No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As Viking Snooker
Episode Date: September 14, 2023Dan, James, Andrew and Rachel Parris discuss parachutes, puppets and precise presidents. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for... ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hi everybody, Andy here. Just a couple of very quick announcements before this week's show starts.
The first is to say who our special guest is.
If you've been listening to Fish for a little while, you may have heard her before because she is none other than the brilliant Rachel Paris.
Rachel has done so many things.
She's a member of ostentatious, a great improvised comedy show.
She's hosted The Mash Report.
She's a musical comedian.
She's toured the country with her brilliant shows.
She's written a book called Advice from Strangers.
There's nothing she can't do.
And as you're about to hear, she was great on the show.
this show too, actually always is. The other thing to say is that we have just done a live
show at the London Podcast Festival. Now, the show is in the past. There's no way of getting there
by conventional means, but if you go to no such thing as a fish.com slash live, you will be able
to get a streaming ticket and watch the show in all its glory. And there is one extremely good
reason to do that, which is that our special guest for this show is none other than Anna.
Anna Tijinsky's back. She's come back for this show, as you will hear.
She was great, and you can buy the streaming tickets and see Anna's glorious fish return for the next week.
Tickets are available to buy until the 21st of September.
So treat yourself to that.
Enjoy it.
No Such Things of Fish.com slash live.
That's it from me.
On with the show.
Welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast this week coming to you live from the Soho Theater.
My name is Dan Schreiber.
I am sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray, and Rachel.
Rachel Paris, and once again we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, and that is Rachel.
My fact is, Viking men dyed their hair blonde, wore makeup, and had grooming kits.
Oh.
You don't imagine them jumping off the longboat with grooming kits.
No.
Also, I thought they were blonde already.
No, some of them were blonde
But there was, I think now we know
There was a much greater prevalence
of dark hair than was previously
thought they weren't universally blonde
So what they did was they used lie
To bleach their hair blonde
What we can't know is their intentions
It also was useful for cleaning it
And stopping lice
So what we don't know is was it only for cleaning
Or was it partly for vanity as well
But the idea of it being for vanity
seems believable
because we do know they were quite vain in other areas.
The English certainly thought that they were very vain, the Vikings.
There was a monk called John of Wallingford,
who said that the Danes cheated by washing.
They made themselves too acceptable to English women
by their elegant manners and their care of their person.
That is cheating.
That is cheating.
How could we possibly compete with people who wash?
Well, that's the way it seems to be,
because there was a guy called Ahmed Ibrahim, Ibrahim.
Fadlan who was writing about the Vikings,
he was from Baghdad,
but he was probably in somewhere like Constantinople or whatever.
And he wrote that every day,
they wash with the dirtiest and filthiest water there could be.
They blow their nose, they spit,
they do every filthy thing imaginable in that water,
and then they wash with it.
So it seemed like they were in this kind of in-between
of the people in the Middle East thought they were disgusting,
but the people in Britain thought they were absolutely...
That Arabic writer was one of the sources
that he noted that they bleached their beards to a saffron yellow.
Oh.
So he really had his eye on them, didn't he?
He had a keen eye on them.
I'll tell you what they didn't have.
Maybe.
Tables.
What?
Yeah, exactly.
Not such a catch now, are they?
Idiots.
I think that men with tables are cheating.
They must have had tables.
What?
What did they play snooker on?
Well, yeah.
There's a guy called Neil Price
who wrote a book
called Children of Ash and Elm,
all about the Viking mind.
And he's also been a historical consultant
on a few Viking movies.
He was asked,
we needed to have a banquet,
and he said,
I don't know if there were tables
because there's no record.
There's no Viking tables left over.
So they just shot it cleverly
to completely ignore
the question of whether tables
existed in the Viking world or not.
That's so weird.
What did they eat off?
We don't know.
The flaw?
This is an eminent Viking scholar,
Neil Price.
He's not willing to say.
You know, those little trays that have a padded cushion underneath.
My wife uses them.
On their knees?
Yeah, on the knees.
I actually don't know what those are.
What are those?
It's kind of like if you're watching TV and you bring your dinner in,
it's a sort of like little cushion and it's got a table on top of it.
It makes so much sense that Andy doesn't even know what we're talking about.
A tray?
On your lap?
Look, I know what a tray is.
I know what a lap is.
I just saying, I don't...
Is your wife 95 years old, then?
What is this?
There was a Viking called Lot the Unwashed.
And that's more.
evidence that perhaps they were very
clean because why would they call him
unwashed if it wasn't for the fact
that everyone else washed normally.
He was described as a wise man
and much given to manslaughterers.
Right. Wow.
There's also a theory that
they loved orange cats.
All right. Yeah. So they loved cats anyway
which is quite an amazing thing. Every
sort of expedition,
they go on expeditions, every pillage
that they went on, they would
bring cats with them and they
They brought cats for a number of reasons.
A, they loved them. B, for any vermin that was on the boats,
they could get rid of the mice and stop spreading disease.
But the cats would escape once they get to these lands that they were going to.
So there's been studies where they've looked at the DNA of a bunch of cats from that period
that they found the bones of and so on.
And they've discovered that it was basically just the Vikings just dropping cats off in all these places.
Were they orange cats?
No.
Or had they dyed the cats with Lyme?
They were immaculately brushed.
Their hair, yeah.
On terms of how clean they were, or how dirty they were,
we thought we knew for ages how clean they were
because there are churches in England
which have Viking skin nailed to the doors.
