No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As The Ugly Panda

Episode Date: May 22, 2015

Dan, James, Anna, Andy and special guest Rufus Hound discuss the origin of The Sooty Show, an omelette-cooking tightrope walker, and the shepherds running America. ...

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast coming to you from the QI offices in Covent Garden. My name is Dan Schreiber. I'm sitting here with Aniches-Mexby, James Harkin, and Andy Murray. We're also joined by special guest, Rufus Hound. And once again, we have gathered around the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days. And in no particular order, here we go. Starting with you, Mr. Hound. Well, Dan. Twice in its history, America has been run by a...
Starting point is 00:00:40 shepherd. Really? So we got that fact through and I have no idea what that means. Yeah, what does that mean? Twice, the resident of the White House has also been a keeper of sheep. The first of them was Thomas Jefferson, who, when he lived on his plantation, had corn and wheat and tried to rotate them, but found that the soil was rapidly blitzed, essentially. And then realized that sheep were the way full.
Starting point is 00:01:10 forward that they fertilized the soil they were super animals and so when he was president he actually bought sheep with him to the white house and the the ram that he was most pleased with in terms of the the sheep that he thought would become america's sheep was a shetland ram now in the early days of america when we think of the white house we're obviously thinking of something behind layers and layers and layers of security but it used to be a house and you could walk on those grounds so The sheep were in the White House grounds, in the lawn and whatever, but this ram was incredibly violent. There are official letters from William Keough,
Starting point is 00:01:50 who states that he was left black and blue by this ram. And in another letter, it transpires that actually a small boy was killed by one of Jefferson's rams. Yeah. Oh, man. Very hard to imagine that happening today. Today with the White House. But that's true, because I was looking into when George Washington, because obviously he was the first resident in the White House.
Starting point is 00:02:11 And it was exactly like that. Like people could just come and go, how have they wanted. And he had to put a law in that stopped people just wandering in off the street to go, hey, how's it going? He said they would just be doing work and people would walk in and just going, hey, I was just passing. You going good? It seems to be going great. Bill Clinton was attacked by sheep, wasn't he? Remember that?
Starting point is 00:02:28 We were talking about that earlier, weren't we? Yes. And I can't remember when he was attacked. It was as a child, and he's ever since been scared of sheep. Really? Yeah, apparently. He said it was the awfulest beating. I ever took, but I don't know if that was before
Starting point is 00:02:40 after the whole moniker affair. The other president was Woodrow Wilson. Oh, who, when he declared war on Germany in 1917, the ground staff, by this point, they were ground staff for the White House.
Starting point is 00:02:59 And because it was, you know, we are one nation, he freed them to all join the American military and bought sheep instead because the sheep would nibble the grass and it would be a sort of cheap
Starting point is 00:03:14 upkeep. I mean they can't sculpt hedges as beautifully as some expensive White House ground stuff, can they? I like, yeah, I read that they were as replacement for all of his garden stuff. How good are they at planting a nice bed of roses? Yeah, but to be fair, they are
Starting point is 00:03:30 definitely much worse in a war than human men. Very hard, sheep spies. Did you hear something? Did anyone call him Woodrow Wilson? Well, they should have done. They were known as Wilson's Woolies. Oh, nice.
Starting point is 00:03:50 Oh, really? And the ram of this flock was incredibly well known. He was known as... Is that Old Ike? Old Ike. Yes. Who... Smoked.
Starting point is 00:04:04 Well, who loved tobacco. And anybody who dropped cigar butts. in the White House grounds. He would make a B-line. I don't think he smoked, really. No, that was an exaggeration, you're right. He was chewing the tobacco, wasn't he? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:17 One interesting thing about Woodrow Wilson is he had a stroke after the war, I think it's in 1990 or 1920, and his wife took over the de facto running of the country. And she was in charge when the 19th Amendment was passed, which was votes for women. Really? She wasn't officially the president, but she was like a de facto president. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:04:38 God, so that sort of invalidates the whole votes for women thing, doesn't it? There wasn't even a man in charge at the time. Right, we're going to have to go back and recount all the votes. Re-calibrate. Who was the president who basically died post his inauguration because he did an hour and 40? William Henry Harrison. Yeah. I hadn't heard of that until I read that was morning.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Do you know about this, Rufus? Well, yes, it was that he was already ill at his inauguration, but he stood outside for so long that it exacerbated the symptom and he can't... He should have had a nice woolen jumper, shouldn't he? Yes. He didn't wear a coat or a hat. Did he not? He was being...
