodness
And yeah
And it's by far the most common
creature to go in your ear. And it's because
they've got this thing, and I'd never heard of this word.
They've got positive thigmataxis.
And thigmataxis describes
how much you like the stimulus of touch.
So some animals will have negative
thigmataxis. They don't want to be touched.
And cockroaches want their whole body to be touched all the time.
They're so needy, out there?
They are. So clingy.
They love a massage.
Full body massage every single time.
Never just the shoulders.
But that's why they love ears. So they go in, because
They like being in tiny little nooks and crannies.
And that's why they'll always squeeze into little cracks in your house.
And also they quite like the fatty acids.
Do any of us know someone who's found a cockroach in their ear?
I don't.
None of my friends has told me.
Does anyone know anyone who's found anything in their ear?
No.
It's still not as common as the common cold.
And also, we don't really have cockroaches in this country very much.
Do you not?
Oh, okay.
Not as much.
No, we don't, Dan, person who's lived here for about 14 years.
I reported termites the other day in my house.
that they're not in England.
The guy at the photo was like,
that's fascinating, I'll be over as soon as possible.
I was like, wow, he was keen.
They were flying ants.
Oh, my gosh.
Jesus.
I read on a BBC source
that some of the earliest lip balms
were made of ear wax,
and I don't believe it.
I regret mentioning it now.
Thanks for bringing it.
Are they saying, like,
ancient Egyptians and stuff like that?
Yeah.
But I just, it would taste bitter.
But what if they were Asian earwax?
Doesn't that taste fantastic?
No, but that's drier and crumbly.
It also doesn't taste fantastic.
You've taken the wrong thing from that.
It does feel like someone's opened a tub of Carmex thought that looks a lot like earwax.
Here's a rumor I'll spread on the internet.
I read that in bits of Asia, so India and China, earpicking is seen as a nice pampering thing to do, really enjoyable.
So so much to the point where you can have it done on the side of the streets, there's vendors.
It's so luxurious you can get it done on the side.
There's such demand.
It's a career.
It's a dying career, though.
Because young people are more interested.
They're on their phones.
They don't want to have their ears picked by a stranger.
Wait a minute.
You can be on your phone and have your ear picked at the same time.
That's very true.
It's one of the few things you can do.
Not if you're talking to two people at once on two different phones.
Sure.
I forgot you could use phones to phone people.
But it's true.
They have this whole set of picks, don't they?
Yeah.
I've got an air spoon at home.
Do you?
Yeah, yeah.
And it lights up.
So you can see in.
see inside the ear when you're picking stuff.
You can't.
What does ever mirror?
No, no, you do it for other people.
Like you said, it's like, yeah, yeah.
I don't use it, by the way.
I just bought it as a curio.
But the thing is that cotton buds are being banned in the UK.
So there's every chance that the ear spoon or the roving ear cleaner could make a comeback.
Post-Brexit.
No smartphones, but here's your roving ear cleaner.
Thanks, Boris.
Shut a minute.
Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact. My fact this week is that the biggest single biomedical laboratory in Europe, designed to encourage scientists to chat more to each other, is so noisy that scientists are actually complaining it's too hard to concentrate.
This is an amazing building that's up in London. It's in the Houston area, and it is ginormous. It's 1,250 people work there. They're collaborating from different fields.
of medicine. And it's the Francis Crick Institute, isn't it? That's right. It's called the Francis
Crick Institute or its nickname. So it's run, the head of it is Sir Paul Nurse, who is a Nobel
Prize winning scientist. So its nickname is Sir Paul's Cathedral, which is quite a cool name.
Yeah. And he had influence over the design, didn't he? And he said that he wanted the atmosphere
to encourage a gentle sort of anarchy. So yeah, you don't necessarily want scientists to talk to each
other all the time, I suppose, is what we're saying. Sometimes you just need to be quiet in a test
tube, right? Yeah, well, I suppose the problem is, I'm not in a test tube.