What?
Macabre.
At least four of them, they're called Dane skins.
And I think the idea is that the church has made themselves
look really hard by saying, you know, the Vikings came here
and this is what they're left behind.
This is, you know, we saw them off.
Anyway, they've tested them, and they're almost all cow or donkey.
They're just...
I really?
It's weird that because the thing we were talking before about how they had brown hair, a lot of them,
we know that through DNA tests.
And they've also checked it with modern day people.
They found that in the UK, each of us in the UK, on average, has got about 6% Viking DNA.
But also that when they've looked at people who were buried in Scotland,
they found a lot of people who were buried as if they're Vikings,
but didn't have any Viking DNA in them.
And so they just kind of like self-identified.
as Vikings.
And they just decided, well,
even though I don't have any Viking heritage,
I'm just going to be a Viking now,
and they went with all of the culture
and all of the everything.
Wow.
That's pretty cool, isn't it?
Yeah, that is cool.
Like, cosplay?
Cosplay.
Very, very early cosplay.
When the people are still there.
I'm going to say,
uncontroversially,
that self-identifying is not the same as cosplay,
but we'll...
Oh, shit.
Yeah, thanks, Andy.
Well, we've had nine years of fun.
I didn't mean it like that.
Can I tell you more about the grooming?
Oh yeah, yeah.
Oh, come on.
Oh, God.
The facial grooming.
So they had quite a lot of different beauty tools.
And this was men and women alike,
including razors and tweezers, and as we've mentioned, combs.
But they also had ear spoons, which I like.
No.
Yeah.
So they knew kind of.
before we did that it's not a good idea
to shove something in your ear and compact it.
So they had little
tiny ear scoops to scoop the wax out.
They had that in Mongolia as well.
Did they?
Yeah, so a buddy of ours, Craig Glenday,
Guinness World Records, editor-in-chief,
he went to Mongolia to meet the tallest man in the world.
He was there to verify him as the tallest man.
And when you go to a house, he said,
went to the house and he said,
before you come in, here's your spoon for your ears,
and you've got to clean your ears before going into the house.
Yeah, it's like, take his shoes.
shoot off, clean your ears. I've got quite a few
ear spoons. Do you? Yeah, yeah. I got one
that lights up. It's kind of cool.
Okay. Hang on.
How do you... How do you
sit? How do you know?
Is it?
It comes out. It just shows at that time.
No, yeah. So,
there was a thing in Japan quite a few years
ago, which was this kind of trend
of, like, young people
would spoon each other's ears.
I've said it before and I said again
what a generation Z up to
this is before then I reckon
it's quite a lot many years ago
and there was like this trend of selling
earspoons in Japan
and I bought some because we were going to talk about it on QI
I just thought it would be kind of a cool thing to have
what are they used for?
It's just right you're getting bits of wax out of your ears right
yeah this is someone else if you light up
you could do it yourself but isn't it
nicer if you just have someone lay their head on your lap and you just kind of spoon out the earlats.
I feel like I've lost the room.
No, no, no.
I think we're all fascinated.
I want to know, like, if you're scared of like, because a lot of people have a phobia
about their ears, do you get to do that fun helicopter thing?
The airplane's going to come around in.
But for the ear?
He's coming in.
Yeah.
Chee-ch-ch-ch-oh.
Oh, no, choo-ch.
I don't know my vehicles at all.
Choo-choo-choo, here comes the helicopter.
Yeah.
Do you want to know where the last Viking attack on UK soil was?
Of course I do.
Well, obviously 10th century.
2021.
20201.
This happened in a Scottish town called Kirk Cudbright,
and it was when a replica longboat for a display
knocked out the power supplies
when it got tangled in an overhead power line.
The local energy network said only one customer had been affected.
And the reenactment group's maritime officer
apologize for the inconvenience and said we are
incredibly sorry for the disruption.
I think that is the last time.
I think I found some more
legit modern Vikings than
cosplay ones, which is
Iceland has an elite police force
and they are known as the Viking squad.
That's their sort of unofficial name.
They're technically the special unit of the
National Police Commissioner. There's only
about 46 of them in
total. But the problem
was not a problem. Rather, there's no
sort of official standard military in
Iceland, so it defaults to them.
So if ever Iceland gets involved in a war,
the Vikings are coming.
Oh, no.
Vikings squad. All 46 will be sent in.
What would you say to me, Andy, if I said,
Ergi, Agar, Rager.
I don't know what I'd say. I mean, I'd saying what I would say,
which is direct with bafflement and mild upset.
That's fair enough.
What is it? Is it like a Viking question?
It's more like a Viking insult, actually.
Oh, classic James.
Turned up, tried to do the good research,
and I'm just getting insults.
What is it?
It's calling someone a coward
in various different ways,
but the interesting thing is
these swear words were so derogatory
that if someone called them to you,
according to Icelandic law, at least,
you're allowed to kill them
without paying any compensation.
Oh.
Just from any of these insulting words.
Those, was it three?
You wrote out.
Ergi, Agar and Rager.
You're just compounding the offence.
Got to do it twice now.
I've got a quiz question for you guys.
Oh, yeah.
Okay, so they was once a Viking called Sigurd the Mighty.
And he was killed by something that was attached to the side of him as he was riding on a horse.
Okay, so he has a sword there, and the horse flips him up, and the sword stabs him in the leg and severs an artery.
I'll go with not a sword, but a cheese knife.
Ah.
It was a posh Viking.
