¶ Intro / Opening
I 50 år har vi på AG-produkter varit på väg. Steg för steg inom förändring och utveckling. De betyder något är inte hur långt vi har vandrat, utan vad vi lärt oss under resans gång. Till exempel hur man skapar arbetsplatser där människor mår bra. Och så får du mer än bara inredning. Du får 50 års erfarenhet. Välkommen till AGProdukt. Vi på AGProder är med våra kunder hela vägen, från planering till leverans och montering. Eller tills du känner att du har allt du behöver. Усёкта.
Just det, vi är ju klara. Se bara till om du också behöver en hjälpande hand. Och så får du mer än bara inredning. Du får rådgivning hela vägen. Välkommen till AGI-produkter. 자막 제공 및 광고를 포함하고 있습니다.
¶ Welcome, Nottingham, and Market Madness
Hello and welcome to another episode Of Little Fish. This is your bonus Monday episode where we put down our four favorite facts from the last seven days and we go through your favorite facts that you've submitted to podcast at qi.com and he tralls through the email inbox. He picks out. the best choice selections and we bring them here. So why don't we get into it? Who wants to start off? I'll start off. I'm James, by the way, listener. Nice to meet you.
Um I have a fact from someone called Thomas Thomas Martin. That's a nice name. Uh my name's Andy. He s he mentioned you in the intro. Well I feel like we're off the blocks. Well Thomas Thomas Martin writes that the richest person in the world lives in Nottingham. Interesting. Yeah. Trillionaire. Nottingham was a big shoe country, wasn't it? That's Northampton, I think. Yeah. Nottingham is Nottingham has a goose fair. Oh yeah. Lots of caves in there. I'll say somebody's monetized cave.
Well I'm just thinking Robin Hood's from the area. Yeah. I mean imagine bumping into the richest man on earth on the road. That is a that's a good pay Give it to the poorest man of the world. Yeah. Here's the thing though. I I'm pretty sure Elon Musk is the richest person alive. So he must be from Nottingham. His money is just on paper really. Um and in a way you could say that this person's money is just on paper as well. Uh because this person has got sixty three quadrillion pounds.
Uh, but they can only spend it in one particular coffee shop in Nottingham uh because someone gave them a gift card and there was a little typo on the gift card and the ten pound balance um to this place called two hundred degrees coffee actually came through as sixty three quadrillion. That's really funny. That's really funny. And if you can spend it all in the coffee shop within a month, you get to keep everything. It's like Bruce does sixty three quadrillions. Yeah.
Oh, that's so charming. I love it. I love those stories. I love'em. Yeah. Do you remember um the sixth of October twenty sixteen? Of course. The the night of that. No, I no, I just remember the daytime. Yeah. Uh well probably when you were asleep'cause I'm talking midnight, everyone in the UK lost ten percent of their work. Literally everyone. Like a gravity thing? Now, what happened was,
Around that time, Francoise Hollande did a speech about Britain. And a lot of the transactions in the stock markets and in the financial markets. are done by computers and he did this and it triggered off a mini sell off of sterling. Right. And then the computers sort of saw that and then sold more and then sold more. And these programmes all started selling loads of sterling.
Then there was a second sell off limit that was hit and then even more started being sold. Oh god. And then it all got fixed before we woke up in the morning. Ha ha ha. So within several minutes of this happening, eight percent of the value of sterling was wiped off. And then when the human traders caught up, they sort of fixed it all. So only if you'd gone to a bureau de change at midnight on that day
and tried to change your pounds into Euros, you could have had a problem. But for everyone else it didn't make any difference. So funny. That's like a financial version of that film Night at the Museum. Is it? Yeah. What happens in that? Well everything goes crazy in the museum every night and Ben Stiller has to fix it all before the morning. Oh and then does it get Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. It's like a financial version of The Simpsons, isn't it?'Cause whatever happens in the Simpsons, by the end of the episode they're always back to normal. Right. Okay. Can I just say I'm staggered that one of us has not seen Night at the Museum, Dan? What? I'm staggered you haven't seen Night at the Museum.