Unless you're a test tube baby. Yes, then stay in your test tube. I think there's a difference
between creating an atmosphere where people are there to work and collaborate, as well as creating
a sort of cafe-like atmosphere where people just come because they know that that's where their buddies
are going to be. So I think a lot of people are distracted when they're trying to do quiet work on an
idea by PhD students coming in who've just graduated or so on and having parties,
without, not without actually having the party, but effectively grouped.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
And this is not everyone who's complaining.
It's working incredibly well this place.
It's not.
It's not failed.
It's literally one dude.
Do you know what's underneath it?
Underneath the,
underneath the Francis Crick Building Institute.
It's roundabout where Budica was buried, supposedly.
Oh, well, she's been joined, actually.
Is it plague?
A Budica, plague, probably some plague.
Sure.
And also, so it's obviously named after Francis Crick.
And his son, Mike, is still alive.
And he donated Crick's California license plate into a time capsule, which is buried underneath the building.
So in the ceremony, they buried it.
Yeah.
Is there a reason for that?
I didn't know.
The license plate number was ATGC.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
So those are the four letters that make up DNA.
So that's what that is.
That's so clever.
A.D.C.
That's, yeah.
That's cool.
So that's underneath it.
Which is what Crick did.
Which is.
Ah, this is all coming together.
Was it, was it Goldfinnan?
No.
Watson and Crick.
Watson.
Quicks and Watson, as we tend to say it for some reason.
Rosalind Franklin.
Rosalind Franklin, who's been left out of the history books to an extent.
The Pete Best of the DNA.
If Pete Best had secretly written all the Beatles songs.
Which, according to my theory, he did.
So this thing is,
Is it all about open plan, basically?
Yeah, it's an open plan office.
To an extent, if you look inside it, it's obviously got levels,
but it's one of those ones where it all looks down into a big courtyard of desks
and everything seems to be open, yeah.
Because open plan is very, it's kind of controversial now, right?
In fact, I think most studies show that it's a negative thing,
has a negative impact on work.
And it's very trendy, but I get really confused,
because people talk about open planners if it's like a trend.
friendly cool thing and it seems so obvious to me
surely the reason we have open
plan and it's generally in Britain and America
is that it's just a hell of a lot cheaper
saves money on walls it just saves a hell
of a lot of money you can squash way more people in
I think we should stop pretending we're doing it for the good of our employees
for bonding and stuff and be like sorry guys we're cheap
yeah we have how many rooms do we have in this building
we have four we should have a maximum of four members of staff
at any one time and we should all get a room each
that's what they have in places like Germany
in Scandinavia, like everyone will have a right to an office because that's a better way to work.
Well, the person who invented cubicles, he was called Robert Propst, and he thought that it would be
like a dynamic, everyone would have that area and would be really dynamic and you could move
around it and it would be really good for work. But of course, what happened was companies just
made them smaller and smaller and smaller until it was a smallest amount that one person could
work in. And then obviously it had the opposite effect.
Yeah. A friend of mine, their office is being relocated completely to a new place that is
to be this open plan layout, but they're taking it a step further now where no one will
have an assigned desk.
It will be hot desking.
And the theory behind that is that the idea is that's going to encourage more work because
you want to get to work as early as possible to find a good seat next to an influential
person because everyone of every level is going to be sitting around this same desk.
So if you want to get next to the boss, you get close to them, you arrive at 8.30 in the morning.
What if the boss doesn't come until 10?
It's the whole thing's a risk.
You've got to work out the rhythm, see when they arrive, all that sort of stuff.
But in theory, that's...
Why are we just hide in the toilets watching the office and waiting for the bus to arrive?
Then lots of people hide in the toilets.
Everyone's just going to be following the bus into work like a horny artadillo.
Miles of a conglare.
I'd never heard that as a justification for hot desking,
because everyone always claims that's a good thing, hot desking, and you don't have too much your own.
It is more efficient.
Because you always do have a couple of people in a big office.
You'll have ex people who don't turn.
or who are ill or who are travelling for business or whatever.
So, you know, there is a...
But it's risky because people will leave food on their desk or people will leave mugs.