Yeah.
He was on his way to a tasting.
is very excited about it
I feel like it's not going to be
sordy because that seems too obvious
so
um
boots
boots yeah no
so the answer is
it was the decapitated head
of male bretter
who was a sworn enemy of Sigurd
who he had killed
taken his head off his body
strapped it to the saddle
of his of his horse
and as he was riding
the tooth of his enemy scratched his leg
and it got infected and it killed him.
This is the rumor.
I'm not sure if it's 1,200 years old
whether it's a rumor anymore
as a rumor is kind of one level up from gossip.
And I wouldn't say this is gossip.
You know, this is kind of...
You hear what happened to Sigger the Mighty.
Oh my God.
I thought that was hot goss.
Dan just heard this like from his neighbor
who heard it from a friend.
I think we just start presenting
all of our facts as rumors and hot goss.
It is time for fact number two, and that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the fourth president of the United States
once sent the third president of the United States a letter,
giving the precise measurement between a weasel's anus and its vulva.
That actually is hot gossip.
That's exciting, sexy gossip.
That's, that's Heat magazine Circle of Shame.
It would be better if they called it the one.
Weasels Vover rather than the circle of shame.
That's a better name for it.
So what's going, what's going to do?
Well, just what I said, that's what happened, for sure.
But this was basically, we're talking Thomas Jefferson, your third president.
And he was in an argument with a French nobleman called Count George Louis Leclerc Buffon.
Buffon had never been to America, but he had a theory that America had just come out of the ocean
and it hadn't dried out yet
and so it meant that
all the animals and the plants
were really struggling to live there
and they were all like really small and weedy
now he told that to Jefferson
and Jefferson was not very happy about it
and so he decided that he was going to prove him wrong
and so he sent his friends
one of whom was James Madison
who was the fourth president
to measure as many animals as they could
and so what they did is they went out
find a load of American animals
including a weasel
and sent back all of the first.
the precise measurements of all these animals,
and one of them was the distance,
which I explained earlier.
Yeah, and he was,
he was so pissed off that this guy had said this,
because the insinuation was if any European animals went over there,
they would sort of regress once they were there
and just sort of shrivel and get smaller as the generations.
But the implication was also that American people would be like that as well,
so that American people would be much more small and insipid than Europeans.
And why?
Because it was damp.
Because it was, because it was,
Because it was damp, because it was...
I'm going to say as well, someone from the north.
Just because it's damp.
Buffant, who was a brilliant guy,
I'd hope we talk about him in a bit.
He was an amazing guy.
But he claimed that anywhere in North America,
if you dug down by two feet,
the ground would be frozen.
He was incorrect about this.
Hugely incorrect about it.
But it basically was this theory
which they referred to as New World Degeneracy.
Kind of the idea was
lots of old European countries,
they're more aristocratically run,
America was,
like to think of itself as being founded
on more egalitarian lines
or more democratic lines
and not needing a nobility class.
And so they wanted to find
scientific underpinning for that,
that America was a kind of...
Did they want to kind of cast aspersions on it
so that people weren't attracted to going there?
This guy was just a bit of a curious cookie, right?
He sort of had lots of theories.
He had lots of theories about the age of the earth.
He just was building up these theories.
And it's just so great that Jefferson was so pissed off.
And there was a lot going on at this time.
And he was like, I need measurements of animals.
And all these guys who are about to change America.
Suddenly out there measuring weasels, anuses to vulvas.
And the report came back.
And he presented it to Buffon.
And he said, look at it.
Our bears are 410 pounds.
Yours are 153 here in Europe.
We've got 12-pound otters.
Your otters are terrible compared to our otters.
All this sort of stuff.
And he was like, and don't get me started on the moose.
Our moose are massive.
and he's like, Bufan was like, you can't have massive moose over there, surely not.
He's like, mate, it's huge.
Our moose are so big, your reindeer's walk under them.
That's how big they are.
And he didn't believe him.
So then Jefferson writes back to the guys again and says, send me a fucking moose.
And they have to go out and find a moose and send it.
And they do.
They did.
Yeah.
And it was rubbish when it turned up.
Yeah.
Because it had been taken months to find it, dry it, skin it, debone it, whatever you do with
the moose.
You know, you had to...
I have a lot of questions about how they measure.
the animals, did they
anesthetise them?
And if so, did they have anaesthetic?
I am afraid they might have not always been alivey animals
by the time they were, yeah.
Especially the weasels.
I'm like, how did they hold them nicely and safely
while they measured from their anus to their vulva?
And a weasel as well, which will be quite...
Quite fidgety.
That, I have to say, you've just brought up
a great time travel destination point.
Imagine going back in history,
landing and watch Madison measuring the anus to Volvo of a weasel.
The other thing is Madison was famously very slight, wasn't he?
Oh yeah.
He's really, really the smallest president there was.
Are you about to speculate on the distance but from the anus?
Oh, wow.
Is that where you're going?
I wasn't going to go there.
Oh, right, my mistake.
He could overpower a weasel.
He was a short guy, but he was...
And he could walk underneath a moose.
Interesting.
What a guy.
But it would have been funnier to see him wrestling with a weasel than A.
Abe Lincoln, for instance, who's a big man, I would say.
That's true.
James Madison was 5 foot 4
and he weighed just under
£100. It's about the same as
Milakunis when she was in Black Swan
if that helps. It does help.
Small. Small.
Yeah. Small guy. Was he maybe the
shortest president? He was the shortest. By quite a bit
by a few inches. Yeah. Although he sounds like a great guy too.
