No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As The Mole Street Journal

Episode Date: June 11, 2021

James, Dan, Andy and Anne discuss mole-ologers, beard-botherers, actors' special rings, and textual deviants.  Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, James here. Welcome to this week's episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, where myself, Andrew and Dan Shriver are joined by none other than our very, very, very good friend and colleague Anne Miller. Now, you all know Anne, she's been on the podcast many, many times, but the one very important thing to tell you about her today is that she has a brand new book out. That book is called Mickey and The Trouble with Moles. It is an amazing children's book All about this secret group of animal spies And the amazing thing about this book Well actually two really cool things about this book Number one, there are secret codes hidden in the book
Starting point is 00:00:42 That you can solve while you're reading it And number two, even more excitingly for me I have a cameo in it Page 106 I'll admit it's not a huge cameo It's just one of the characters alludes to someone called James, but I am assured by Anne that that refers to me. So this is very exciting for me, the first time I have ever been in a work of fiction. But guys, honestly, I can't tell you
Starting point is 00:01:09 enough how great this book is. It's called Mickey and the Trouble with Moles. Stephen Fry said of this series of books, they're brilliantly funny, ingenious and deliciously addictive. And if that doesn't sell you on them, I don't know what will. Apart from hearing Anne on this week's episode of Fish. So, with no more ado, it is time for this week's No Such Thing as a Fish. On with the podcast. To another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from four undisclosed locations in the UK. My name is Dan Schreiber. I am sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray, and Anne Miller, and once again we have gathered around the microphones
Starting point is 00:02:07 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 Anne. My fact is that Moll's burrows have special kitchens where they keep up to 470 decapitated earthworms to eat later. Oh, wow. 470. It's very specific. That's the most they found.
Starting point is 00:02:31 There could be more. It's absolutely, it's like a giant larder, right? Yeah, yeah. Where they can go into for a nighttime snack. Yeah, they need to eat a lot, so they eat about 60% of their body weight and worms every day. and their boroughs are really intricate They have special rooms for sleeping, for giving birth and for storing their food
Starting point is 00:02:47 So it's kind of like having a kitchen or a larder or a pantry But it's, well, it's not to my taste But it works for them Yeah, I think 470s quite a lot though It's like their panic bot Earthworms, isn't it? Yeah, that's pandemic purchasing, isn't it? They know something's going on
Starting point is 00:03:03 Hang on, they've got special rooms for giving birth in They can't use those very often Well, we have those as well, Andy And you wouldn't put earthworms in the same room, Andy. It's very health and safety problematic. No, completely, completely. But all I'm saying is that if you've only got a certain number of rooms in your home. Oh, but they've got loads.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Yeah. Oh, okay. To have a specific maternity unit room in your house, I don't have that in my house. I've got a kitchen and a living room and a bedroom. But if you were a mole, like, so malls can dig up to 20 metres a tunnel a day. So you've got a whole borough of them and they're all digging, you could probably add an extension on pretty quick.
Starting point is 00:03:39 Whereas if you're adding it to your house, Andy, imagine it would take you more than a day or two, probably. Yeah. Especially if it was just you. The neighbours would have a few issues, no doubt. I love the way that they catch the worms. One of the ways they do it is they dig a tunnel and the worms just fall into it. That's how they get so many.
Starting point is 00:03:56 Just wait for it. Of course. Exactly. Imagine you're a worm just kind of going around your daily business sort of burrowing in the soil and suddenly you just fall into a massive hole of your enemy. And then you get put in a larder with all your... dead friends. You see all your friends say, yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:11 But here's a quick question. So I was reading that they stored the worms, and there was a suggestion in what I read, is that they've immobilized the worms with a bite to the head. So they're still alive. They're not dead yet. They may be brain dead,
Starting point is 00:04:24 but they're sort of fresh because they're still living. So is that right? They're not actually dead in that larder. Yeah, I think it's more, it's kind of like putting them in a fridge, but it's like a living fridge. Yes.
Starting point is 00:04:35 So the worms aren't going to go off so they can eat them later, but they also can't get away. It's very glad you. I think they can get paralyzed by, like you say, I think they can get paralyzed by being bitten at the back of the head, which kind of stops them being able to wriggle around. But I think that moles might also be kind of poisonous or venomous as well.
Starting point is 00:04:54 They're stuff in their saliva. I think there's many different types of moles. But yeah, I think their saliva can do stuff as well. I think that's right. And I think shrews are the same. And there's this kind of toxin called blarina toxin, especially in shrews, but I think in moles as well. and if they bite humans as well
Starting point is 00:05:10 then you can get a little bit of a bit like a bee sting or a wasp sting you might get a bit of swelling around so they are quite you know they're venomous well just on being bitten by moles moles are really really strong and there was a belief in the 18th century that if you held a mole in your hand
Starting point is 00:05:29 until it died your hand would acquire healing power right okay so if you just kind of cuff it in your hands now the problem is they're so strong there's a mole expert called Mark Hamer, and I read an interview with him, and he said that moles are stronger than people, he said that if you picked up a mole and help, yet don't shake your hand, James, it's true. If you pick up a mole and cup it between your hands, even if you're really strong, like even if you're a manual labour or something, it will be able to burst open your hands and get out. I know what you mean,
Starting point is 00:05:56 Andy, but I don't want to be one of those 7% of men who think they can beat an elephant in a fight, but I do think that I might be able to beat a mole in a fight. But well, you'd have a really hard time finding one, though, because we very rarely see moles, because they're pretty fast, and they're mostly underground. And actually, in 1967, there was a guy called Peter Stafford, who won the Wildlife Cameraman of the Year Prize. He took a photo of a mole and it's young in a borough. And for 40 years, that was the only photo we had of moles in their borough with their young. What?