Leave books, don't they?
Yeah.
Personal items and...
Why are you looking at Dan?
Why are you looking at me?
No reason.
So, Anna, you know how you stand up at your desk quite a lot?
Yeah.
I read that, according to a study, office workers could lose half a stone a year by standing
up at their desks.
That's why I'm actually in minus weight now.
I'm when minus two's turn.
If I'd have stood up,
For the last 12 years that I've been working at QI, I would now weigh about eight stone.
I imagine that's how that works.
So I was looking up distraction and concentration and things like that.
Yeah.
So when you're concentrating or when you think you're concentrating,
it turns out that if you look at your brain activity, you're actually distracted quite a lot.
So in between bursts of attention, attention is the study described it as a searchlight
that sort of shines on the thing you're reading or the thing you're studying.
and then shines away again just to see if there's anything more important or dangerous going on that you need to know about.
So how often do you guess that happens, that the brain sort of scans the area?
It's every five, three minutes.
Okay.
Every 45 seconds.
It's four times a second.
Four times a second.
Is that whether you're not getting anything done?
I genuinely, I'm not like, I totally phased out while you were explaining.
Brilliant.
Genuinely.
To be fair, he was scanning for danger.
Four times a second.
No, it's not, I'm just not doing that.
Your brain basically alters your perception to make you think it's a constant movie of you just focusing on one thing.
Four times a second, your brain sort of temporarily takes its attention away.
You just wouldn't get anything.
This is, this is, it happens.
Yeah, that's cool.
Very cool.
It's weird.
Okay, so each of these scan away, they must be an absolute micro-millionth of a second.
Yeah, it's short.
It's not, it doesn't take a quarter of a second, four times a second.
Is it stuff like breathe, blink?
No.
It's not like, I wish you hadn't zoned out while I've been saying the thing.
I'm not going to go back and say it again.
I'll hear it on the podcast.
Can I, I found something about a laboratory that I had never heard.
I thought was super cool.
Have we mentioned this before?
We mentioned the special feces studying lab in the Soviet Union.
So this is in the 1940s, the USSR developed a secret lab for studying world leaders
poo.
And it was to find out stuff about them.
And the justification that people have made have backdated to it
is that we didn't really have CCTV or other ways of watching people,
so we collected their poo instead.
And this is genuinely, someone found this out a couple of years ago
going through these old archives.
And Beria, you know, Stalin's sort of right-hand man,
Beria was in charge of it.
And it was a special department.
And for instance, in 1949,
they had special toilets installed for Mao when he came and visited.
And they weren't connected to the sewers.
They were connected to boxes underneath its loo,
which they then collected and they went through it.
And it was like if you found certain things like apparently if you found amino acid
triptophan, it meant they were calm and approachable and perhaps you could do a deal with them.
And the theory was if there wasn't very much potassium in their poo,
then they had a lack of sleep and might be a bit stressed, a bit tetchy.
Give them a banana.
Give them a bloody banana and they won't press the red button.
But we know now that people are still doing this, right?
So Kim Jong-gun did it during the Singapore summit this year,
brought his own toilet for exactly the same reason.
Was that so they couldn't steal his poo?
study it. Yes. So he would have taken
all of that back to North
Korea when he left. Lucky them.
Which I think is bizarre. Yeah. It is weird
but then we now know that there's
a historical justification for it.
I always thought it was them just being paranoid
but. I think it is them being
paranoid. Okay. Oh no, although
we know that they were doing it and we know
now I bet you can learn way more from someone's
pool. If there's a house guest visiting my place
I'm not ashamed to say I'll
analyze. Yeah. I do think you should be
ashamed to say that.
Why do you keep giving me bananas whenever I come around?
Okay, it's time for our final fact of the show, and that is Chisinski.
My fact this week is that the largest sunflower farm in Ontario has been forced to shut
because so many people were taking selfies there.
And this is a really funny story.
It's from this summer, and the farm is called Bogle Seeds Farm.
It's in a place called Hamilton.