Oh yeah. I mean all these people sound like really interesting guys.
Yeah. May I tell you something
more about Jefferson's letters?
Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Oh yeah.
So in 1787, the same Thomas Jefferson,
wrote a letter to Peter Carr, his nephew,
but he said, if you don't get married, do have affairs with women.
Oh no, oh my God, sorry, I'm getting my facts mixed up. Hang on.
No, can I erase that on the tape?
Who's doing the tape?
The gossip is about to turn to slander.
Right, Benjamin Franklin, not Jefferson.
Benjamin Franklin advised a young man to have sex with older women, not younger women.
Okay.
And he really set out all of the reasons why.
Better conversation.
More...
I hope someone's going to woo for all of these.
More even-tempered.
Yeah.
Rather darkly, no risk of children accidentally.
More sexually experienced.
Wee.
You'll love this.
If there's any older woman in the crowd,
I am loving this one.
He said,
You might as well, because if covering all above with a basket
and regarding only what is below the girdle,
it's impossible of two women to know an old one from a young one.
Wow.
Covering all above with a basket.
His final reason was that eighthly and lastly, they're so grateful.
Wow.
Thanks, Ben Franklin.
Well, you can see why I married my 90-year-old wife now.
Wasn't just for the pillow table.
Wow, that's quite something.
Franklin?
Yeah.
Wow.
Who's got a basket that big?
Like a laundry basket?
I imagined a laundry basket.
Oh, yeah, okay, yeah.
I could probably fit myself, my entire self, in my laundry basket.
Sorry, I'm boastful.
I'd have to tuck, but...
tuck myself up, sorry, just for the tape.
Jesus Christ.
We're all here, Andy.
We can all hear.
what you're saying.
I refuse to believe that.
Can I talk about either Madison or Buffon?
Yes, please.
Talk about anything else.
Okay, let's talk about...
Just a couple more things on Madison
because we were talking about before.
He was a very significant president
who gets kind of a bit overlooked
because he was fourth in the running orders.
So, you know, everyone knows about George Washington
and John House and blah blah.
Madison was president during the War of 1812,
which is when the British invaded
and torched the White House.
And he had to flee at the time.
He was actually in residence at the time.
He was the last person alive who signed the Constitution,
which is quite something for some years.
And he died in 1836.
He was 85 years old at the time.
And it was late June, right?
Late June, he's dying.
He's 85.
And his doctor says, you know what we could do?
We could give you some crazy drugs
that will keep you alive until the 4th of July,
which is Independence Day.
Oh, yeah.
Because at that point, three previous presidents,
had all died on the 4th of July.
And the doctor basically said,
want to make it four?
We can, you know.
Did he not think, why don't you just keep giving me
those crazy drugs for longer than that?
Yes, that is a really good point.
I think they were kind of very last resort.
Stimulus things.
And he, to his great credit, said,
you know what, I'm okay.
When I die, I die.
And he died on the 28th of June.
Yeah.
But his doctor was the same one as took care of Jefferson
who did die on the 4th of July.
So maybe they did that with Jefferson.
Oh, yeah, they might have done it as well.
I tell you the thing, because I think this relates to what you took,
about Jefferson that I accidentally started earlier.
Oh, yeah.
This is about Thomas Jefferson now.
In 1787, he was writing to his nephew.
And I just found it interesting what you're talking about signing the Constitution
and what Americans think of themselves
and that Jefferson was actually pretty much a skeptic,
really interrogated the Bible and believed in constantly questioning what's said in the Bible,
you know, so that you know. And he said, shake off all the fears and servile prejudices under which weak minds are servilely crouched. In other words, saying that his nephew shouldn't be afraid to question the text of the Bible. And he even questioned the existence of God saying question with boldness, even the existence of a God. Because if there be one, he must approve of the homage of reason rather than that of blindfolded fear. So that's quite cool. Yeah. And thirdly, get yourself a really big wicker basket. And I tell you what you're going to do with that.
Bufan did that as well, didn't he?
They were all enlightenment people, weren't they?
And they were questioning what was in the Bible and stuff like that.
Bufant was kind of the Aristotle of his day
in that he hoovered up a huge amount of information
and turned it into, I think it was 44 volumes,
the work he produced, it was absolutely mega.
Here's another experiment he did.
He wanted to see how old the earth was at the time,
quite controversial to say it would be more than several thousand years old.
So he heated up balls of iron
until they were white-hot, right?
And then he saw how long they took to cool down,
and then he just scaled up to the size of the earth
and said, well, that must be how long the earth took to cool down
after it was a ball of molten iron.
It's a good idea.
He assessed 75,000 years, obviously flat wrong,
but privately, he thought it was more like 3 million,
which is also still several orders of magnitude wrong.
He's getting there?
It's getting closer, yeah.
Getting warmer?
Yeah, and he...
And he partly went with the lower number
because he thought it would be more acceptable to the church.
And he had to preface it with an introduction saying,
obviously, this is just a crazy thought experiment I've done.
But he was still doing the work and, you know...
The important thing is that he was questioning these things
that have been passed down knowledge.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It sounds like Pliny.
Like saying Aristotle, but he's, yeah, he's got...
It's an encyclopedia part.
Pliny's the one I meant.
Sorry, Pliny's the one I meant.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just sort of like...
It would...
I reckon if I'd lived in that time,
even with the kind of modern-day intelligence that I have.
Please.
What?