Starting point is 00:06:23 And then the reason they got changed was in 2012 Springwatch, we're like, well, this is a challenge, let's film the malls. But they got Peter Stafford back to help them do it. So he is, like, the guy for filming mulls in their burrows. They're very mysterious. Amazing. Have you guys heard of moleology? No, no. So this is a thing that's been coined by a guy called Yersper Yerman, and he's a archaeologist
Starting point is 00:06:46 who basically made an application to the Danish Cultural Agency to say we want to use moles to help us do our archaeological digs. And the idea was that if you have moles burrowing down into potential sites where you believe there to be hidden cities, in the digging, the stuff that comes to the surface might have shards of pottery or have little elements of these bits of archaeological brick or whatever. And so he's dubbed it Mollology and they do the work for him. So they don't have to sort of desecrate the area and potentially ruin ancient sites. Do they not think that like ancient Egyptians were just all eating earthworms and stuff?
Starting point is 00:07:27 But that's happening in the UK as well. They're moles basically working at a site in Cumbria. That's an old Roman fort, but it's protected. So you're not allowed to dig there if you're are human. Moles are not bound by such rules. And so there are a whole team of human volunteers whose job it is is to go through the mole hills and find out what they've basically turfed up as they're digging. And so far, the malls have found pottery, beads, and my favorite, a decorative bronze dolphin, which makes me think they're like, I'm not putting that in my borrow, I can send that up. That's really good. Yeah. I prefer their original name sort of circa 450 to 100 AD. And Well, you're very old school, Dan.
Starting point is 00:08:06 Yeah, and I would appreciate it for the rest of this segment we could refer to them by their original name, which was, and it's very nice the idea, Andy, as you say, holding a mole in your hand because they used to be called wands. Oh. You had a wand. Wow. Yeah, W-A-N-D. And a wand eventually turned into a want, so they became a want. And the molehills used to be called a wanty-tump. They were not called that.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Damn was that. Back in the day, you would be making a mountain out of a wanty-tum. Tom. All right. That's fantastic. It's like their name before they were cool as well. Dan's got the original molehill data. Another thing about mould is they got really fast reaction. So the star-nosed mole actually has the Guinness World Record for being the fastest eater on the planet.
Starting point is 00:08:50 So it can basically locate a snack, eat it, and then move on to looking for its next one in 230 milliseconds. The average, the fastest one was 120 milliseconds. And for a comparison, it takes humans 650 milliseconds to respond to a red light traffic level. So they are fast. They are fast. They look insane, by the way. If you've never seen a star-nosed mole, give it a Google. It's the most alien-looking creature.
Starting point is 00:09:14 It's a sort of, it's like it's halfway through eating an octopus, and it's just stopped with the legs hanging out. That's what's on its face. The rest of it's very mole-like, and then suddenly, bluh, alien on the face. It's very magical, actually. That organ on the front of their face is 12 times more sensitive than a human clitoris.
Starting point is 00:09:35 Wow. I do with that. I don't know what to say about that. And it's a lot easier to find as well. That's so good. Oh, so mole catching, I'm sure you guys have been reading about the massive feud in the British mole catching community. Okay.
Starting point is 00:09:58 No, I don't like this. There are three British bodies. It's so stereotypically. British devoted to catching moles. There's an association of British mole catchers. There's the British mole catchers register. And there's the Guild of British Molecatchers. Splitters.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Well, they had this huge feud in 2016 because Anne Chippendale, which is the name of a woman who is in the association of pro mole catchers, she accused Louise Chapman, who's the head of the British register of molecatchers, of being an embarrassment, in quotes. This all happened in the pages of the Wall Street Journal for no good reason. idea why? Not the mole street journal? Why? They don't have better things to report on? Clearly they just wanted a bit of sort of exotic colour from weird backwards Britain. And so they just wrote about this mad feud they were all having.
Starting point is 00:10:46 And there's this huge debate about whether you should check a mole trap every day, because that's more humane or whether you should check it only a few days, which is, you know, could leave a mole in distress, but might also, you know, you've got to drive 50 miles to get to your next bloody trap. And so there are eructions in official pro mole-catching circles at the moment. Wow. Yeah. Wow.
Starting point is 00:11:06 I'm not actually a member of any of those. I prefer the underground stuff. While you are going for it, James. Look, I've been away for a week. I feel like if I don't, then you guys are going to replace me the daily full time. Speaking of Anne said earlier
Starting point is 00:11:25 that they had really good reactions, and that's why we have the thing called whack a mole, that game, you know, where the moles kind of pop up and then you whack them. So this was invented in Japan in the 1970s. It was called Magura Taiji in Japan.
Starting point is 00:11:41 And in 1976 and 1977, it was the second highest-grossing mechanical arcade game in both of those years. It was absolutely massive. It was huge. Really? And for people who don't know it, the moles pop up like these little furry things. Then you hit them with a mallet. And every time you hit them, you get a point. And then they dropped back down into their holes.