Starting point is 00:05:17 I don't know. And no gloves. He was trying to show... Because there were all these reports that he wasn't strong enough, that he wasn't interesting enough, that he didn't do long enough speeches. I'll show them with my naked 10-hour speech in the snow.
Starting point is 00:05:30 I read as well, because I've just been looking at to presidents at the White House and sort of interesting things that they did while they're there, so keeping sheep. One, and this isn't properly confirmed that a lot of people seem to think it's true. Grover Cleveland used to piss out the window in the Oval Office. Yeah, it just used to pop the window up.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Yeah, it's a rumor. That wouldn't be good when the public were just walking through the grounds all the time. When you say it's a rumor. Why are the sheep yellow? What's going to run? Well, you know that you can find bright yellow sheep in Devon. What is he? Yes. This is one of the things I looked up was
Starting point is 00:06:06 about sheep rustling that actually it's going through the roof over the last 10 years sheep rustling and what do they call it rural crime has gone up something like 125% and whole flocks have been going missing but one of the things is if you take a flock of any kind of size
Starting point is 00:06:25 you actually need a field to put them in you know what I mean you can't just leave them in a lockup so there must be farms that are basically hiding these sheep And there's so much open green space, you know, where are they? So farmers have taken to dyeing their sheep, neon yellow, neon blue, neon pink. That way, if their flock ever goes missing, and then, you know, five hills or whatever. Someone's like, I just saw a bright pink sheep in the van.
Starting point is 00:06:56 This was a news article in Turkey earlier this year. There was some Turkish shepherds who were in a field, and they... Turkey shepherds. Turkey shepherds. Wow. They were in a field, and the field was next to a cliff, and one of the sheep, there were 1,500 sheep in this field, one of them walked off a cliff,
Starting point is 00:07:14 and all the other sheep followed. So all 1,500 sheep in this village fell off a cliff, and the first 400 died, but then the next 1,100 survived because they landed on the dead bodies of the sheep. Oh, my God. I mean, I know that sheep are quite fluffy, but I didn't think they were that fluffy.
Starting point is 00:07:34 something if you landed at speed on a sheet you really badly you think so, weren't you? They're not like clouds, you know. But define fluffing. Like, 400 of them had to die first. Yeah, that's true. Surely if you piled 400 hedgehogs
Starting point is 00:07:49 of a cliff, like the 400 and first one is going to basically be landing on meaty squelch. Meaty squelch doesn't make it sound like a less appealing prospect than the big ball of fluff Have we ever mentioned on the podcast the idea that sheep just used to shear themselves?
Starting point is 00:08:10 What? They just used to just... They used to shear each other, is what you mean. They used to shed their wool on their own, and we've bred it out of them because we've wanted to make it a thing where we could do it when we want. Well, sheep peeling is going to be a thing in the future where you kind of put a protein into the sheep, and it makes the wool kind of detach itself. and then instead of shearing it, you just kind of peel it off. Is that like an apple, and if you peel it off,
Starting point is 00:08:38 can you throw it in the air, and whatever lesser shape it lands in is the initial of who you're going to marry? Well, I have to try, Anna. I mean, I know E-Harmony isn't working for you. I've been through so many apples. It's just not working. Do they come, do you peel it in one big chunk?
Starting point is 00:08:58 Yeah, I think that's the idea, yeah. Well, maybe you just make a tunnel out of the script. catchy side of Velcro and run the sheep from that bolt the other end. Fire it through. It's cannon it. Can we get that for us? For us? Instead of getting your hair cut, you just inject something under your skin and then
Starting point is 00:09:19 you just peel your whole hair off and then it saves time. I mean, middle-aged men around the world are spending billions of pounds trying to do the exact opposite of the thing you've just described. Yeah, that's the most redundant invention. Something to make men bold Order now and get these three impotent hills Okay, time for fact number two And that is Harkin
Starting point is 00:09:46 Okay, my fact this week is that there is a village in Russia Where every single person knows how to tightrope walk Is it just a coincidence? Like in a pub one day Someone was like, do you know, I can do this really weird thing? And then everyone's like, oh my God, me too. Yeah, like they can all wiggle their ears or something like that. That would be good.
Starting point is 00:10:05 No, this is a village called Sovkla Aden, and it's in Dagestan, so it's in the south of Russia. And the population is about 400, and everyone knows how to tightrope walk. And the most popular story of how it happened is that 100 years ago, the young men had to go to another village to find girls. And to do that, they had to go up and down a mountain. And instead of doing that, they would set up a tightrope walk, and then they would do it. But the most common, most likely explanation is it was just bad weather in the area and they needed a fix to get over rivers and things like that. And so they did it when the footbridges would get washed away, they would use tightrobes. But what's interesting is so you say 400 people there.