No, I just didn't accept your premise that it was similar to the situation. It becomes a museum that is sentient. Everything is sentient all of a sudden. Yeah, true. The money didn't become sentient. But then the market's traded by themselves. Uh huh. So there is a little bit of sentience there. Okay. Well that's still calling more space odyssey, you know, it's like it's a sentient AI as opposed to a wax work of Roosevelt.
¶ Canadian Parks and British Pubs
Uh This is a fact about Canada, and it comes in from Martin Williams. Good Canadian name. Um, this is about Wood Buffalo National Park. It's the largest park in Canada, right? Do at night the wooden buffalo become sentient and run em off? Very funny. Yeah. Um it's just about the size of this park. Okay. Some parks are big, right?
Hyde Park pretty big. This park is forty four thousand square kilometers. It is bigger than Denmark. And if it became an independent nation, it would be the hundred and thirtieth largest country in the world. Right. Which I love. And uh Martin has done some more maths, which I I respect. Uh could Sorry, point of order. Yep. Um Denmark owns Greenland. Yeah, Martin. So actually Denmark is the largest country in Europe if you don't count Russia.
Really good point. Does it own Greenland or was it one of those funny things where Greenland owns itself but it's governed from It's the other way round, so Denmark owns it but Greenland governs itself. I understand. I understand. Okay. Uh Time of recording, of course.
I'm recording. All right, well I'll do I'll do the rest of Martin D. Miller anyway,'cause it's brilliant. Um collectively the thirty nine national parks and reserves of Canada have an area of three hundred and forty three thousand square kilometres larger than the Republic of the Congo and over forty percent larger than the entire UK. This was why my picnic failed in Canada, because I'm like to my mics, I'll see you in the park.
Just middle of the park here, yeah. Um so that's how big they are. Despite this, not one of them boasts a waitros or weatherspoons location. I am aware of these chain institutions almost exclusively due to your podcast, which mentions them curiously often. This has piqued my own curiosity, and should I ever travel to the UK, I will most assuredly visit a Weatherspoons. Okay.
It is interesting that you can learn that quite a bit from our character probably by the various institutions that we mention on this show. Exactly. And Martin says, the one he's he's already picked the weather spins he'll go to. He says, I'll go to the mechanical elephant in Margate in the hope of bumping into Dan. Hopeful hopefully hopefully it looks better in person than the photos online. That's a bit unfair. I mean, I'm sure he hasn't combed his hair today, but
Uh I won't be in that one obviously. I'm in Ramsgate. At the far superior Weatherspoons. I don't wanna give the impression, by the way, that I go to Weatherspoons. I've been to that one around. There's nothing wrong with kind of other story. I wanna be the Ratherspoon's guy though. You're not the weather suits guy, you're the wife guy. You can't be bad.
¶ Naming Quirks and Bee-Delivered Wisdom
Um, all right, let's move on to another one. This one has been sent in by Pete Sorel Cameron. He says, I don't know if you have covered this before. I don't think it's an outrageous fact, but it's always tickled me that Oscar-nominated actor Michael B. Jordan's father is called Michael A. Jordan. That's really good. I've never heard that before.
That's really good. I try to look in more to see if there are any other uh initials uh that were in sequence. Um Well there's Michael Double A. Jordan and then there's Michael Triple A Jordan who's half the size. Yes. Ha ha. Well Michael so his dad, Michael B. Jordan, is not an actor. He works as a supervisor at John F. Kennedy Airport, JFK, of course, son of J. E. K. No. No. No. Not true. No, he was he was JPK, uh his dad. And then weirdly, JPK's dad was PJK. What does the P stand for?