Starting point is 00:12:01 but a lot of people in video game academic circles refer to Wackermole as the first violent video game basically so you know when you're talking about how maybe Grand Theft Auto is turning us all into you know carjackers and stuff they really can take it all the way back to Wackamol which was the first of these games right that's really interesting because I've played Wackamol like at Seaside fairly recently not in the last year or so but it wasn't mulls it's always like sort of
Starting point is 00:12:30 cylinders that sort of pop up. So maybe that was an attempt to sort of separate it from cruelly bashing the moles, even though it's still called whack a mole. I think maybe it was. Because if you think about it, like, you know, whacking moles, people say, oh, video games, they don't make you do that. But there are three societies in Britain dedicated to catching moles. So that's evidence for you straight away. We need a follow-up of which arcades they visited as children. But yeah, there are some others like Waka Banker and Waka Warden. kind of like new versions of them where you can attack some people with
Starting point is 00:13:04 unpopular jobs in the future. The Versailles Palace in France, famously, has its own mole catcher and it has had for 330 years, okay? Well, they certainly had in 2012, which was when I read an interview with the Versailles catcher Jerome Dormion. And he signs off all his text messages
Starting point is 00:13:25 with mole catcher to the king, completely ignoring the fact France no longer has kings. They literally... dealt with that situation. But basically, Versailles obviously is so neat. The gardens are so pristine and the lawns are so gorgeous that he has to keep 2,000 acres free of moles. How does he do it? Does he have like a little mole guillotine or? Genuinely, he uses a guillotine style trap. No. Genuinely. He actually does. And he is very lucky to be in his work because in the old
Starting point is 00:13:52 days, he wouldn't have had a chance because from the 1600s until 1812, all the mole catchers came from the Learerd family, all the royal molecatchers. And there's a story that the last one was a bit of a rake, bit of a scallywag. And basically turned the official molecatchers residence at Versailles
Starting point is 00:14:08 into a knocking shop. It was a brothel. And one day, as Napoleon was walking in the gardens at Versailles, a prostitute came out of the mole catcher's house and propositioned him and said, all right,
Starting point is 00:14:22 Bonaparte, fancy a good time. And as a result, the family was stripped of its ancient privilege after 150 years of mole catching. Wow. Yeah. What a roller coaster. What a mole coaster.
Starting point is 00:14:36 What a way to lose your family inheritance of so many years, though. Just one prostitute. Every time someone asks you, you'd have to repeat the story as well. You'd like to pull me it. It was something cool. So I really love reading about moles, but also, obviously, there's moles in the human world. But in terms of the word mole meaning a double agent, that pretty much comes from John Le Carrey's books.
Starting point is 00:14:55 and he has sort of said like some of the words he took from the world of espionage and some of them he made up himself and there's a bit of confusion over which ones are which because obviously things are secret and which things are coincidences and which things are definite but according to the Oxford English Dictionary
Starting point is 00:15:09 they basically say it was very rare to use it to mean espionage before the Cold War saw writings and they cite John Lackari as one of the very first people to use that and as well as coming up with the word mole he also came up with honey trap that came from the carrie that wasn't something we used before. And he also had to run past any character names, had to run them past the foreign office
Starting point is 00:15:30 to make sure he didn't accidentally dob in any real active agents, which I thought was kind of cool. And then in the BBC interview, they asked him if he did the same thing with jargon. And he was sort of like, no, but I try and, you know, I have more fun making up my own words. Well, so, Anne, you've written a couple of kids' books about espionage in the animal world. Did you have to run, and you've got friends in GCHQ, I know that, happened to know that. So did you have to run those names past the... I'm not allowed to comment on that. And is there a honey trap in your book?
Starting point is 00:16:00 No, there is not for children and age, but thank you. Okay, cool. It could be an actual trap of money if you're trying to chat Winnie the Pooh, for example. Yeah. Okay, it is time for fact number two, and that is Andy. My fact is that in 1800, a wig maker in London patented mechanical whiskers. Great. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:26 Amazing. Are we talking cat or a human? Human, which is nice. Oh yeah, not the cat food. No, not the cat food. God, this is semantic nightmare this one. Basically, this is from an article by an expert on beard and wig history, a guy called Alan Withy,
Starting point is 00:16:44 who discovered in his researches a patent that a London wig maker had taken out, and it was in a time when beards were reasonably fashionable. They hadn't at huge heights, which was later on a bit. Victorian times, you know, the mid-19th century. This is the year 1800. But there was a London wig maker who had made a contraption, or patented at least, a contraption, which had fastenings made of a certain elastic compressed steel or springs. It was basically so you could attach a beard to your face with metal and make it look really
Starting point is 00:17:15 convincing. Yeah, it would make it kind of almost flap a little bit in the weather, wouldn't it? Right. Okay. Well, that was the worry, wasn't it? Because people who were obsessing with trying to wear fake beards were taping. them to their face or gluing them. And if a big gust came, their beard would fly off
Starting point is 00:17:31 mid-chat and suddenly a naked face would be talking to everyone and that would not be seen as a good thing. I spoke to Dr. Withie this morning and what a great guy he is. And he said that it was almost like you could buy this wig and then it came with like
Starting point is 00:17:47 optional extras. And so he said that the mechanical whiskers were almost like the go faster stripes of the wig world. So you would buy your normal car but you would add the GoFaster Stripes or you'd buy your normal wig and you would get these extras
Starting point is 00:18:01 that went alongside it. Cool. That's so cool. He's an amazing guy. I'm so excited that you got to talk to him because his website, his blog on Beards and he's got a book out as well. It's just fantastic.
Starting point is 00:18:13 And one of the best things about him is a man obsessed with beards. He doesn't have a beard. Well, Dan, I spoke to him on FaceTime today and I can tell you that he does have a beard now. Well, he's buckled then. He's buckled. to the freshen.
Starting point is 00:18:27 Well, during lockdown, decided to grow a little beard. Fair enough. It looks very cool. What kind has he got, James? Well, for him, like during lockdown, the rest of his hair kind of fell out. He doesn't know why.