Do I see under that sentence?
Well, I definitely would have been like,
been like, he's right.
Yeah.
Like, I just...
Sorry, just...
Are you saying it, if you were teleported back now,
having done this podcast for nine years...
Yeah.
And we've talked about Pliny
and how wrong he was about everything.
Yeah.
Like, how, like, women have four teeth
and all these mad claims he made.
Yeah.
You'd be like, cool.
Sounds legit.
Yeah.
Okay.
I think you could be plenty.
I would dethrone plenty if I were you,
if you end up in this crazy situation.
I would do it.
He also, like, it's really weird
because he was very obsessed with how American animals
were very, not superior.
You just wanted to make the point
that they were not weak.
So this is Jefferson.
Sorry, back to Jefferson,
that there were bigger animals,
the otter was bigger and so on.
But he did also love European animals,
and he brought dogs back to Virginia,
a shepherd dog.
And interestingly, it's a kind of dog
that historians can't quite agree on
of what it was.
So he was in Paris.
He went out miles into a storm one night
to try and find one
because he'd heard rumors of where one was.
And he eventually found a pregnant one
and he brought it back to Virginia.
And he was so excited
and he was breeding these dogs.
And then something, and again,
it's slightly murky what happened,
just went wrong.
And he got rid of the dogs
and he had all his dogs executed
and he just turned into someone
who hated dogs
for the rest of us.
Executed a strong word.
Well, it's the right word.
I mean, the vet doesn't come in and say,
I'm going to have to execute your dog.
Sorry.
We've assembled the firing squad.
I'm sorry I don't fluff it up for you.
And then what happened is
he had all of them move to a farm
where they had wonderful lives.
Of course we'll blindfold your goldfish, Mrs. Prescott.
Okay, it is time for fact number three,
and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that during the Second World War,
Steinway parachuted pianos into battlefields.
So this was a morale thing where they thought,
we need to make this a bit more cheery, this whole World War II thing.
And why not get a bunch of...
Because music is such a great thing to raise spirits and so on.
And at this point, Steinway was put under restrictions by the government
because they couldn't use lots of medals.
And so during the war effort, they were making coffins
unfortunately, but they were also making
random bits and pieces. And then they hit
upon the idea of making a portable
piano, a tall standing piano,
that they could just parachute
out of planes into battlefield
and 3,000 were dropped off
over the course of the war,
landed safely, and there's so many
stories of these pianos being played by
the troops as they were gathering around and stuff.
It's a lovely idea, but you know
that some assholes banging out Wonderwall
at 3 a.m.
It's always that guy.
Yeah, so they were known as victory verticals
And they weren't just used for parachuting into the battlefield
They were put into submarines as well
Which is a really interesting thing because in order to get them into a submarine
You need the submarine not to be shut first as in entirely in case right?
Yeah, it's like during the building process you have to put it in and so once they're in they're stuck in there and
Going forward just a bit there is a ship which called the USS Thomas S
which is the only submarine rather, which has an actual Steinway, like a proper grand piano style Steinway,
and they can't take it out. It's been, it was in there for 22 years. Imagine being on a submarine
with the guy who's brought his like grade one book. I'm going to be learning actually for the next
nine months. These victory verticals, they just sound so cool. And they're so interesting.
They were painted ODI-I olive drab government issue because they were painted dark green.
And they had no legs because that might not survive the parachute drop.
And the history of Steinway during the war is so mad because Steinway was a German-American company.
Founders were German, still had a factory in Germany, had a factory in New York as well.
And both sides demanded different things of Steinway.
So in Germany, they were suspected of being a Jewish company.
And they had to deny that and, you know, sort of prove that they weren't.
And in America, they was suspected of being Nazis because they were called Steinway.
so they had this terrible time
and they had to hang American flags all over their buildings
to kind of show, look, we are, you know, we're patriotic.
And this is the weird thing.
Both separate halves of the company
made planes, wooden planes
for the war effort, for the side they were in.
Oh, my God.
So the German Steinways were making decoy planes
to be bombed.
The American Steinways were making gliders,
which were real planes, but they were wood, they were very light.
It feels like both sides could have gotten together
and just said, you know what,
Let's just cross this line out of the ledger.
Just like completely disregard this.
Yeah.
And so they made these incredibly powerful gliders
because gliders were an incredibly amazing tool
for getting past enemy defences and landing soldiers.
Right.
So the first one they built, they tested.
They loaded it with a ton of stuff.
And then it got towed behind another plane
because that's how you get a glider somewhere.
It got towed three and a half thousand miles
from Montreal to Britain in one day.
And this was just the test flight to see if the gliders worked.
And it contained vaccines for Russia.
military equipment for the free French, parts for some bomber planes,
and a bunch of bananas for the pilots family in London.
Really?
Very sweet.
Yeah.
They made over a thousand during the war, these gliders, the American Starways.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
Very weird.
These pianos, obviously, because it's a war, you don't have all of the stuff
that you can normally make pianos out of, right?
So they use a lot less metal that you get in a normal piano.
Instead of the copper strings, they use soft iron strings.
Instead of ivory keys that they couldn't get, they use celluloid.
And the thing is with cellulide is if you bang it, it explodes.
Which must have been, you know, if you're really doing a proper,
a ratman and off sort of slam on your keys.
It takes a whole new meaning to a banger on the piano.
Do you know the White House has a Steinway.
Did they?
Yeah.
And it is tiny.
It's about, it's like this big.
What?
