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No Such Thing As A Fish

505: No Such Thing As Hitchcock's 'The Worms'

No Such Thing As A Fish

No Such Thing As A Fish

Arts, Nature, History, Science, Improv, Comedy

4.817.9K Ratings

🗓️ 16 November 2023

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dan, James, Anna and Andrew discuss snake bites, starfish bodies, sucking blood and a speaking building.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly

0:18.5

podcast coming to you from four undisclosed locations in the UK.

0:23.0

My name is Dan Schreiber.

0:24.0

I am sitting here with James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray,

0:27.4

and Anna Tashinsky.

0:28.7

And once again, we have gathered round the microphones

0:30.9

with our four favorite facts from the last seven days and in

0:33.8

no particular order here we go starting with fact number one and that is

0:39.1

Andy my fact is that for years scientists thought starfish had no heads. It now turns out they have no bodies.

0:49.0

Wow. All head. Are even the arms heads?

0:54.0

No.

0:55.0

Yeah, I think what this shows is that it's actually quite hard to describe Starfish in terms of human anatomy.

1:01.0

And it's like... So what's the difference between head and body according to this

1:05.8

definition okay this is the result of a new study from Stanford University and I think

1:10.9

maybe one or two other places and it's it's about the genetic code that sort of programs

1:16.1

Starfish because Starfish are really weird bodily as in they start out

1:21.2

with bilateral symmetry which is what humans have, as then you've got two sides,

1:25.2

you've got left and right, and it's sort of the same, you know, you're mirrored.

1:28.6

So Starfish start out like that when they're first born and then they kind of grow out of it and they become the

1:33.3

starfish shape that we know. And so what the study is it looked at the

1:37.5

genetic code which kind of programs head-like territory and it turns out that they have that in each of their arms and so

1:46.0

then and the middle the middle bit which joins all the arms together has more head-like genetics.

...

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