Starting point is 00:10:46 That is, I read the article as well and it's quite depressing because this guy's saying, we used to have 7,000 people here. Actually, only the first 2,000 died. No, but yeah, he's really upset because this was the place for typewreck walking, and now it's endangered. It's an endangered typerope walking village, and he's saying we have no funding. So if anyone wants to start a Kickstarter for them, they need money. Actually, all the villages in Russia are pretty much empty these days. Everyone's gone to the cities, and I think there's like, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:11:22 hundreds of thousands of villages with fewer than a dozen people in them now in Russia. I have a fact on that. Oh, do you? Which is that there are 23 villages in the crowd. I'm aask region with only men in them. Really? Yeah. And the article about this from a Russian website says that several have only one resident,
Starting point is 00:11:37 which I don't know if that makes it a village or not. I think that's almost been demoted to a hamlet by that point. It's just a house, isn't it? It's just a headset. But weirdly, in all of those villages, top gear, absolutely perfect. But to the opposite of that, you said that's a town full of men, right? There's a town of... only ladies in in Brazil
Starting point is 00:12:02 Côneau de Caudill I can't say it properly but it's about 600 women in this town and the reason it's only women is that the men go away during the weekdays and they work and they only come back on the weekends and as soon as you hit 18 as a boy and you become a man you have to leave the village
Starting point is 00:12:18 so it's an entire town full of ladies and it's been advertised as like singles ladies looking at it. So he's suggesting we maybe build a tightrope between Andy's all-male village and you're all-female village. Yeah I mean it's a that's a long walk. It's a long walk. You've really earned your woman at the end of it. I mean, it's a long way, but is it a straight line?
Starting point is 00:12:41 This is just a village fact. There's this little village in Kazakhstan called Kalachi, where this sickness has just like afflicted the, a quarter of the population, which is a sleeping sickness, where people keep inexplicably falling into brief comers. So people keep on just falling asleep. They have complete memory loss. they're left with kind of dizziness, nausea, headaches, and no one knows what it is. They just keep passing out. It's near a uranium plant, so people are going on to about that. But apart from that, it's a completely normal little village.
Starting point is 00:13:12 No explanation for these very sleepy people and these very bright yellow sheep. I was looking into, because I love that idea of everyone in the village does a thing. So I started looking into villages and towns where everyone does that. one thing. And I found a couple. So one is that this is quite nice. There's a town in Spain, which is there's only 318 residents, and they've all been scanned as 3D models. Every resident is a 3D toy now. And you can see you can go and look at the town of all the people living there just as 3D models, which is quite cool. Yeah. There's a really good one, which was in Jakarta, an entire town. Basically, the police took and decided to burn 3.3 tons of marijuana.
Starting point is 00:13:59 because they were like, we're taking this away. They got an entire village hot. The wind blew the smoke. And so this entire village were just off their heads for ages. Have you seen that video of the BBC reporter? Try to do the link next to the pile of burning heroin. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:14:17 Wow. I mean, Google it now. Pause this podcast and go look at it. He literally cannot hold it together past the first four words. It's absolutely exceptional reporting. Some stuff on tightropes? Yes.
Starting point is 00:14:33 Yeah. Why not? In 5th century France, the tightrope walkers were forbidden to go near churches. Was it in case they set up a line? Because some people did go from Notre Dame's to towers between them. That was a big thing in France. No, it was mostly like the church used to look down on actors as well. You can't look down on a tightrope walker.
Starting point is 00:14:55 That's true. Or they're doing it wrong. But the thing is That all the fares were held near churches And the fairs were the places Where the tight roll walkers did their things So basically it was a ban on all of tightrope walking In the 5th century France
Starting point is 00:15:11 Didn't work, did it? We've still got it today. Yes. Does anyone else find it really surprising That it was only, was it last year Or the year before That someone walked on a tightrope Across the Grand Canyon?
Starting point is 00:15:22 Seems like the most obvious thing you do Oh, yeah. And then Nick Hualender was the first But it's so obvious It's so obvious. I like the fact that they had to put a 10 second delay that was shown live, except that there was a 10 second delay on the footage, wasn't there? In case he fell?
Starting point is 00:15:38 Just in case something happened. So I don't know what they would have done. I guess they just black out the program and go, well, that's done. On to the next. So Nick Wellender is a very, very famous tight-rope walker, but you know he's from a family dating back generations of tight-rope walkers. So the Wellender's, Carl Wellender was one of the most famous, but he was going in the 1920s,
Starting point is 00:15:59 and he set up the, one of the hardest things to do is a human pyramid on a tight rope, unsurprisingly. So you have two walkers on a rope, one in front of the other. They have a bar on their shoulders, and you have a third walker on the bar. Wow.