But James Madison used to play it, didn't we?
It's a really tiny sineway.
Wait, we should say for the people, you were doing like,
a sort of six inch high.
Yeah, do you know what? I didn't want to look like
a massive idiot. But you know when you
have a scale, and I just can't
remember how to pronounce the scale, but it's one...
Piano scale. No, not the piano scale.
The size scale. So it's one...
One to seven. Yeah, so it's one
to seven. So it's a seventh to size. Yeah,
exactly. That's a good way of saying it. So it's a
seventh of the size of a proper
Steinway. And...
Good thing, you nearly look like an idiot there, Dan,
but you sort of swear. That's bigger
than that, then, because the Steinway's
massive.
So, what, a couple of feet?
A couple of feet each way?
Yeah.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Again, I was doing the hand size
knowing that the audience at home
couldn't see what I was doing.
Who was it for?
Well, it's for the White House and it's a replica
of a Steinway that
they did actually have and which has now
been moved into a museum.
So this guy who's an artist who created it
spent 16 years
basically conceiving, creating,
building it and making sure that it functions
exactly like a Steinway
of regular size.
And even to the
point, this is how sort of obsessed he was about
doing it, that when he was making
the actual pieces themselves, because there's
so many pieces, there's something like 12,000
pieces that go into a Steinway.
He even made tiny
versions of the machines that make the
bigger pieces to then make the
tiny pieces from in order
to produce a signway. You're looking very skeptical
here, Rachel. At some point, you have
to ask, why?
Yeah. Why not just make a Steinway?
It's easier to play.
Yeah. You'd have to play. You'd have to
play this one with little chopstick fingers
you know with little like stick.
Oh that'd be great though.
When you play the chopsticks. Yeah.
Yeah. So that exists.
That's in the Whitehouse.
You know that thing of getting a piano dropped on your head?
In cartoons.
In cartoons. Yeah.
There is a place in the world where that happens for real every year.
What?
Yeah.
So MIT, the American University, they have a tradition every year, the piano drop,
where they drop a piano off the roof.
But not on someone's head.
Yes, onto someone's head.
It's whoever comes last in the class each year.
year is
you'd say executed, I guess,
by...
No, they don't.
They're really, really careful about it, obviously.
But since 1972,
they had this broken piano.
They wanted to get rid of it somehow.
It's just a bunch of students at this point,
and they wanted to push it out of their window
because that'd be crazy and fun of their students.
And then they read the rules,
and they found out, oh, you can't throw things out of your window.
But then, because they're students,
they read the rules really closely,
they found out there's no rule against pushing it off the roof.
Just out of your window.
That's not allowed.
off the roof, not in the rules.
So they did it, and half a century
on now, they are still doing it.
And they're very tight on security,
and they, you know, everyone closes their windows,
and they, in fact, do even more than that in terms of security.
Yeah.
And sometimes they fill it with sweets or confetti.
Yeah.
They stopped during COVID, didn't they?
And then they started again last year.
I guess the piano was full of COVID.
They filled it with sweets like a sort of piniagniawata.
Oh, there we go.
Piani an arta.
It almost works.
It almost works.
And we should say it's always a broken piano.
It's never them just trashing a functioning piano.
It's always a broken piano that can't be mended.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
This is kind of a common thing in America, isn't it?
Or relatively common.
Not as common as McDonald's.
What, chugging pianos of a roof?
Yeah, dropping pianos.
You kind of, once you start Googling it, you're like,
well, this happens way more often than I thought.
Really?
So the first one I think that I found, anyway, was in 1968.
And what happened was there were two musicians,
and they were driving a van and there was a piano in the back of it
and the piano accidentally fell out
and they thought it kind of made quite a nice sound
and they thought, well, what if we did that
but we dropped it from a helicopter?
It'll make it even better sound.
And so as a benefit for a radio station,
they decided to drop this piano from a helicopter
and yeah, they did it.
And they got 3,000 people there.
They all paid to watch.
At one stage, a dog ran directly underneath the piano.
and sort of yapped around,
and the guy on the microphone said,
asked everyone to whistle.
And so everyone in the area whistled,
and then the dog sort of went,
oh, what's that?
And ran off again.
Yeah, okay.
I don't know how that works,
but that's what happened.
And they dropped the piano,
and it made a big old noise,
but not nearly as nice a noise as they wanted.
Turned out that it didn't sound that good,
but they made a load of money anyway.
That sounds like something men would do.
Isn't it?
I don't want to, I don't want to stereotype,
but it sounds like,
so they like,
dropped it a tiny amount and it made a magical sound.
And then instead of going, that was nice, let's do that again
or do something really creative.
They were like, let's drop it from a fucking helicopter
so that it is a massive smash.
And of course, that doesn't make as good a sound.
Like, of course.
I was just thinking, I wonder if we could do that.
We do need to move on to our final fact.
It is time for our final fact of the show.
And that is Andy.
My fact is that when filming...
E.T. Stephen Spielberg
kept E.T.'s puppeteers on the
clock at lunchtime so that
six-year-old Drew Barrymore could eat
with him, so she kept believing
he was real. It's
such a nice fact. She asked
for a scarf for him to
keep him warm because he's got this very thin neck,
hasn't he? E.T. And actually, they did
adjust it for, they adjusted the whole
filming for the children. They shot the film
in chronological order,
in order of the script, which never happens
because, you know, you're saving money here, and
you shoot these two scenes here,
but it meant the children really kind of believed it more.