Um well, who knows? Patrick, I believe. Very nice. Very nice. But I'm gonna say package. Sure. I believe. Okay. Um yeah, just quite fun. I I I love that little bit of sequencing. Fairly. The only one that I would thought of which was another confusing version of that is same first names. So you guys remember Evelyn Wall or Evelyn Wall had a wife who was also called Evelyn. Yes. So the way that the friends distinguished them was he was Hevelin and she was Shivelin.
Okay. And they had a child called Ephelin. Yeah, lovely fact. Yeah. Great fact. Um here's one from Tony Elnquist and Tony said around the year one thousand, French peasant Lutard of Virtus was commanded by God to preach against certain practices of the church, including tithes, old. sacraments and the veneration of the cross. Eventually he was branded a heretic and killed himself by throwing himself in a well. The way God chose to communicate with him was via a swarm of bees.
A swarm of bees that flew into his anus. Well done if anyone saw where that sentence was going. I'm starting to see why he threw himself into a well. I think the constant bees flying into Uranus would Actually quite interestingly, the bees flew into his A. Yes, they they did. So sorry, he was did we say he was a saint? Uh he was no he was a peasant. You c absolutely many of the best ones were both. Uh but no, he was a heretic. Oh sorry. He was a heretic, so
I'm sure some people venerate him'cause that's the thing with heretics. Like usually the majority of people don't like you, but there's usually a few. Like JD Vance. I'm excited. Heretic, I think. Okay. Yeah, I believe. So at the time of recording he's beefing with the Pope about matters of Catholic theology. Like that is honestly bringing a knife to a gunfight. Not that the Pope would approve of either fight, but still.
Um no, so sorry, God communicated with this heretic by flying a swarm of bees up his bottom. According to Tony.
¶ Ancient Executions and Modern Cancellations
Amazing. What are the bees communicating? Yeah. Yeah. It could have been worse, they could have communicated him with him through his nostril, which we know is the most painful place to be stung by a bee. Yeah, according to Schmidt. Yeah. The Schmidt Pain Index. Yeah. Do you know? Do you know what Scaffism is? Scaffism. Is it a kind of heresy?
Um no, but it's something that could happen if you were heretical. Oh, okay. Uh it was husband? Yeah, method of execution. Oh no. Uh and it was done by the Persians, according to Plutarch. uh and he described that the person who was to be killed was trapped between two boats, one on top of the other. So like you're inside an Easter egg kind of thing. And your head and your limbs are sticking out, but they're covered in milk and honey and you're basically eaten by insects. That's your punishment.
Between two boats? Yeah. Yeah, I didn't fully understand that. So like imagine imagine two like rowboats. Like w it's not two fairies. Yeah, yeah. Okay. So it's like one robot on top of the other, so you have Yeah. Yeah. Um so yeah, but it was basically just a place to hold your body down while you had to stick your bits out and then the insects would eat your bits. Riky. No fun being a heretic back in the day. No. Ha ha.
It's it's you would say this has gotta be the heretic's era, really. Absolutely. And there's never been a nicer time. It'd be quite funny to see an animation of, say, like Richard Dawkins being subjected to all the different ways that heretics were murdered back in the day. Wow.
Well just to give us an idea of like what like he's living in a good time. He's able to go on stage and say these things. Yeah. A different time. He would have had I didn't know that. Like we didn't we didn't know that as an option of death. Has he been cancelled, Richard Dawkins? 'Cause that's the modern punishment of a heretic, isn't it? for thought. I'll take the cancellation please. I'll have the bees. Okay.
You get the bees on the bun. You have to go in between two boats while insects eat your arms and you get a Netflix special. I 50 år har vi på AG-produkter varit på väg. Steg för steg genom förändring och utveckling. Betyder något är inte hur långt vi har vandrat, utan vad vi lärt oss under resans gång. Till exempel hur man skapar arbetsplatser där människor är bra. Och så får du mer än bara inredning, du får 50 års erfarenhet. Välkommen till AGP! I 50 år har vi på AG-produkter varit på väg.