Starting point is 00:18:39 But the bit that's left is kind of a mustache with a goatee beard at the bottom. Okay, yeah. By the way, his website, we should just say, it is Dr. Allen. It's Alan spelled the Welsh way. So that's A-L-U-N-D-R-A-L-U-N. wordpress.com and like Dan said it is an amazing website with everything you would ever want to
Starting point is 00:19:00 know about beards it's incredible. So does he have his beard if it's a mustache with just the goatey bit at the bottom? Is that a bit like Iron Man's? You know, Robert Downey Jr. Is it like that? So not like yours, James, connected. Yeah, I think that's right, although I can't obviously remember people's faces. So I think. For the listener, James can't remember any faces. So I'm questioning this whole Oh, Dan, you're just annoyed because you've been scooped on your research. But that's supposedly called an anchor that type of beard. And I think James, you have a goatee, which the way you have it, that might be a circle called the circle beard. Is that right?
Starting point is 00:19:43 Yeah, there's so many different types. And he brings up all these old types from the 19th century, particularly, you know, some beards were called soup strainers and others thigh ticklers. And there's the Piccadilly weepers. But I obviously, I don't know if you can tell this as a video call, I currently have not got a beard, but apparently in the 1800s, it was also quite fashionable for women to fasten their hair under their chin to imitate the look. So I might try that next time I'm hitting the shop, see if it goes down well. Exactly. I spoke to Alan Withy about this and he said that he found a few kind of advertisements for women to buy hair products for their beards. But they were usually like, you've got ringlets instead of sideburns. They would kind of get those growing down.
Starting point is 00:20:25 or sometimes would even draw whiskers onto their faces because they wanted to follow the latest fashion. I mean, it must have been an amazing time, maybe the best time ever for beard owners the 19th century because people just went tonto for them. So the really big era of beard fashion was kind of that middle of the century. And supposedly it was starting with Crimea.
Starting point is 00:20:45 The Crimean War, soldiers grew beards because it was very, very cold and they just wanted a little bit of facial protection. So that, then all the, obviously, 1856, the Crimea war ends. Soldiers come home. They're conquering here. Well, I can't remember who won the Crimea war. Anyway, the soldiers are home.
Starting point is 00:21:02 That's the main point. And they've all got beards. And that's an argument. There's a book from 1854, actually, called the philosophy of beards, which said that beards could keel sore throats or that if you shaved off a beard, you might get rheumatism and lots of other ailments because you don't know if there's protection anymore. I read that book for a little while and it's not the whole thing
Starting point is 00:21:27 Alan Wethy's read the whole thing I'm sure and the author of this book says you might be thinking why don't women have beards if beards are so great and the author is saying beards are really really great and he wrote well look women naturally have longer hair but also women were never intended
Starting point is 00:21:45 to be exposed to the hardships and difficulties men are called upon to undergo so I think the idea is that the men are out hunting master dolls and whatever it's men are hunting. And you need a beard to hide behind if there's no bushes. Exactly, exactly.
Starting point is 00:21:59 I love this as a man who clearly hasn't heard of a scar. There is a theory that came out quite recently, isn't it? The beards evolved so that if people punch you, it kind of lessens the force. Do you see that? That's amazing. So this was quite a recent study, and the scientists, what they did was they took a skull
Starting point is 00:22:20 and obviously you can't get a skull with a beard because it's a bit late for growing a beards by the time you're a skull. You can't really do it. And so what they did was they took a load of hair from a sheep and then wrapped it around the skull to kind of be almost as if it's a bit like a beard and then they pummeled the skull
Starting point is 00:22:39 with this iron rod dropping down with different weights to work out how much of a force it could take. And they worked out that actually the one which had the sheep's fur on it could take a lot more force than the one without. Right. I mean, that's an amazing experiment,
Starting point is 00:22:58 but also what a bunch of weird perverts these sides are pummeling a skull wrapped in the hair with a rod. Also, you don't see many boxers with beards, right? Like, you figure this new research would change literally the face of sport. I wonder if it's in their rules. Like, you know, they're very strict.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Like, what kind of things you can have if you're a cyclist? If you're a boxer, maybe it's like you can't wear a beard. It's like, sacking. Oh, yeah. Or maybe it's like a real wussy thing. Oh, look at him with his beard, softening the punches. Like giant six-foot beard. It's a cushion all the flow.
Starting point is 00:23:27 Well, that was the thing with beards, wasn't it? It was like that they were supposed to be like a side of manliness. And apparently that was because they were almost seen as a waste product, a beard. It was like the exhaust pipe of sperm production. So if a man was making lots of sperm, then this was almost like a waste product of the sperm-making. would be the beard that came out. And that was the theory behind why, you know, the more masculine men would have beards.
Starting point is 00:23:57 Well, I didn't think you would say anything in this podcast more disgusting than your weird sheep experiment. The exhaust pipe of sperm production is pure nightmare field. For me, it was the starred-nosed clitoris earlier. But back to sort of spies and espionage, I read a really good thing. There's an argument that prison notion, allowed to have beards because if you escape and you've got a beard, if you shave it off,
Starting point is 00:24:23 it's a pretty good disguise. But if you're clean-shaven, to make yourself look different, is much more elaborate. It would take much longer. Wait a minute, can you not just grow a beard then the other way around? You'd have to be hidden for quite a while, I think, if you've escaped and you come in with your beard. They catch you 10 minutes later, unless you're making a lot of testosterone. Yeah, you can't just go into a phone box and wait in there for a week and then come out. famous convicts, Bermy Pete, actually managed to avoid recapture every time he escaped.
Starting point is 00:24:51 So one really interesting thing actually on that, which Dr. Withy said to me, which is that it's quite easy to know about posh people's beards from the olden days because lots of people had paintings and stuff like that. What did normal people have in their beards? Did they were beards? Did they have different styles and stuff like that?