And it's absolutely massive.
They were at 1.6 million sunflower plants over 68 acres.
and they thought it would be quite a good idea, make a bit of extra cash,
charge people some dollars by saying you can come here,
park up in this little car park we've got, take a selfie, here you go.
And it went mad.
They were completely swamped.
Thousands and thousands of people came.
There was four kilometres of stationary traffic backed up on the road leading there.
There was a 300 car parking lot, and any one time there were 7,000 cars trying to park in it.
And it just turned into complete chaos.
They trashed the place.
And so they had to shut it.
People were cutting off the tops of sunflowers.
Someone said that one person urinated on one of the neighbour's bushes.
It was bad.
The pictures did look quite cool, didn't they?
The pictures look really nice.
Sunflowers are still pretty.
They are.
Yeah.
Lovely photos of people weeing and fighting and smashing their cars.
But on Instagram, that's not what the photos were.
They were just nice pictures of people with sunflowers.
That's true.
And they see a single weir.
Apparently people brought ladders to this place so you can go into the field and then climb up a ladder.
So you can be poking out above the top of the top of the.
sunflowers, which I think is quite clever. And also maybe just because they're so tall sunflowers,
I can't believe how high they can get. Oh yeah. They might just want to get to the top. The,
the largest that we have on record, this is a Guinness World record, is 30 feet and one inch.
I can't, that can't have been a happy sunflower though. Why? Because it would be quite stressed,
wouldn't it? Self-conscious. Everyone on the hand is much shorter. Think about that, but surely you would,
I wonder. They must grow to get more light, and if they need more light, they must be stressed,
right?
As in, yeah.
So for instance, four leaf clovers,
they only grow if they're stressed four leaves
because they need an extra leaf to get more light
and more energy.
I didn't know that.
So usually when a plant does something weird,
it's because they're stressed out.
So now whenever we find a four leaf clover,
we have to go, oh, that's so sad,
rather than thinking it's good luck.
That's what I always do.
Oh, God.
Such a kill joy.
30 feet?
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, that's so tall.
How did you grow?
Do you plant it at the bottom of a well?
Well, this is a guy who's managed to top his own record a few years in a row.
So he's, he's just a group.
I mean, do you have to have it trellis to something?
They're quite strong.
They're really strong.
They were really strong.
They used to have sunflowers that were super tall and they didn't have any.
Really, but not 30 feet tall.
I should just say that the, sorry, the reaction of the bogal seed farmers was negative
to this chaos.
So just to conclude the story, because you should really go on their website.
So they closed down the farm.
They said, we're not having anyone else here this year.
although they are still selling seeds.
But no one can come anymore.
And you should go to the website because it's so aggressive.
They've got about seven different notices saying,
so they say, unfortunately, with the police involved,
you know, all lots of capitals, they had to call the police.
We've had to close the photo opportunities due to traffic jams, etc.
There's a big one of those running banners that you get on slightly mad people's websites.
In capital letters closed for the season.
Wow.
I mean, they sort of ask people to come.
Yeah.
And then lots of people came.
They didn't know how popular they'd be.
It's not the people's fault for coming.
It's not any individual person's fault.
It's the individual urinator in the bushes.
Yeah.
People who are cutting tops off.
Yeah.
I think I can blame those people.
And they do say now they've still got people coming who will like swear and abuse them and say,
no, I've driven four hours to get here.
Oh, you've got to let me take a book.
Check the website before you go.
Check the website, gosh.
So Sunflowers are massive in Russia in every sense of the word.
Oh, okay.
So they're from America originally, Sunflowers.
and then they were brought over to Europe.
And in the 18th century, they were really popular in Russia
because you were banned from consuming oil during Lent,
but you weren't banned from consuming sunflower oil loophole.
Ha, because they didn't know it existed basically, did they,
when they wrote the rules.
Yeah.
So it was just an absolute get-around,
and you could use the oil for food or for light or for whatever it might be.
So the Russians used to have massive sunflower fields.
Well, they still do.