Steg för steg genom förändring och utveckling. Något är inte hur långt vi har vandrat, utan vad vi lärt oss under resans gång. Till exempel om man skapar arbetsplatser där människor mår bra. Och så får du mer än bara inredning. Du får 50 års erfarenhet. Välkommen till AG-produkten!
¶ Estonian Hams and Topical Ointments
Here's a great one from Annalisa, uh with two eyes, who Probably noses and mouths. Very strong. In the west coast of Estonia. Uh we used to have about ten thousand Estonia Swedes living. Uh huh. Uh they moved to what is now Estonia about a thousand years ago. Wow. Uh and stayed rather insulated uh the uh until the Second World War. Isolated, I suppose. Um
But in the olden days this is just a cool fact uh which Anna wants to let us know about a thing called ham fish, as she calls it. In the olden days it was a tradition that every year after a girl was born a smoked ham would be put away and stored for her wedding. So a few days before the big day, twenty or so well aged hams would be available, and you'd then boil them to make them edible, and you'd have all your Like wedding wedding hams. It's a really nice idea.
Yeah. I think that's a really good idea. It's just putting a little bit aside. It's like a bottom drawer we would call it. Like a junior Icer. Yeah. Yeah. It's slightly more similar to my thing where you literally put things away for the wedding. Yes, that I see that I do see that. Yeah. But yeah, I like I like the analogy.
Yeah. And there'll be government campaigns saying you really should put hams away. You really should salt hams and store them for your daughter's eventual wedding. Nothing no word about what the son's got. I suppose if there's one wedding it's you know it's at this time it's That's very good.
That's very cool. Um I've got Andy, we I I'm sure we've said this before many times, but you pick all these facts for us, don't I? You sort of curate what James and I get. Yeah um I just don't know why you pick these particular themes for me sometimes. I'm re I'm really sorry. Well there's Rob Walter who's sent in saying you can absorb aspirin through your skin, which is why you shouldn't masturbate for too long with linament. Sorry. Thank you, Andy. What's what's liniment?
Linnament is um well Dan knows all about that Is it made from the willow tree? Must be a medical medical goo. Okay. I think it's uh yeah, it's got it's heated as well. Oh dear. Or like deep heat. Yeah. Oh crumbs. Ich glaube, es ist okay. Because of the rain. I mean I haven't I haven't used it in quite a while. But not after that first time, but I think that was linament.
¶ Oldest Bottoms and Misleading Place Names
Okay. Um yeah, and then this other one sent in by John Turbot. Here's the headline from Scientific American. This may be the oldest butthole imprint on earth. Yeah. I'm just getting a lot of butthole and masturbation stuff from you in my I don't That's fair enough. What I would I is. If I see a fact that's really good but I don't want to read it out myself, um, I think I know I know I'm Patsy. Ha ha ha. Can you tell us about the oldest bun?
Yeah, this is actually very interesting. Um You're welcome. So uh they discovered an animal squatting in the mud. And it was preserved, uh and it's the first time that they've seen this. Now it's a cloaca, right? So it's the exit point of multiple different things. So they didn't find the animal, it's the oldest fossilised imprint of the bottom.
Yeah, exactly. And it's around two hundred and ninety nine million years ago that there was a volcanic eruption and this was buried in a patch of mud in what is today central Germany. Um yeah, so it's fossilized, a fossilized butthole uh imprint, as Scientific American puts it. Um Yeah, it's uh I do love that idea that we've got a more organized filing system for what we let out of our bodies. That's
What do you mean? Like as in birds they everything goes in and out of one hole, but we have a few different options. Exactly. We have a few different holes in which we allow the urine out or the poo out. Professor. I'm still reading the Scientific American article here. Well it feels like progress, is what you're saying. Uh Yeah. I feel like I'm more organized than you guys say I am. Absolutely. By the nature of that.