Starting point is 00:25:09 No one really knew because we don't have those kind of records. But what Dr. Whittie decided to do was to look at prison photographs, which they did have from the 19th century. And what he found was that they kind of like to have this beard that you don't really see anymore, which is almost like a chin strap. So it comes down the sideburns. It goes down the bottom of the chin, underneath the chin. And there's no mustache or anything like that and nothing on the cheeks. I try to look at other people who had it. I think Henry Thoreau maybe or Stormsy, if you can.
Starting point is 00:25:43 think of either of those two people. It's that kind of beard, but you don't really see it around anymore. But that was really, if you look at the prisoner photographs from that time, they all had this kind of beard. So it seems like if you're a lower class person, that's the beard you would have had. But if it's really thin lines, that means presumably it's quite a lot of upkeep to have that. So you would probably have taken quite pride in that. It's not something that you just let it grow and it became bushy.
Starting point is 00:26:05 That's deliberate. That's kind of what Dr. Withy was saying. It is strange because you actually have to work at that. just let it grow and that's what it does. You actually have to put some effort behind it. So, yeah, it must have been a fashion. That to me seems a bit also like protection because you know that fact about cravats
Starting point is 00:26:24 coming about as a result of wearing a bit of scarf around your neck might disguise where your actual neck is in war and if a knife was coming. Imagine if you had a very bushy beard just in front of your neck if you're in prison. That's almost like, where's his neck begin? You'd be slashing with a knife and you might just trim the guy
Starting point is 00:26:42 as opposed to cutting his neck. Did he manage to cut his throat? I don't know. Okay, it is time for fact number three, and that is my fact. My fact is, we know who the most significant male actor currently working in German-speaking theatre is
Starting point is 00:27:05 because he wears a special best-actor ring. The most significant male actor in the German-speaking region, which is, let's be honest, Germany and Austria, He must like walk into a party with, you know, like when someone just gets engaged and they kind of have their hand in front of their face the whole time so everyone can see the ring. He must do that his whole life. He must, right, and it's a real sparkly ring. It's got 28 diamonds on it. So it's a real fashion piece.
Starting point is 00:27:35 And the story behind this is that it's called the Ifland Ring. And this was in dedication to a great German actor from the late 18th. century called August Wilhelm Ifland, who was a brilliant director, dramatist. He was a theatre director. He sort of ran most of the theatres in Germany at one point. And the story goes, because it is a bit of a murky story, that this ring was created and was to be handed on to the next person who the previous owner deemed to be the most worthy actor working in German theatre that day. So you would receive the ring upon the death of the previous owner of the ring. And once you got this ring, you had three months to make your
Starting point is 00:28:19 decision about who would be the next person to inherit it. Now, they wouldn't get it until you yourself died. But they would then, once you died, open a vault where inside on a bit of paper you will have written who you think that your successor is and they get given the ring. But what happens if you're one of those actors who has a couple of really good movies at the start? Like, who's the guy who we talked about the other week who became a wrestler who was in Scream and Courtney Cox? David, Ike. Ked. David Arquette. What if you're like David Alcette?
Starting point is 00:28:47 You're like, well, what a great actor he is. And then he goes downhill very quickly. You're right. It's absolutely mad that it's you pick the most significant person working within three months of you getting the award. If you're young, you might be living for decades. Yeah. Yeah. What if it was like McCauley Culkin, for instance?
Starting point is 00:29:04 Like, they, the guy got his ring. Let's pretend McCauley Culkin is a German. But they got the ring. And then they thought, Home Alone and Home Alone 2 are killer movies. He's the best actor. He obviously is in the world. Let's give it to him. And then 30 years later, you die, and it's just this guy who's living with Pete Doherty.
Starting point is 00:29:22 But do they have a backup plan? Because if you get it and it doesn't pass on until you die, you know, you can't guarantee that you, unless you picked someone like McCauley Colkin who was young, then you can't guarantee that you'll outlive them. So is there like a list, like a sort of, like a line of succession for if your choice isn't available. It sometimes happens.
Starting point is 00:29:39 You're right. So the previous holder before the current one was Bruno Gannon. who played Hitler in Downfall. That was maybe his most famous role in the English-speaking world. And he intended an act called Gert Voss to get it, but Voss died in 2014 when Gantz was still alive. So he had to change his mind and re-nominate. And as a result, he nominated the new fellow.
Starting point is 00:30:02 Yeah, and that's happened a few times. By the way, Gantz, when we say Hitler and Downfall, for anyone who hasn't seen that movie, you probably have seen a very iconic scene from it because it's become one of the most memed movie scenes. possible where the subtitles are changed with Hitler having a meltdown if you can picture that great meme that's from that and that's from the great most significant German actor of his time one person ago.
Starting point is 00:30:27 You think that's what got him the nomination? It was the meme. It just had such an impact all around the world. It has to be you. But I mean, so, you know, that has happened before Gantz had that happen. There was a guy called Albert Basserman who was given the ring in 1908. and he really didn't want it and he named three successors
Starting point is 00:30:46 and all of them died before he actually died himself. So he thought it was cursed and he wanted to give it away. So he actually didn't nominate his successor. It was done by a team, an Austrian team who decided who the next actor was. But he was quite a cool actor, Batterman.
Starting point is 00:31:03 He was nominated for his role in an Alfred Hitchcock movie that was made in 1940 called Foreign Correspondent. And during the filming, he had to have his dialogue spelt out to him phonetically because he spoke virtually no English. So he was memorizing his lines from a phonetic translation and he memorized them and delivered them so well
Starting point is 00:31:24 he was nominated for best supporting actor. That's ridiculous. Bassaman tried to destroy the ring by throwing it into a fire. Into a volcano. Well, this is insane. It was at the funeral of the third person he'd nominated who had subsequently died. who was Alexander Moises,
Starting point is 00:31:44 I don't know how that's pronounced exactly, but the story goes that he threw it onto the coffin of Moises at the cremation, and it was sinking into the flames when the director of the Viennese theatre reached in and grabbed it, and he said, this ring belongs with a living actor,
Starting point is 00:31:58 not a dead one. Oh my God. And so as a result, there was a kind of a vote. He gave it to the Austrian federal theatre body, and they had to pick, because he said, I'm not picking anyone more.
