Table

Table

Author: Festival of the Spoken Nerd September 15, 2020 Duration: 39:47

Steve goes to war against rote learning; Matt tells us how ancient numbers affect what we can and can't name our dogs; and Helen's bit is elementary, my dear listener:

- Matt's bit (00:50)

- Steve's bit (11:15)

- Helen's bit (22:00)

- Helen's bonus brassy song (37:05)


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Come for the Unnecessary Detail. Stay for the A Podcast Of. 

 

SHOW NOTES:

Unfortunately our show notes are too big for Acast's margins to contain... head to the Table episode page to see everything in once place.


Corrections and clarifications:

- Regular listener Paul has pointed out that not ALL phone numbers can actually be used as phone numbers. The system connects on the first valid match, so phone numbers longer than 4 digits cannot start with emergency services number 999, or 111, or anything like that. The actual numbers depend on which country you're in, of course.  

- Not every IV is written as IV... @DavidDanaci sent in several examples of watchmakers who use IIII instead of IV on their watch faces: Patek Philippe, Breguet and Alange & Soehne. One large scale counter-example is the Great Clock of Westminster, aka the Elizabeth Tower clock, aka, the clock that houses Big Ben aka the massive clock in London colloquially known as Big Ben. Yes, Big Ben is the bell, not the clock or the tower. But you knew that already, right? 

- Benedikt Gocht emailed to point out that we won't be waiting for another 18 elements to reach the next noble gas, but more like 50 or 54, depending on which model you use to predict the properties of elements after 118. There go Helen's dreams of an element called "Hanon" in her lifetime...


Thanks for listening!


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Ever find yourself falling down a rabbit hole of questions about the seemingly mundane? That’s the exact territory mapped out in A Podcast Of Unnecessary Detail. Each month, the trio from the live comedy phenomenon Festival of the Spoken Nerd-stand-up mathematician Matt Parker, experiment enthusiast Steve Mould, and musical geek Helen Arney-gathers to pick apart three unrelated stories with a gleeful, granular focus. They operate on the principle that the most fascinating layers are often hidden beneath the surface of ordinary things, and they have the comedic and explanatory chops to dig them up. This isn't a broad overview; it's a deep dive into the tangents and technicalities that most conversations gloss over, all delivered with the warmth and wit of friends who love to get sidetracked by a good fact. Listening to this podcast feels like being let in on a brilliant, meandering backstage conversation where laughter and genuine curiosity are equally important. You’ll hear the unexpected connections they draw, the playful debates, and the moments of genuine surprise as ordinary topics unravel into extraordinary tales of science, maths, and human ingenuity. It’s for anyone who’s ever wondered ‘why?’ and then immediately followed it up with ‘but how, exactly?’
Author: Language: English Episodes: 26

A Podcast Of Unnecessary Detail
Podcast Episodes
On The Ones And Twos [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 45:05
In this episode, Steve explains why all the molecules in your body are right handed, Matt bigs up the strong law of small numbers and Helen grabs the mic to get on the ones and twos. Stand by to receive details!- Matt's…
Live And Kicking Part 1 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 50:46
Helen, Matt and Steve introduce the best bits of their recent live shows, performed at London’s Bloomsbury Theatre. With nerdy guest performers Dr Rohin Francis aka Medlife Crisis discussing why the human body isn’t real…
Curiouser and Curiouser [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 42:29
In a different kind of episode, our intrepid Detailers reveal three facts that they just could not believe the first time they heard them, but turned out to be true. The reproductive habits of barnacles, the unexpected m…
Hearts and Minds [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 44:16
In this episode, logical thought and raw emotion meet as Matt finds two numbers that say “I Love You”, Helen sings mathematical equations that are guaranteed to make your brain light up and Steve embarrasses himself with…
Input and Output [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 48:57
In this episode, Steve explains how computers talk to each other behind our backs, Helen co-writes a song with a popular internet search engine (if you can’t work out which one, Google it) and Matt brings an Oscar-winnin…
Go Forth and Multiply [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 48:59
In this episode, Matt finds out how a runaway algorithm created the world’s most expensive book, Helen searches for the most singable fruit fly genes and Steve considers whether donating a kidney is easier than buying a…
Primed and Ready [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 42:25
In this episode, Matt finds his portrait in a Prime Number, Helen sings about the biggest Prime Number ever discovered (at the time of recording) and Steve discovers the hot new trick that wild honey bees are using to de…
Flush and Forget [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 46:42
In this episode, Steve discovers the greedy cup siphon hiding inside your loo, Matt delves into Joseph Bazalgette’s calculations for London’s sewer system and Helen teaches everyone how to flush a toilet, through the med…
A Podcast Of Unnecessary Detail is back! [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:08
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts for new episodes as soon as they are released!Looking for a science comedy podcast that doesn't skimp on the details? We've got you. One starting point sets off three different sc…
Transmission [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 42:01
In this final episode of Series 1, Steve talks about how plants transmit their genes, Helen eavesdrops on whales and Matt decodes spacecraft transmissions. Plus a song about the bravest little transmitter in the known un…