And I assumed from how you are in your day to day working life that you were still rocking the cloaca. I just sort of thought, damn we'd have got around to sorting this out yet. What a sort of I actually think you haven't even reached cloaca status. You're like a shipworm that only has one opening. So you everything goes in and out, including the food goes in and the poo comes out and the weed goes out and the breeding happens all in one hole. Well it's it's good to work I won't think of me.
Bet you wishing you'd been a bit nicer about my night of the museum analogy now? Now that I think that was really cool I know. Um Yeah. Uh here's one from C C Lam. Um this is about a really interesting sounding place in southern Utah, USA. Um my husband and I were visiting St George, Utah and uh I I drove a rental car from Las Vegas up to meet him.
Uh and as I drove I could see the gorgeous Virgin River, as it's called, as I crossed it on my way to Zion Country. I learned shortly afterwards that the Virgin River I crossed That's its name, was named after a mister Virgin who was an early settler of the region. It's named after Thomas Virgin, nineteenth century settler. That's very good. And that was one where you tried to trick us. Yeah, how do you go? Try to slip it in. Yes. Could he not? Like anyone did to Mr. Virgin.
Brilliant. Superb. Um, while in St. George we went to visit a fascinating dormant volcano in Snow Canyon State Park, named of course after Lorenzo and Arafter Snow. No. Uh. Oh that's very good. Snow can Snow Canyon. That's funny. Fantastic. That's very good. Lovely d lovely double double tap there. Lovely double tap. Well hey, listen, thank you everyone for sending in your facts. Please do keep them coming in. Podcast at qi.com. We love going through these and reading them out here.
¶ Custodianship of Fish Facts (Part 1)
Before we wrap up the episode, one more thing to do, which is if you are part of the highest tier of Clubfish, which is our private members club on Patreon, it's called Friend of the Podcast That Tier, you will be eligible to become custodian of one of the facts. from the twelve year history of fish. And so we've been going through the big long list, dishing them out, and we've got eight new custodians to give away today. Who wants to go first? Uh
I'll go first. This one goes out to Stuart Earl and Stuart, your fact is that the Statue of Liberty originally wore a headscarf. Yes. I think this was one of my facts. Yeah, and I remember because I was I was looking at the Statue of Liberty's face before it was erected on top of the body and I thought it looked exactly like Elvis Presley. So I started digging into it. How interesting. Was it based on the mother of Bertaldi or something? Yeah. Yeah. I think it was basically.
That she looked like Elvis Presley. Yeah, so that's interesting in its own right, isn't it? Um anyway I started looking into it and then there was this whole thing about Egyptology at the time. Someone had written a book about the sort of obsession with Egypt at the time and it was just a fact within that. Um Interesting fact, Elvis Presley wore size four hundred and seventy nine blue suede shoes. Brilliant facts. Explain that's the shoe size, the sandal size of uh
Statue of Libertarian. And I'm also I think I might have got the number wrong, but anyway. Eight hundred and something. Was it? I think it was eight seven nine. I think you got that. I think that was that. Anyway. Um shall I do one? Yeah. This one goes out to a llama. A polo mint takes forty-two and a half minutes to dissolve if you stick it up your nose.
We did this at a live show. Yeah, we did it. Wanna say we did this at a live show? Dan, you I believe did it at a live show. You stuck a polo up your nose. Yeah. Because um we we record over an hour, so I thought okay, this is interesting. It might it might be gone by the time it's finished. Not sting like uh linament on the penis. Or a flock of bees up the bottom. What block?
It didn't work. No. No, but this it came from a study because you need to know if things get stuck up children's noses how long they have been up there. Yeah, I mean... use polos'cause it's like, you know, boiled sugar basically. Right. So it will dissolve eventually. Yeah. Maybe you've uh maybe the pH in your nose is unusual in some way. Oh yeah. Interesting. อันอันอันอันอันอันอัน Well right into scientists. Um let's do another one. This is for Georgie the first.