Starting point is 00:16:14 It gets even better. The Wellender family did a seven-person pyramid, right? So you have four men at the bottom going in pairs. There are two lines. So you've got a square. They both have a, a bar on each of them, and there are two men on the next level up on each of those bars.
Starting point is 00:16:32 Those two men have a chair between them on their shoulders, and a woman is standing on the chair or sitting on the chair. And they did this for decades without incident. And then in 1962, they did have an accident, and two of them fell and died, and one of them fell and was paralyzed. And the other four managed to cling on to the road. Of the Walanders? Yeah, of the Walanders.
Starting point is 00:16:49 They lost two Wollanders. Yeah, they were a family. What I like about Tyros is how basically they just make it as difficult, possible like doing this human pyramid or or going over a lion cage it's just like it's not enough that you're walking from one place to another you have to do something done on the lions oh yeah uh blondin who was one of the great tightrope walkers ever he once did a tightrope walk with a lion cub in a wheelbarrow so he combined the lion and the tightrope wow but that was very dangerous and he very nearly fell and died because it was lion cubs are not light yeah and neither are wheelbarrows and it obviously
Starting point is 00:17:26 the line, you know, will bend a bit, it'll dip in the middle because you've got a wheelbarrow and a line. What you want to have is a wheelbarrow with two giraffes in it, with a neck sticking out either way. Okay, I found someone called William Leonard Hunt, who performed under the stage name the Great Farini.
Starting point is 00:17:45 One of his best ever tricks, this was in 1860, was crossing Niagara Falls with a washing machine tied to his back. And he's, and I don't know what that would have looked like because in 1860 they didn't have modern washing It wouldn't have been a massive one like we have, but in the middle he stopped to wash several handkerchiefs. And then when he got to the other side, he gave them to, you know, his admirers. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:18:05 It feels like washing machines would have been bigger in those days. Like those massive ones which you open at the top and you shove all your stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Surely it was just like a bucket with a mangled tree. Exactly. I think your idea of what these washing machines are. It's like, they're only one step up from the flintstones.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Yeah. Terradactyl with a mouth of soap. Is this the same guy, or is it Blondon who did the typewark walk over Niagara where... That was Blondin. Is it Blondon? So he went over with his son strapped to him at one point. And his manager, giving his manager a piggyback. Piggy back?
Starting point is 00:18:44 Yeah. I read a report where they said that they didn't like the safety side of that because someone else could get hurt. So could he instead cook an omelet when he goes out next time? He did. Yeah. But how did he cook it? How do you make that suggestion? He had a little stove.
Starting point is 00:18:59 He had a miniature stove and he had a pan. And to be fair, he didn't just fry an egg or something. He made an omelette. Right. Yeah. Chops a few chives, yeah. All needs to cummin had to go back. Yeah, so it's only a little stove.
Starting point is 00:19:16 It's not like an aga. He was carrying on his back. No, he took a full kitchen on his back. So Nick Willenders says he refuses to use a safety. net says he never has done. He's had to once because he had to buy laws when he was going over Niagara Falls, I think. And he says, my great-grandfather taught that safety nets
Starting point is 00:19:33 offer a false sense of security, so I never used them. I mean, how false is that sense of security? Are they just an illusion safety net? I met Philip Petit once years ago. Philip Petit was the guy who walked the Twin Towers. If you've seen
Starting point is 00:19:49 Man on Wire, that documentary. And we, so he came, the QI used to have a building in Oxford and he came and did a book signing there. How did he arrive? You know what? He starts all of his speeches on the top of a ladder. So he came in and he was like, do you have a ladder? And so we got him a ladder.
Starting point is 00:20:06 And so as everyone came in, he was just perched at the top of the ladder. And someone asked him in the Q&A section, at any point when you were walking between the Twin Towers, did you think, oh my God, I'm going to fall? And he got furious at them. He said he doesn't acknowledge the idea of falling. He said that just, you would never do it if that was even thought to be a possibility. And then he said, and if I did fall, I would fly. I thought, hmm.
Starting point is 00:20:30 There's a thin line between confidence and mental instability. Time for fact number three, and that is Chesinski. My fight is that in Britain, pedestrians step to the right to avoid each other, and in Japan, they step to the left. And nobody knows why. It's just weird. So it's totally, yeah. So it actually is true.