Starting point is 00:32:08 Wow. It's so incredibly Lord of the Rings, though. And I also read that the Ilford ring was one of us, set of seven originally, which definitely adds to this. And then I started looking into the Lord of the Rings. I just found this potential origin story.
Starting point is 00:32:22 I think it's not completely, well, tell you the story because I blew my mind and I hadn't heard it before, which is there is a ring at a place called Devine, Hampshire, it's National Trust property, and it's a massive chunky gold ring. It's so big, it can only be worn on a gloved thumb. It's ginormous. And it's inscribed with Latin that says, Sinisianus live well in God. They found this in the field, and 1785, it's a ring, it went into the display. But then, a few decades later, they found a tablet at a site in Gloucestershire, a little way away.
Starting point is 00:32:52 And this one contained a tablet, which said that a Roman wanted to let them know. Someone had stolen his ring and he wanted it back. And the tablet said, among those who bear the name Senesianus to non-grant health until he brings back the ring to the Temple of Nodens. And the bit that makes this really exciting is they contacted a professor. of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University to help them work out who this god was and that was one J.R.R. Tolkien. Which I thought was so cool. So you can see that ring, one of another mysterious rings at the National Trust property, although they do say it's not completely sure it was connected to the tablet. They were a long way away, but the story, if that's true, is so cool.
Starting point is 00:33:31 That's such a great Lord of the Rings connection. They do think of the seven, two do still exist. So we've got the one that sits on the most significant actors hand and a second one is in a private collection, but it's suggested that that's either been lost or destroyed. So we could be down to the last ring. And someone tried to throw it into a fire. This is definitely Lorded the Rings. You know, it's a shame. I think Bassaman would have rather it had burnt in that fire because the successor that they picked would have absolutely devastated him. Because Bassaman was married to his wife, who was called Elsa, and she was Jewish. And during the height of Nazism, he was told that he would need to divorce her
Starting point is 00:34:13 if he wanted to continue performing in Germany he said absolutely not and he and Elsa went away to Switzerland to live instead he was very against it so it would have killed him for the fact that the ring was passed on to Werner Krauss who was part of what is seen as the worst propaganda movie that Nazi Germany ever made
Starting point is 00:34:32 about Jewish people that was the successor of the ring really just horrible yeah actually you were just saying about Switzerland and Andy said that basically the only German speaking places are Germany and Austria. Well, of course you did forget about Switzerland, Andy, which is where Bruno Gantz is from, who played Hitler, he's Swiss, and in Switzerland they have their own ring. They have the Heinz Reinhart ring and that is for whoever's the best Swiss actor. And actually in 1991, Bruno
Starting point is 00:35:04 Gantz won that as well. So for a short amount of time, he had both the best actor, in Switzerland ring and the best actor in Germany ring. What? Incredible. Oh my God. He wasn't. You know, he was meant to be the lead role of Pretty Woman. He was meant to be Richard Geer.
Starting point is 00:35:21 What, the Julia Roberts? Yeah. Oh, sorry. Yeah. That would have been a very different movie, wasn't it? Richard Gear, Kort Hitler. But actually, you know, this guy that I just mentioned, the Nazi Krauss, he actually tried to be the first person to give the ring to a lady.
Starting point is 00:35:40 because he thought this shouldn't be just male dominated. And the lady that he wanted to give it to was Alma Seidler, who is a brilliant actor at the time. And they said no, because she was a woman. And so as a result, since the 1970s, a new ring has been created, which is the Alma Seidler ring, which is given to the most significant female actor in German-speaking theatre. And we're on our third most significant actor as of this year
Starting point is 00:36:10 to hold the ring. Yeah, there's a suggestion that Jens Hauser, who's the current holder of the Ifland ring, might give it to a woman, isn't it? Yeah, he better do. We don't know, of course. Yeah, he's really suggested he will, so I hope he does,
Starting point is 00:36:22 because otherwise, that's just all talk, isn't it? Yeah, and actually, the ring has been with a woman for the last few years, at least, because Jens Hauser apparently keeps it in his daughter's underwear draw. Does he? For safekeeping, yeah. It feels like a small victory for feminism,
Starting point is 00:36:39 of that one. It doesn't feel like safe keeping if you've told everyone exactly where you keep it and you've put it in your poor daughter's bedroom a 28 diamond ring. Can I just say
Starting point is 00:36:50 for any criminals listening because I know you do listen to this podcast we know what you look like you've got that little beard going around for any criminals listening he has moved it
Starting point is 00:37:01 from the daughter's underwear drawn now. It's not there anymore it's somewhere else. Well that's what you would say that's exactly what you would say if you hadn't moved it from your daughter's underpants drawer.
Starting point is 00:37:16 Okay, it is time for our final fact of the show, and that is James. Okay, my fact this week is that countries can now send propaganda to individual enemy soldiers on the front line by text message every time they turn on their phones. Wow. Bad. And by countries, I mean Russia. Although I suppose anyone could do it, but this is an article in the economy. from the last couple of weeks
Starting point is 00:37:44 and it is about a thing called pinpoint propaganda and it's something that's happening on the front between Russia and Ukraine and apparently a Ukrainian soldier might turn on their phone and they'll get a message saying who is robbing your family while you are paid pennies
Starting point is 00:38:01 waiting for your bullet that kind of thing I'm settling it's pretty direct then it's not subtly saying hey have you maybe considered retraining they go straight for the money I think in warfare probably direct is generally the way to go. Well, they really do go for it.