The two biggest producers of sunflower oil,
are Russia and Ukraine, which means that tensions between those two countries have affected the
world's supply of sunflower oil.
Really?
Oh, wow, really?
Yeah.
God, I didn't know how I felt about that battle, but now I'm really anti, because sunflower
oil is a useful thing to have around, isn't it?
There's an amazing thing about the fact that sunflowers are used in nuclear apocalyptic sites,
basically.
So, Fukushima, for example.
Right.
Part of the process of trying to clear it of radiation was to plant millions and millions of sunflowers because they soak up the radiation.
And this was a thing that was employed in Chernobyl as well.
Really?
Yeah, they did, yeah, lots of planting.
It's many different flowers and field mustard.
I must admit, I read that and I thought it probably wasn't true because it's the obvious thing to put in, isn't it?
It's light, it's energy.
it feels like a kind of a folk remedy to that, doesn't it?
Yes.
But then it's 100% true, isn't it?
Yeah, they have studied it.
The hyper accumulators, which take up heavy metals from soil.
Do you know who's a big fan of Sunflowers?
Huge fan.
It gives a clue.
My wife.
Really?
Yeah.
That wasn't going to, well, it's someone very similar to your wife, actually.
Oh.
I've got to be careful here.
No, it's Osama bin Laden.
Oh.
I've always thought she reminds me a bit.
She's tall.
Yeah, exactly.
She got a beard.
She hates America.
Yeah, he had a passion for them, apparently,
according to his wife.
He loved growing, he always grew them.
He loved growing the biggest sunflowers in his village.
Do you know what's ironic about sunflowers?
Are someone bin Laden loved them?
Is it that they come out at night?
Oh, that's good.
What?
Where do they hide?
No, I'm guessing.
That would be ironic.
if there's sunflowers that they hate the sun.
They love the sun.
They love the sun. They followed around all over the place.
None of that.
No.
It's that they're the only flower with the word flower in their name, but they're not a flower.
They're not a flower.
No.
My head just got blown.
They are thousands of flowers.
So they are.
So each sunflower is actually thousands of little flowers.
The definition of a flower is obviously like, you know, the bit that has the reproductive organs.
And on the sunflower, um,
The bits that are called the disc florets.
So if you follow the big yellow petals down, you then get all these little circular bits.
Yeah.
A bit more brown.
Yes, exactly, the bit more brown bits.
They have male and female reproductive organs, each one of those.
So each little petal with a disc flore attached is a flower.
Wow.
So every time we see a sunflower now, we should call it as sunflowers.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I will do that from now.
I know.
You actually will, won't you?
I won't take the blame for that.
As you're eating your penino.
What technically then is it?
It's a group of flowers.
It's a group of flowers. That is going to save me a lot of money.
I'm just going to be able to say, darling, I've got you 2,000 sunflowers.
Hey, I've got another ironic thing about sunflowers.
This is about Van Gogh or Van Gogh.
So he never sold any of his sunflower portraits.
I think he painted about 11.
And he never sold a single one in his lifetime.
And yet now, the one that the National Gallery in London has one,
and they sell more postcards of the,
that than of any other picture they've got. When you go to the National Gallery, they say no taking
photos, but actually since 2014, they've lifted the ban on selfies and taking photos because
they realized they just couldn't regulate it. So if they saw someone with a phone out, most people,
they couldn't tell if they were Googling something, texting, or whether or not they were about
to use it to take a sneaky photo. So they do know that certain flashes and so on do actually
affect paintings, but they've only with a few specific paintings said now, that is illegal
to take a selfie with.
But that's also ironic
that a place
with hundreds of self-portraits
stops you from taking a self-portrait.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Apart from they don't.
They don't.
The irony is been taken down.
The irony used to exist
and it now does not.
Yeah.
And that's another thing about the sunflowers.
The painting is wilting.
All the Van Gogh's sunflowers
are going brown.
Very slowly.
As in because the ink is are...
Yeah, because he used a paint
which degrades under light.
Although, great news,
it's not yet visible.
to the human eye.