Starting point is 00:20:55 Every country has pedestrians tend to have a strong preference for stepping to a certain side when they're about to walk into another pedestrian. But it bears no relation to like what side of the road they drive on or what side of the, like, what side of the road you're supposed to walk on. Yeah. Because in Japan they drive on the left as well. Yeah. So you would expect it to be the same way. Yeah. Yeah. So you can get really obsessed as I did with pedestrian behavior.
Starting point is 00:21:17 And I really do recommend reading the thousands of reports that have been put out mainly by the two same guys. So for instance, we act, react differently if we are going to collide with someone on a staircase. So when we're walking along a pavement, we tend to only put into action avoidance behavior when we're about a meter away. But if people meet on a staircase, they do it right at the start of the staircase. So you see someone right at the bottom and you decide there, okay, I'm going to step to the right now to avoid them. So Richard Wiseman did a study about how quickly people walk in cities. And he asked people to send him data and whatever. and he found that the fastest city in the world for people walking 20 yards is Singapore,
Starting point is 00:21:56 and they on average walk at 10 seconds, 10.55 seconds to walk 20 yards. Copenhagen was the next. London was about halfway down. It takes us about 12.17 seconds to walk 20 yards. And everyone's between about 10 and 17 seconds, apart from one place called Blantaya in Malawi. I've been there. Have you?
Starting point is 00:22:16 Yeah. No. They walk at 31.6 seconds per 20. yards, which is more than twice as much as anyone else. Oh my God. They're just like really, like very pedestrian. Did you notice this when you were there? I did not notice that. So I went on Wikipedia to see what reason there could be behind that.
Starting point is 00:22:33 And it says the most conspicuous and dominant physical feature of the city is in numerous hills. So it could be that. Oh, yeah. They're walking up. Surely that would average out. There must be walking back down to be a little bit. Just with things going right and left, I read a thing, and actually, Rufus, you might know more about this because you've done a lot of stage acting.
Starting point is 00:22:55 Villains exit stage left. Yes. Is that a true thing? It's in pantomime. Okay. More than in sort of all theatre. But yeah, obviously the Latin for left was sinister. And so that's where we get things on the left being sinister.
Starting point is 00:23:12 Oh, really? Yeah, all pantomime villains exit stage left and the goodies exit stage right or enter an exit stage left and right. So is that how you spot the left. the villain in a pantomime because I've never been quite short. They're very subtle about that. Yeah, it's a fine point. Those are the clues you're looking for. You're always leaving phantomimes going, I liked it.
Starting point is 00:23:30 I thought it was very powerful and ambiguous. But yeah, so I read that even Herge with Tintin, he used to do that as well. If you would face a certain way, so you would face right if you were progressing as a character and then you would face left if things were suddenly going against you.
Starting point is 00:23:48 Yeah. Didn't we do something about cowboy films. Yeah, we did. The good guys go from left to right, I think, on the screen. This is in really early cowboy films, which is mostly, you know, it's... And also usually the bad guy dresses in black, I think,
Starting point is 00:24:03 and the good guy dressed in white. Yeah, yeah. That would have been a technical thing, wouldn't it? And like a cultural thing. Yeah. That in black and white... Have you seen the old makeup that film actresses used to wear
Starting point is 00:24:16 in black and white movie? Oh, I think... So they had, like, green paint on their faces and then the lips were like bright blue because the way it registered on old chromatic black and white film was that
Starting point is 00:24:29 it looked most likely to be like red and and things were registered in that way that must have been so hard to act is that why they're all a little bit less believable in black and white films because Lawrence Olivier is looking at some fluorescent face
Starting point is 00:24:44 clown and saying darling I love you very much you look ridiculous I read horses apparently are better at running if you have a racehorse. But the humans. Yeah, they're just, it depends over the distance. Yeah. There is an annual manvy horse race. In Wales, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:25:03 Yeah. And we kill it over the 10-yard dash. But... We kill it. Well, then obviously we win. The way that that works is it's over. It's round lots of tight corners, isn't it? And so the horse struggles to get round those.
Starting point is 00:25:17 And there are bits of up and down. And it's done in a way that makes it almost equal between human and horse, which is quite exciting. So who, has it always been a human winning? No, the human won it for the first time quite about four or five years ago, did they? I think it's generally the horse that wins. Right. But yeah, apparently if they go one way around the racetrack, it's an advantage to most horses. If you suddenly sent them around the other way.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Oh, really? Because, yeah, there's something about being right-footed. Most horses are right-footed. So you learn, like, anyone knows if you've ridden, that when you go into a canter, you have to get it on its right leg. So you have to, when you're trotting and you go into a canter, you have to sit down at the right moment. Otherwise, you're on its wrong leg because they're right, most of the right footed. And you can tell it feels wrong. If you sit down at the wrong time, you can feel that it's really awkward.