Um Georgie, your fact is now when you have a tattoo lasered off, you end up pooping it out. It's Georgie L. Yeah, probably. But quite like Georgie the first as a Congratulations, your majesty. This was one of yours, Andy. These are quite a few um sort of famous fan Hall of Famers. Yeah, I would say. It's good to know where all my tattoos have gone since I had the procedure. Yeah. Greg Wall I saw that. Whatever you might have tattooed on your body.
I showed you that in confidence then. And it was a different type. What was on the other bum cheek? It was Hugh Edwards. I bet you regretted getting Scott Mills on your penis. Um Yeah, no, it's uh that was a th I I was thrilled by that fact. It's a very funny fact. Yeah, very good. Very nice indeed.
¶ Custodianship of Fish Facts (Part 2)
Okay, here is a fact that is now under the custodianship of Martin Nuterbum. And apologies, Martin, if I've mispronounced your name, but your fact is that the man who invented the airship, Alberto Santos Dumont, had dinner parties with ten foot high chairs, so his guests could experience the joy of flight. Yes. Fantastic. That was another all time th the out Santos Dumot was such an amazing character. Yeah. Yes. He is brilliant.
I saw I went recently to the Science Museum and they've got the s the one of the top floors is the flight thing and his name is all over it. They've got loads of his early designs and things and yeah, it's really good. Original items or Yeah. Is he the one or it was definitely in that era in Paris where they were like the only person who had a dirigible, like a hot a balloon.
And they used to float from house to house and just sort of sit outside your window going, Hi, it's me Sounds really familiar, you know. You're right. I think you're right he did that. Lovely. I remember years ago at the QI building we organized a book event with Philippe Petit. He was the man who did the tightrope walk between the twin towers.
And so I was I was there helping him set up and so on and he sort of went, uh, do you have a ladder? And we're like, You want a ladder? And he likes to start all of his talk. perching at the top of a ladder to give you the sense of him maybe falling off. Wonderful. Wonderful. I don't know if he does it for all, but certainly that day had to go find a ladder. What a guy. Anyway, let's get another fact.
Here's another one. This one goes out to Rachel Robertson. Rachel, your fact is a new scientific study has concluded that there are too many scientific studies. Uh vintage down phrasing there. And uh this would have been about twenty seventeen and I guess Yeah. They stopped, didn't they? They stop. Like I said, we've had enough of scientists, we've had enough of experts.
Yeah, yeah. Sort of time wasting science studies, I suppose, is what they were they were concerned about. Yes. Yeah. But is any study really a waste of time? No, you never know where the new breakthrough is gonna come from. It might be something about, you know, how long does it take a tortoise to go around the lake or something, but you don't know, like that could be the next meta sunglasses. Exactly. Is it?
Um, let's do another fact. This is going out to Kathleen Frederick. Speaking of tortoise studies, uh, you should never pick up a desert tortoise in case it pees itself to death. Oh Yep. Good. Uh I learned that when I went to Death Valley in America. Mm-hmm. Uh because that's the rule. And these it says it it might even say it on signs. Or something, like don't pick them up. Are they are no are they around the place? Did you see one there?
Uh I don't think I saw one though. I think they they like to hide away. Oh, yeah, I'm sure they're pretty secretive. Death Valley, of course, named after uh Sir Reginald Death. Yes. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm. Frankie Valley. Brilliant. Uh I'll do one more. This is a James fact and it goes out to Renata Strausser and it's that. Firefighters use wetter water than we do. Yeah, I love that fact. That's a great one. It's a really good one.'Cause they put little um like little chains of something.
Yeah. Polymers, that's the word I was stretching for. And it just makes it more slippy. But it means that it goes through the pipes quicker, which means that when you fire it out, it goes quicker to the fire. It's stunning. That's fantastic. When you find that it's one of those facts, when you find it out you have to just you have to know more. Yeah. It's great. I think we said at the time they keep slipping over on the extra wet water afterwards, which is quite funny. Really? Yeah. I guess.