You know, they were going back into the same world day after day.
So it is kind of magical what they did.
Yeah, so I watched a bunch of interviews this morning.
Drew Barrymore has her own chat show,
and there was the 40th anniversary of E.T.
Not too long ago, and so all the cast members came back on to chat about it.
And so she kept saying, you know, I knew it was definitely a fake thing,
and they were all going, you absolutely didn't.
So what the thing was is that she was during the breaks, during lunch,
They'd sort of go, where's Drew?
And Drew would just be sitting there just going,
so what do you think about?
And she was just chatting to this static model that was sitting there.
And so the mother, who, I believe her real name's Didi,
she went over to Stephen Spielberg and said,
I think she really believes that he's real.
We should possibly do something about that.
So Stephen then hired two people who were part of the animatronic side.
That was their job to basically sit there
and just have the eyes roll whenever she said in anecdotes and stuff like that.
And she keeps denying it, but every single cast member says,
no, you flat out believed that E.T. was real when you were five, six, however she was.
And he was amazing.
So my sons and I have just started watching it again because they've just discovered it.
And you can buy these toys at the moment, which is so, just a reminder of what E.T.
looks like for everyone.
E.T. It is.
That's James Jesus.
What?
Have you even seen E.T.?
Have you seen the movie?
Maybe.
Well.
Does that know what happens?
You deliberately winding people on.
Deliberately winding down up.
I have seen E.T.
I watched it when it first came out
when I was about three or four years old, I think.
Nice. Right.
So I don't remember any of it about it.
I believed it was all real.
Yeah. He looked so real and that's the thing.
The animatronic side of things were extraordinary.
So if E.T. was static,
just standing and doing the scene,
there was like 120 different things
that could happen to E.T. in that point.
If he was using his hands,
there was a woman who was a mime
who would be laying underneath E.T.
who had E.T. glove hands on
and she would be doing all the movements
while someone else is doing the voices and so on.
Then you had three actors.
One was a child who didn't have any legs.
He was part of the main cast.
He became their best friends.
When E.T. is walking through the kitchen,
he was the one who, walking on his hands,
inside the E.T. suit was, yeah, slamming into the fridge
and falling over and stuff.
Really?
Yeah, so there was so many different elements
that went into this one character.
Do you know the company that could have made E.T. was Columbia, right?
And they said no to it.
Okay.
Like idiots.
Why?
Because it was the biggest film of all time.
Did they say no?
Oh, sorry, sorry.
They ran surveys on it and the marketing department said,
eh, it's got limited commercial appeal.
I know.
And so it went to Universal, right?
And then Columbia had originally worked on it,
so they got, I think, 5% of the net profits.
One executive from Columbia said that year, the year it came out,
they made more money on ET,
where they got 5% of the net profits,
than on any of their own actual films.
It was so huge.
It really was.
It was absolutely, it was monstrous, you know.
Which is bad, because Spielberg's massive at this point.
He's just made Indiana Jones.
He's made Inns.
He's made The Close Encounters of a Third Kind.
Yeah, he's made, yeah, jaws.
Like, the guy is, the guy is...
But this was meant to be his small film in between big films.
Yes.
And then it turns out to the biggest film he's ever made.
Speaking of, Harrison Ford was in E.T.
Was he?
Yeah, he got cut.
But they filmed it.
He was Elliot's principal, school principal,
and it ended up on the cutting room floor.
That's ballsy directing as well.
That's why Spielberg's a genius.
Oh, thank you, Harrison.
But it doesn't really work.
Why did he cut him?
I guess he was too famous at that point.
And when you think about the story,
like it must have been a bit of an offshoot of the story.
It would have been mega distracting to see Indiana Jones
in the middle of the ET film.
Yeah, it's post-Indiana Jones, right?
Yeah, yeah.
It was the next film.
So it would be odd, yeah.
It would be really weird.
Because Henry Thomas, who's the kid who plays Elliot,
which, just for anyone here and anyone listening,
if you haven't seen it, there is a clip online
of him auditioning for the role of Elliot.
It's one of the most heartwarming things ever, right?
So awful and sad and beautiful.
Yeah, it's when the military are coming
to try and take E.T. away from him.
So you've just got a shot of him crying,
and going, but I don't want to give him up, he's mine.
It's really touching, really, really touching.
It's the best bit at the end where you just hear Spielberg
off screen go, you got the job kid.
It's just wonderful in that moment.
That's the thing that got it. But he arrived for his
audition with a bullwhip because he
loved Indiana Jones so much. So he came
as Indiana Jones.
He didn't ever try to attack E.T. with it, though.
Yeah, no.
So I was reading a biography
of Spielberg, and there's an interpretation
of E.T., which I might just share with you all,
if that's all right. There's a scientist who becomes
friends with E.T. if you remember that.
Sorry, a friend of Elliot's and helps E.T.
to get home. And all the way through
the film, he has a bunch of keys hanging from his belt,
right? That's sort of key detail of him.
And also, Elliot's parents are divorced, and
it's a film about loneliness and being a child,
and, you know, being alone, and finding a friend.
And it's really, it's really touching.
And Spielberg himself was from
his parents got divorced, so it was kind of about
himself as a child. Very moving stuff.
This is the interpretation from a critic
called Andrew Seris
about the scientist who befriends
Elliot. Spielberg in the final
sequence subtly implies a romantic
pairing of keys, that's the scientist,
with Elliot's mother, and he
puts them in shots together, but he doesn't spell it
out. He doesn't have any dialogue. It just shows them together
and lets you draw your own implications.