Starting point is 00:25:59 Very weirdly, looking into pedestrian behavior for this, I found an article on the Chicago Tribune website, which said, In Britain, simply stepping off a curb means pedestrians walk a tight rope. Not very interesting, but true. Good link. Oh, well, if we're doing... Because of pavement style, behaviour. behaviour, do you know why French actors say meld to each other?
Starting point is 00:26:22 No. Ah, so we say break a leg. Do you know what break a leg means? No. So the levers that lift the front curtain up and down, they're actually called legs. And so if you've got lots and lots of standing ovations and the curtain had to come up and down. You would break a leg. So when actors wish each other break a leg, that's where that comes from.
Starting point is 00:26:43 But French actors say meld, because if you're always... run was going to be incredibly long, if the play was going to be a huge success, then you would have lots of people coming into the theatre. And before there were pavements, the reason that we have pavements was that the horses would go in the road, and that's where all the poo would go, and the pedestrians could walk on the pavement, and that was a raised thing to absent yourself from the poo. But before that, you were just trampling in poo all the time. So if your play ran for a long time, people would be treading poo into the theatre. So, for French actors wished each other's mead, meaning drag a lot of, you know, I hope that your
Starting point is 00:27:22 theatre is full of shit. It's so great. Who came up with, like, they must have had an actor's meeting the last of about three hours going, well, the processes, the horses are outside for ages and so they poo and then well, so. Probably, I doubt there was a meeting. There wasn't a meeting. Someone in Cambridge said, okay, there's news from England.
Starting point is 00:27:39 They've got this new breaker leg thing. We need to get onto this now. So they did, they did experiments on, again, on pedestrians and seeing what distracts people. And they gathered up, uh, people test walkers, as they called them, into a virtual street crossing simulator, which I really like. And they pumped in the noise of traffic, uh, through speakers. And they measured how well these people crossed a virtual road while having a phone conversation. Right. Because obviously, you don't want to test it in the real world with actual traffic. So fair enough. But it was a real phone call. So they were speaking to one of the scientists. And
Starting point is 00:28:13 they did look both ways when they were crossing this virtual road. But, um, they still, were walking much more dangerously. So they had less time to spare. They missed more chances to cross safely, and they had more close calls. And I love this. Some even got hit by a virtual car, the researchers report.
Starting point is 00:28:30 Which is kind of the best car to be hit by, but still. And basically, they compared it with doing other things. So listening to music seems to distract people much less, maybe because it's a song you know, I don't know, or maybe just because you don't know what the other person will say. But also, it's as distracting to talk on your mobile phone as it is to do complicated. mental arithmetic while you're crossing the road.
Starting point is 00:28:51 Right. They have the same effect on your cognitive ability. But this is why they banned being on the phone while you're driving, like holding the phone to your ear, things like that, wasn't it? Because largely it seems that your brain processes language. Like the way in which your brain processes language interferes with your other processes in a way that listening to music doesn't. Which is why, if you're studying,
Starting point is 00:29:18 but you want music on at the same time. You should listen to classical music or dance music without a vocal. Yes. Because the moment there's a vocal, your brain processes get confused. In Chongqing, in China, they've now got a cell phone lane on pavements so that people who are using their phones go in that lane, so I guess at least they just bump into each other. Wow.
Starting point is 00:29:39 Some theatres in Broadway now have a cell phone section of seating so that you can tweet and look at Facebook while the show is on. That makes so much sense. No, it doesn't. No, it does not. No, I mean, it's abhorrent if you're a sort of pure theatre. If you're on stage, yeah. But actually, there are some suggestions that producers are quite keen on this
Starting point is 00:30:01 because people do spend time, it turns out, tweeting about how much they're enjoying the show and its bars and things like that. So they've got roped off sort of sections that, you know. I'm anti-this. I'm very anti-as-as-well. I don't want to sound archaic and with Andy on this, but that is disgusting. The last thing anybody would want to be with Andy on it. Okay, time for our final fact of the show, and that is Andrew Hunter Murray. My fact is that half of all California condors were raised by glove puppets.
Starting point is 00:30:38 So condors are massive birds, and it's sort of 10 feet wingspans, and they evolved, you know, millions and millions of years ago. They're fantastic things. they can fly 100 miles a day looking for food, but they were not very well suited to the 20th century. They were shot a lot, and they would fly into power lines and things like that. And in 1987, there were just 22 left of these birds. And they were all taken into captivity. They were rounded up because they just weren't safe.