Uh we do have one more fact to dish out. Okay, I'll do the last one for the day. Um, and that is oh, this is a very interesting one. So Katie Baker Smith, your fact is that plants have their own internet made of fungus. And I think what's interesting about this is that we did this fact quite soon after this was discovered. Uh there was a few books that came out around the same time that talked about this mycelium network between trees. But I think in recent years
There's a suggestion that it's been overblown a little bit. Really? Really? And the interesting thing is because it's such a good idea and like intuitively it sounds like, oh, this must happen, right? And it tells you a lot about forests and whatever, it gets taught everywhere now. And if you go to it lots of museums, they'll have like full areas that tell you about mycelium network and stuff like that. But actually
My understanding is it probably does happen to a certain extent that fungi help the trees. Yeah. But the idea that they all kind of talk to each other and stu and stuff might be a little bit overblown. Right.
they still might have basic communication but not to the point of because they're saying stuff like they they do And we said online shopping to the point where they can distinguish between their relatives and they can make sure they're stealing from other competing plants and and all that stuff. shopping I guess they'd be using Amazon, which is of course a a place where there are lots of trees. Yes. Name after Michael Amazon. Really good.
It was sitting there. Yeah. I I might have actually said that on the day, I think. I think I was fine. Yeah.
¶ Final Jokes and Podcast Farewell
Um but yeah I'm not sure. I d I know I have quite a few tabs open for a debunk of this. The idea of going into it on QI in the next couple of years. Oh wow, that will be fascinating.'Cause that's a good example of where we can learn how sometimes we overblow and pull back. Like how how did we overblow it?'Cause it's data that was showing what was happening. That's great. I'm excited for that.
Walnut Mart, I suppose. Uh'cause Walnut's a kind of tree and Walmart is v has a very big online shopping presence. could hear the keyboard tapping in the background. Were you asking for Just a big online. You don't need chat GP tree.
Okay, congratulations to Katie, Renata, Kathleen, Rachel, Martin, Your Royal Highness, Georgie the First, or Georgie L. Alama and Stuart, you are now the custodians of those eight facts, as well as getting that you will have already received a digital certificate, which oh Andy, you've got a joke. Furious. Mm-hmm. It's gotta be better than Chat GP Tree. It's not a good one. Right. Anyway.
Moving on, you will have received, as I say, a digital certificate. So if anyone wants one of those, they're very cool. Uh you just need to go to patreon.com slash clubfish because clubfish, as we've said, is our private members club. So uh head there. Uh and do please, as I said, keep submitting facts for this show. We love it. So podcast at qi.com, they all go to Andy. Otherwise, we'll just see you again on Friday with a big fish. So we'll catch you all then. But for now, from me, goodbye.
Mm-hmm. I also say goodbye. Okay, and we'll see you next Sorry I I guess it's tree commerce. Okay, goodbye. I femtio år har vi på AGprodukter varit på väg. Steg för steg genom förändring och utveckling. Den betyder något är inte hur långt vi har vandrat, utan vad vi lärt oss under resans gång.
Till exempel hur man skapar arbetsplatser där människor m bra. Och så får du mer än bara inredning. Du får 50 års erfarenhet. Välkommen till AGIP. Vi på AGIP är med våra kunder hela vägen, från planering till leverans och montering. Eller tills du känner att du har allt du behöver. Ursäkta. Kan vi släppa handen nu? Just det, vi är ju klara. Se bara till om du också behöver en hjälpande hand. Och oss får du mer än bara inredning. Du får rågning hela vägen. Välkommen till Ladipproduktion.
Elet enastående person ligger på fjord korv redan, Jag tror att du är här det händer. Tre kor och sen har vi Agneta! Det händer. Vi på Schelleftekraft bygger nämligen ut elnätet så att fler får tillgång till förnybar el. För vi vill få Sveriges omställning att hända. Schelleftekraft, där det händer.