Starting point is 00:38:18 So this has been happening for a few years. I think it was 2017 that the first examples were received by Ukrainian soldiers. And they said things like they'll find your bodies when the snow melts or nobody needs your kids to become orphans. And they also, they look like they're coming from your comrades sometimes, which is very creepy. Yeah, except you could quickly ask them. Why did you send me that weird thing about my wife and kids? I got one from you, so I took one back. And this article basically was all about how mobile phones are a problem in warfare.
Starting point is 00:38:52 So, for instance, if you're a country and there's a front in between you and another country and you want to know where soldiers are, you can scan and you can look for mobile phone signals. And people might be told to turn their phone off. But there was a quote by Lieutenant Colonel Ruvan Habel, who is in charge of NATO troops in Lithuania. he says that it's just turning on your phone is like a fire in the dark. Basically, it just lights you up exactly where you are and they'll know where to attack. That's so interesting. That's just like the equivalent, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:39:26 At First World War, having a glowing cigarette, which can be seen from a really long way away at night. I guess interestingly, though, if you got a text message, you would report that to your superior and say, we got to get out of here. They know exactly where we are. But what if you're defending your own territory? You can't then say we've got to get out of here. Yeah, that's why I should not be put in charge of military. We can't do this, Commander Schreiber.
Starting point is 00:39:49 We just can't do it. No, no, guys, let's just get out of here. They know where we are. They've heard about England. We've got to go. All of us now. But phones are such a huge security beach because, yeah, there's geo-tagging on staff. The Army had to deny a case recently that somebody gave away information
Starting point is 00:40:08 because someone on Tinder was asking them too many questions and they gave away information about planes, they completely denied it. And also there's things like, you know, if you send a photo to somebody, well, that can be geotag. And even if you turned off the geotagging, if there's a time stamp on the photo,
Starting point is 00:40:22 and you can sort of tell by the light, you can sort of work out where you are in the world, so you can also work out where trips are moving. So there's tons of these risks that sit on phones. And obviously, the really big one is location trackers. And there was that really problematic story recently where fitness trackers got, well, they didn't even get hacked.
Starting point is 00:40:37 They released a heat map showing where the people who use fitness trackers were. And a lot of them were in US bases abroad. And a lot of them ran around their base for their exercise. They're basically lit up all these areas in desert. And everyone was like, oh, wonder what's there. Literally drawing a ring around the base. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:40:53 Wow. Well, if you were smart, what you would do is like, you know, in World War II, they would make fake cities, wouldn't they? So they would set fires and put lights just outside the city. So the bombers would come over and bomb the wrong place. What you would do is you'd get your soldiers to run a kilometer away, in a shape a bit like a military base and then trick them. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:14 And then all call home with like sort of some elaborate lighting setups. It's a different time of day and like completely throw everyone off where you actually are and what you're doing. Yeah. James, you got this fact from the economist, didn't you? Yeah. I was reading an article about propaganda in the economist. Might very well have been the same article. This was an article about all the different terms that have emerged in modern day related to propaganda.
Starting point is 00:41:40 So in Russia, for example, there's a term which is propaganda, which is basically a propaganda condom. It's an insult to journalists in Russia who are elastic with the truth. And it's a portmanteau of propaganda and the Russian word for condom, which is sort of derived from the English word for condom, but it's gandon. So propaganda and gandon together, propaganda. So you would say of the journalists there who are just peddling basically state. propaganda that they are a propaganda on, the propaganda condom. Wait, are they the condom or are they the penis? They're the condom.
Starting point is 00:42:18 So what is the penis if they are the condom? It's not really, it's, well, I suppose the elastic with the truth is kind of a thing, but it's like condom is just like a silly insult. But they are the barrier between, I guess, the truth. So the penis is, the penis or possibly the sperm cells are the truth. And they're preventing the truth from getting through to the people. If you imagine like a sperm exhaust and then there's a barrier.
Starting point is 00:42:46 Who's the beard in this? Propaganda. Propaganda. That's great. Yeah, if you want to use that. This is all come a very, very long way from early propaganda techniques. I didn't know this thing, which is that during the First World War, Germany and Britain both had their own propaganda newspapers, which were in French.
Starting point is 00:43:05 So, if you see what I mean. They were four people who spoke French in occupying. Belgium and occupied France and French-speaking prisoners of war. So the German one was called the Gazette Desardin. But the British one, Le Courier de lair, was a floating newspaper. It was distributed as a leaflet from hydrogen-filled balloons and it was just released to drift across the battlefields and slowly release bundles of papers as it went. So there was a really clever fuse which burnt down and every five minutes it burnt down another notch and it released another bundle of papers. I think they invented that because it used to be people dropping them out of planes and then two people got caught with a lot of propaganda leaflets and then sentenced to hard labour and they're like, okay, well, this is risky. So then they develop the balloons to just, you know, do it without people and they can completely deny it. And be like, oh, it just floated into your land. Sorry, sorry. There's no one obviously operating it. It's a bit more difficult to know exactly where your papers are going to end up though, right, than if people are actually, like if I'm a paper boy like I used to be, I couldn't use this as much.
Starting point is 00:44:07 my technique for delivering newspapers in Bolton, could I? No, exactly. And in fact, James, you're so right, because they had to have a weatherman in the early days to consult. And if the wind was blowing towards France, you tied the newspaper. And if it was blowing towards Germany, you attached just out and out propaganda sheets for enemy soldiers. So they had to, they had two different bundles and they had to pick, which...