Starting point is 00:31:06 It couldn't be guaranteed that they'd survive. And they were bred in zoos, and they were bred by puppets. So... Why? Well, the good thing about condors is that when they lay an egg, if you take the egg away, they assume that the egg has smashed on the ground or that it's not survived somehow, and so they will be able to lay another one within that breeding season. And if you do that again, they'll lay another one the next breeding season quite quickly.
Starting point is 00:31:29 So basically you can quadruple the number of eggs that they lay. But really piss them off in the process. It will annoy them, but you then have three eggs that humans can raise, and you'll have the fourth egg which the condor parents can raise. So that's what they did. They took the three eggs, they incubated them, and when they were born, they made leather glove puppets and you have to look them up the pictures are incredible. I'll put them on my Twitter and it's really weird seeing them interacting with also puppet-looking baby condos,
Starting point is 00:31:58 which they look really rubbery and strange or not. So yeah. And they drowned out the noise by playing the sounds of rivers and streams and they poke the puppets through a one-way screen. So you couldn't see, you know, the human behind. Yeah. One of the people who cares for them, this guy, I think, a quote from a guy called, Ron Webb, who's a senior condor keeper, explain that he raises
Starting point is 00:32:20 these baby condors with the help of a condor hand puppet, and then he goes on to say, the puppet is like a fancy glove. Whoever needs an explanation what a hand puppet is. And that's not a good one. It is a fancy glove, isn't it? It's not like I go to a ball
Starting point is 00:32:39 wearing this. Why, Contessa, your sooty is looking especially delightful this evening. Hey, speaking of Suti, I looked into Suti because I was just going into glove puppet territory. Do you know how Suti came about? Does anyone know the origin story? It was bitten by a radioacted. Wasn't it a gift?
Starting point is 00:32:59 No. So a reality show on the BBC called BBC's Talent Night. Effectively, Britain's Got Talent back in the 1950s. And on that show stood a man with a Souti puppet. And he just, I don't even know what he did. Wouldn't that have been... Harry Corby Harry Corbett.
Starting point is 00:33:16 So Harry Corbett went on. He had Souty, and he made it through the heats. Yeah, made it to the final. Suti is a reality TV star. He's effectively the Susan Boyle of his time. He's a reaction. And that was his actor with Suti singing, I dreamed a dream. Yeah, but into Harry Corbett's here.
Starting point is 00:33:33 I've met Matthew Corbett. Matthew Corbett's son worked on QI. Yeah. Did he? Ben Corbett worked on QI. Sound technician. Yeah. Ironically, given his family trade.
Starting point is 00:33:44 He was involved in helping to amplify people. Well, that's arguably what their parents is. What's that you say, Sotty? Oh, yeah. Yeah. So it's just carrying, oh, that's, I like that. And he listens, by the way. Oh, hello, Ben.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Hey, Ben. No way. That's so cool. So, condors, the thing is, all the condos, which have been raised by these puppets, they started behaving really weirdly. So instead of staying in the wild and doing condor stuff, They started posing for photos with, I mean, not posing, but you know, they started compliantly being in photos with people.
Starting point is 00:34:19 They started attacking hikers' shoelaces. And they also started experimenting with group sex, which is not normal condor behavior, I believe. Hey, who are you to judge? Oh, yeah. Normal, sure. Geez, get over yourself, granddad. So the theory was because they hadn't been raised wild by wild birds, that they didn't have proper role models for how to behave like a condor.
Starting point is 00:34:43 But the puppets, the cranes, because they've also done it with cranes, and when they did the puppet rearing with cranes, the puppet reared cranes would often abandon their eggs days before they were due to hatch. But really, really, not long before. So they just didn't have any idea of how to bring up a chick the same way. So to fix the situation, the humans had to start behaving like condors with these glove puppets. So that's when they showed them the screens. they would sort of, this isn't nice,
Starting point is 00:35:13 but they had to sort of hit the child condos a bit, the chicks, when they misbehaved. That must be the weirdest thing, slapping a condor. And being paid, being paid to do that. Because that's not a voluntary job, you know. Can I explain a rabbit hole that I went down, looking at the condors, was that the California condor went extinct in the world in 1987.