So everybody stopped panicking.
Wow.
So the painting of sunflowers
doesn't like the light.
Brilliant.
Love it.
This isn't irony special.
Past and present irony special.
Yeah.
So they've analysed the chemicals
and they know which,
because they use different pigments
for different bits of the painting
and one of the pigments
is going to steadily get browner.
Yeah.
Well, that's fitting, isn't it?
Because they all die eventually,
as do we all.
And I think that's the point
he was trying to make when he used that chemical.
Yep.
He was another man with great foresight.
Do you know the optimal distance
at which to take a photo of your face?
Is it arm's length?
Sadly it's not.
So that's why everyone looks hideous in selfies
and they should all stop doing them.
So five feet is the best distance for a portrait.
That's the length that doesn't distort your facial features.
Well, you know what that is?
About the length of an arm's length
and a selfie stick.
Yeah.
It's about the length of a giant armadillo.
Yeah, but selfie sticks are more easily gotten.
Well, I wouldn't hate someone carrying around a giant armadillo
quite as much, though.
I think if all the tourists in Covent Garden were walking around with giant Alvillars,
you would soon get sick of it.
But no, selfies make your face look 30% fatter, 30% wider than it is, don't they?
Because they're too close up.
Right.
So Kim Kardashian.
Yeah.
She takes a lot of selfies.
Yeah.
And she seems to look normal in them.
Does she have an extremely thin face in here?
Yeah.
I don't know.
She looks like a freak.
Yeah.
Actually, weirdly, Phinella was showing me last night a picture of
of Kim Kardashian when she was 14 versus now to show the facial difference and her note she looks
like she's had a lot of the work done that would make a selfie look great.
She's a professional person who needs to look good, I'm not surprised.
Oh, you're suggesting that Kim Kardashian has had work done.
I can't tell you how thrilled I on this podcast has ended up with us discussing Kim Kardashian's
potential plastic surgery.
So I got another Kim Kardashian fact.
And that is that she's been warned by doctors to stop taking selfies after a painful wrist injury.
Wow. He genuinely had one.
Apparently she's got RSI because she's taken so many selfies.
Really?
Doesn't she have any mates who will take a photo of her?
It's a selfie. You've got to do a...
Well, you can just call it a photograph. We've got a word for the other one as well.
It's all about the angles.
She released a book called Selfie, which was literally 500 selfies.
That was the whole book.
Loved it. Absolutely loved it.
Yep. Yeah. I've got a selfie fact here, which is that in Ohio, there was a man who was a
wanted by the police and his name was Donald A. Chip Pugh. He was wanted by the Lima Police
in Ohio and so they put a picture out. They're looking at the wrong place.
There's a county called Lima, L. I think of the animal, the Lima police, the most adorable
police in the whole country. Yeah so they released a photo of him, which they said,
have you seen this guy, please get in contact.
And someone who got in contact was Donald himself,
who did not like the photo that they were using.
So he sent them an updated selfie of him sitting in a car with sunglasses on,
looking like he's cool.
And they ended up using that photo as well,
sending a message saying this photo was sent to us by Mr. Pew himself.
We thank him for being helpful,
but now we'd appreciate it if he would come to speak to us about his charges.
Do we know what happened on the end?
No, I haven't found enough.
date. Are we sure you didn't just send them a picture of somebody else and think, oh, he's
got away with that one?
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 James Harkin.
Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. and Chisinski. You can email podcast at QI.com.
Yep. Or you can go to our group account, which is at no such thing, our Facebook page,
which is no such thing as a fish or our website.
No Such Thing Asafish.com.
So on there we have all of our previous episodes.
We have links to any upcoming tours that we're doing.
You can get tickets through there.
You can listen to all the previous episodes.
And we also have this behind the scenes documentary we made behind the gills.
So we are going on tour again.
If you want to see what it looks like when we're on tour,
the behind the scene stuff as well as some of the front of sage stuff,
it'll give you an idea what it's like.
So go download that.
We'll be back again next week.
We'll see you then.
Goodbye.