Starting point is 00:44:29 So what if you said the wrong one to the wrong way and you, like, radicalise the wrong group? Yeah. Yeah, problem. We've accidentally turned all the French into German soldiers. nightmare. Propaganda, much older even than the 20th century. During the Civil War in England, there was quite a lot of it against the Cromwells.
Starting point is 00:44:48 And actually, a bit afterwards, they were still really bad-mouthing the Cromwells after the monarchy came back in. And there was a book called The Court and Kitchen of Elizabeth, commonly called Joan Cromwell, the wife of the late Usurper. And this was a propaganda cookbook. and it kind of looked on the outside that it was Joan Cromwell's cooking recipes, but actually in between all of the recipes, there was just a load of sexual slander about the Cromwells
Starting point is 00:45:19 and what they used to get up to and all that kind of stuff. And Stuart Orne, who is the Cromwell Museum's curator, I read this on Atlas Obscora. He said that it would be a bit like today if you were to buy a cookery book that was supposedly written by Michelle Obama, but the first third of it was an essay by Donald Trump saying how awful Barack Obama was. Oh, don't give him my dears, because Trump will do that now.
Starting point is 00:45:45 But what's so great, though, is that especially Americans are really bad for this, they're writing recipes where there's like a really long backstory before they tell you the recipe. So a lot of people skip over those sections. It's probably the best place to hide something because everyone's like, where's the ingredients for brownies? I don't want to know all this. You're right.
Starting point is 00:45:59 You need to put the propaganda in a place that someone's going to read. So it's like, first set your own. to Oliver Cromwell was a shagger at 270 degrees Pick your moments I read a little bit about that James The other thing that I really like Was that all the recipes in it were even they were picked to target the Cromwells
Starting point is 00:46:19 They were quite basic recipes if I can put it that way Designed to say that all the Cromwells had been terribly common You know eel pies Come on guys Sorry that's not rhyming slack for eel pies But you know they were just kind of scuzzy recipes and not for classic people. I think Adela Lawson does a recipe a day on Twitter
Starting point is 00:46:38 and I'm pretty sure the day Trump left. A recipe of the day was bitter orange tart, which is very well played. I feel like it would fit into this. It's everywhere. Nice. Joseph Stalin of Russian fame. More importantly, of Stalin fame, I would say. You're absolutely right.
Starting point is 00:46:55 He had a plane which was used pretty much solely for propaganda purposes. It was called the Maxim Gorky, named after the famous writer. And it was an incredible, machine. It was one of the largest planes in the world. In fact, in the 1930s, it was the largest plane in the world. There were only two built for that specific model. And get this, it had a cinema on board, a library. It was exclusively used for propaganda, this plane. Well, no, no, it seems like it was
Starting point is 00:47:20 often used for watching movies as well and reading books. We don't know what movies were played and we don't know what books you could borrow from the library. No, come on, Andy, right? So, Stalin doesn't need the propaganda. You're not going to talk Stalin into going for for communism by playing him a video. You need to get the propaganda to the people outside the plane. Okay, I'd say 60 to 70% of its function was for propaganda. It had some leisure center facilities attached. It also had its own leaflet printing and dropping capacity,
Starting point is 00:47:50 so it could print them in the air pretty cool. That's cool. It also had a, this is what I read, it had a giant radio attached to it, so it could just blare out propaganda as it flew overhead. How low is this plane flying? It did fly pretty low because it did these cool flying. exercises and that actually tragically led to it crashing
Starting point is 00:48:08 because it was flying with several other planes, tiny ones which were designed to point out how big the Maxim Gawke was and then they would do cool maneuvers around it and unfortunately one of them crashed into it and then it crashed. That is terrible but the idea of having really tiny planes next to your plane
Starting point is 00:48:24 to make it look bigger is quite amazing. It's like those crabs that stand next to the ones with small claws to make their claws look bigger but like in the end. Have you guys heard of the sexual deviance pamphlets? heard of them Ben I've been writing them for five years Who made you the head of HR at QI
Starting point is 00:48:41 I don't have to answer these questions Dan These were used during World War II And it was basically One of the ways to promote propaganda And change the mood of soldiers Is that you would suggest That the wives and partners
Starting point is 00:48:57 And husbands and so on Of people back home Were sleeping with other people So, yeah. So, you know, one batch was dropped on the French front, which had images of British soldiers taking advantage of all the French women while they were there. So they'd suddenly be like, those British bastards.
Starting point is 00:49:15 And then other leaflets had the French draft dodgers doing the same thing but to French women while, you know, the hard working soldiers were out there. They weren't the actual, no, it wasn't the actual people, right? Imagine a leaflet with your wife. I'm like, darling, that could be anyone's exact. Exhaust. Okay, that's it.
Starting point is 00:49:42 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 Shreiberland, Andy. At Andrew Hunter, M. James. At James Harkin.
Starting point is 00:49:57 And Anne. At Miller underscore Anne. And you can also get us on our group account, which is at No Such Thing, or you can go to our website. No Such Thing as a Fish.com. All of our previous episodes are up there. Do check them out. Go and check out our tour dates, our 2021 tour dates. We are back on the road, see if we're coming to a town near you and come see us live. And also, most importantly, get Anne's new book, Mickey and the Trouble with Moles. It's out now. You can buy it in all good book shops as well as online. It's part of the Mickey and the Animal Spy series. Guaranteed absolutely no honey traps in the book at all. It is absolutely brilliant. Get it now. All right, guys. we'll be back again next week with another episode. We'll see you then.
Starting point is 00:50:39 Goodbye.

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