Starting point is 00:35:34 So I was like, oh, let's see what else went extinct in 1987. Oh, cool. And that led me to discover that there's this thing called de-extinction. which is the attempt to bring back... Like Jurassic Park, essentially, to bring back extinct species. And this year was the fifth generation of the Quagga. And the Quagga is a specifically patterned zebra,
Starting point is 00:35:58 which had gone extinct. And Quagga became a slang term just to mean all zebras. So the last quagga, that genuine quagga, died in 1883 in a zoo, but nobody realized she was the last of her kind. And then it was realized that it wasn't a specific species as much as a subspecies, so you could selectively breed plain zebras
Starting point is 00:36:22 to have the same markings and elements as a quagga. And they've done that successfully, and now the fifth generation of quagher has been reborn. And then I found a list of likely candidates for de-extinction. So there's the Carolina Parakeet, The passenger pigeon, which apparently was the most common pigeon in America, and was largely just like, if they saw one, they'd shoot it for a laugh. That went.
Starting point is 00:36:50 The woolly mammoth, I think we've all been expecting that for a while now. And the thing that I had no idea even ever existed, when extinct 10,000 years ago, the woolly rhino. Oh, that sounds really cool. Doesn't it? Yeah. Should have far from fish than sheep. Yes.
Starting point is 00:37:08 Just peel a rhino. Yeah. It would have been very hot, though, wouldn't it? Right there. It must have been just hot. Is that what made it extinct? It's just too hot. Yes.
Starting point is 00:37:18 Yeah. What's the use? So one thing about surrogates is for giant pandas, they sometimes use rabbits. So they'll put the, like, the giant panda clone eggs inside a rabbit. So the rabbit could give birth to a panda in theory. Oh, my God. That's going to be one braggie rabbit mum at the school gates, isn't it? And also...
Starting point is 00:37:39 That's my boy. and not at first, because they look, they're tiny and gross at first, aren't they? So it will give birth at first, and it's like a two-millimeter tall lump of skin, and the other rabbits are going to take the pit. So it's like a new version of the ugly duckling. The giant panda. Yeah. Speaking of, it once was a hideous rabbit with ears, all stubby and short,
Starting point is 00:37:59 and all the other bunnies and so many words said, bloody hell, you're eating a lot of bamboo. Oh, my God. Just back to condors very quickly, they don't eat for days because they fly and they obviously go for huge meals. So they'll look for the carcass of a deer or whatever. And when they do eat, sometimes they go overboard on it, eat too much that they can't actually take off again. So that's true. That's how they used to catch them in like South America and stuff.
Starting point is 00:38:29 They would put like a dead horse or something on the ground or a dead animal. And then the condors would come down and they eat so much that they couldn't eat anymore. and then they won't be able to fly because they were so heavy and then you just sort of run after them and run after them and then pull them off and often like they try and fly and they throw up because they were so exhausted and so full. Is that an evolutionary response?
Starting point is 00:38:52 Because the reason that we want to we when we get nervous is supposedly because there's a I think a reptile so the evolution of the brain is that we start off with a very simple brain and then we get a bit of the brain that becomes a reptilian, and then it becomes mammalian and it's basically layer on layer
Starting point is 00:39:12 and the reason we want to wee when we get nervous is you want to make yourself as light as possible so that when you start to run away you can get further. I would think that would probably be the same of the condo wouldn't it? You throw up because you want to then you'd be lighter and then you could arguably
Starting point is 00:39:28 get away. Or there's some animals that throw up so that something chasing them will eat whatever they've thrown up instead of eating then. A diversionary vomit. Yeah. So when eating corpses, condors always start with her eyes and tongue, which is their favorite part. You don't know that. It might be their least favorite part and they're just getting it over with. That's so true. You eat your eyes and tongue, young lady.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Oh, God, I just think the heart. No. There is a Reddit thread. Do you prefer sex with or without a condor, which is a typo? It's the best typo. Did anyone reply? Lots of people have replied. Yeah, I bet. With?
Starting point is 00:40:13 Love it. Okay, that's it. That's all of our facts. Thank you so much for listening. If you'd like to get in contact with any of us about the things that we've said over the course of this podcast, we can all be got on Twitter. I'm on at Schreiberland. James. At Egg shaped.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Andy. At Andrew Hunter M. Rufus. I'm at Al Jizinski. I've just always wanted her to say that. I've listened to every episode. It's like, no, I've got email. It's like, come on, join Twitter.
Starting point is 00:40:42 Just for the neatness of this wrapper. Yeah. Not allowed. It's in my contract. It's a thing now. In which case you could probably find me out for a second. Yep. And Chazzynski.
Starting point is 00:40:54 You can email podcast at QI.com. And we'll be back again next week with another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish. See you then. Goodbye.

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