Saras then writes, only children
and Freudians can make the crucial
connections between the telltale keys
fondled near the crotch of the
potential father figure,
and the displaced phallus
represented by E.T. himself.
Actually, looking at a model of E.T. here, I can't see that, I think.
Blimey, James.
I think you need to see a doctor, buddy.
Yeah, isn't that the most insane thing you've ever heard?
Yeah.
I need to think about this.
Are they suggesting the keys, like, unlocking something?
I think that might be the...
Is that what it is? Okay.
Well, I think the keys are the Pee's...
but also E.T. is the penis.
It's the penis.
Yeah, but that's what I mean.
If the keys can't be the penis,
can they if E.T. is the penis.
Well, I think for Freudians,
a lot of it is the penis.
Do you see what I mean?
If I was back in time,
I'm immediately bored into this Freudian thing.
I think you're crowded the Agora in ancient Greece
are saying, sorry, what's the E.T. thing again?
Drew Barrymore.
I'm a massive fan of Drew Barramores,
and she comes from a dynasty of actors
and producers and so on.
Stephen Spielberg is her god.
It's that kind of thing, right?
And there's a story about her grandfather
who was called John Barrymore,
and when he died,
he used to play poker
with a lot of other actors.
Earl Flynn, who was the Aussie-turned American actor,
a swashbuckling guy.
W.C. Fields seemed to be one of the greatest
silent comedians of all time.
And there was another person who was seen as an anarchist
that was their group, the four of them.
Earl Flynn went to the morgue,
stole John Barrymore,
brought him to the house,
and they all had one last game of poker together.
No.
Yeah, David Niven writes about this in his book,
and Drew Barrymore was asked about it,
and she confirmed that within the family
that this absolutely is true.
So they brought him there, sat him at the table,
a dead John Barrymore,
they played their game of poker,
and then they returned him to the morgue when they were done.
And Drew says she's even heard rumors
that the movie Weekend of Bernies
is based on the kidnapping of the dead body of John Barrymore.
Wow.
Yeah, pretty cool, eh?
Good fact.
Just can I say, if I die, I would love to be on one final episode of no such thing as a fish.
You'll be there ongoing.
We'll just have you permanently just set the...
Yeah, the listeners won't notice the difference.
No, no, exactly.
The voice of E.T.
Oh, yeah.
Interesting.
This was a woman called Pat Welsh.
She's been on a safari, and her photos had gotten mixed up.
up with someone. And eventually, 20 years later, she got the film back and she went to get it
developed. And when she was getting it developed, she started speaking to the guy. And one of the
people who was there was Ben Burt, who was the sound engineer. And he heard her voice and went,
you would be perfect for my alien. And she'd done a little bit of stuff before. She'd been like
a soap opera actress on the radio and stuff, but she hadn't really done very much. But she just
had the perfect. She'd smoked a lot and she had that kind of...
Yeah, exactly.
But he took that, but he also added an extra load of stuff.
So it took her voice, but added some raccoons, some sea otters, some horses, and a burp from his old cinema professor from USC.
Oh, and his wife breathing when she had a cold.
So he took all these things and mixed them together with her voice to make the ET voice.
It was so cool.
There's a great story that I heard recently.
I was really lucky I met a hero recently, Dan Aykroyd, and he was telling me,
that when he was doing Temple of Doom
because Dan Aykroyd is in Temple of Doom.
What?
Yeah, in Indiana Jones.
He plays the ball, doesn't he?
The big ball.
That's Raiders.
Oh, fuck, no worries.
If you, so it's an uncredited role in the movie,
but you'll all remember the scene, possibly.
At the very beginning of Temple of Doom,
there's the big fight with Lao Chi inside the Chinese restaurant.
In the nightclub, yeah.
In order to get away, they go into a small plane,
and he closes the door and he says,
Nice try, Laotchi, and he closes the door
and it says Laotie's name on it, so you know he's in trouble.
Someone is talking to him to get him into the plane
as they're walking down the runway.
That is Dan Aykroyd.
So when you watch that again, it's Dan Aykroyd.
So he was on set with them,
and he needed to get back to the set of Ghostbusters,
which were they were filming at the time.
So he said, Stephen, I'm going to head off.
He needed to get there quick.
He saw a bicycle just hanging around.
No.
Gets the bicycle.
It's got a basket in the front.
It goes up.
And he flew.
In the sky.
No, Andy.
No, but it later transpired
that the bike that he'd taken
was Elliot's bike.
I don't want to get all Freudian
and I don't really know much about this movie,
but is he gets into a big wicker basket, does he?
The thing is, with extraterrestrials,
as long as the basket's big enough,
you can't tell the difference.
That is it. That is all of our facts.
Thank you so much for.
listening. If you would like to get in contact
with any of us about the things that we've said
over the course of this podcast, we can be found on
our Twitter accounts. I'm on at Shreiberland,
James. At James Harkin.
Andy. At Andrew Hunter. And Rach.
At Rachel Paris. Yep. And I know
it's not called Twitter, but I'm not going to say the new
fucking stupid name.
Or you can get us on our group
account, which is at No Such Thing. Or
you can go to our website. No Such Thing
Asof Fish.com. All of our previous episodes
are up there. So do please check them out.
otherwise come back next week.
We'll be back with another episode.
Thank you so much Soho Theater
for staying this late with us.
We really appreciate it.
We'll see you again.
Goodbye.
