1 00:00:00,600 --> 00:00:04,320 Speaker 1: Christ Yeah, welcome friends to the Christian O'Connell's show podcast. 2 00:00:04,680 --> 00:00:06,520 Speaker 2: Every week on the show, we on the search for 3 00:00:06,559 --> 00:00:10,120 Speaker 2: your amazing facts. They could be amazing, fascinating, they could 4 00:00:10,160 --> 00:00:11,600 Speaker 2: be kind of halfway. 5 00:00:11,200 --> 00:00:13,160 Speaker 3: There, mildly interesting. 6 00:00:13,440 --> 00:00:18,919 Speaker 2: Maybe they're just ninety four one four one four three 7 00:00:19,000 --> 00:00:20,720 Speaker 2: do we? How do you feel about playing the production here? 8 00:00:20,760 --> 00:00:24,640 Speaker 2: Again that's the spirit Jack always encourage the team. 9 00:00:25,280 --> 00:00:26,880 Speaker 4: Hey, you told me what you really thought? 10 00:00:29,560 --> 00:00:33,239 Speaker 3: Hey, hey, did you know that slugs have four noses? 11 00:00:34,120 --> 00:00:36,320 Speaker 3: What the fact? What the fact? What the fact? What 12 00:00:36,479 --> 00:00:39,199 Speaker 3: about about a good fat? I get where it is? 13 00:00:39,240 --> 00:00:39,440 Speaker 5: Now? 14 00:00:39,800 --> 00:00:40,519 Speaker 3: Fascinating? 15 00:00:40,880 --> 00:00:45,360 Speaker 2: Triple Jake, A couple of younger voices having a laugh 16 00:00:45,440 --> 00:00:46,839 Speaker 2: on them on we do it differently? 17 00:00:47,760 --> 00:00:50,920 Speaker 3: Alrighty, what the facts? What do we think of this? 18 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:53,480 Speaker 3: The team from Luke. 19 00:00:53,680 --> 00:00:56,760 Speaker 2: Every toad is a frog, but not every frog is 20 00:00:56,800 --> 00:01:04,640 Speaker 2: a toad? Lord Soft Star, guys soft. The word bed 21 00:01:06,040 --> 00:01:08,400 Speaker 2: is shaped like a bed. 22 00:01:09,959 --> 00:01:15,120 Speaker 4: That is brilliant. Only that's just coincidence though, But how 23 00:01:15,200 --> 00:01:16,039 Speaker 4: good the. 24 00:01:15,959 --> 00:01:20,319 Speaker 3: Word is bed? It is bed? How is that coincidence located? 25 00:01:22,800 --> 00:01:23,960 Speaker 4: That's so good? 26 00:01:24,080 --> 00:01:26,600 Speaker 2: But now obviously this is a sort of a visual one. 27 00:01:26,600 --> 00:01:29,520 Speaker 2: I'm looking at it here, typed out. It's pleasing ones. 28 00:01:29,600 --> 00:01:32,559 Speaker 2: You see it is shaped like a bed. The word bed. 29 00:01:32,600 --> 00:01:34,320 Speaker 3: I'm sorry, but I say, fascinating. 30 00:01:35,160 --> 00:01:38,280 Speaker 2: Adrian, you always see your nose, but your brain blocks 31 00:01:38,319 --> 00:01:38,680 Speaker 2: it out. 32 00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:41,199 Speaker 4: I have heard that and now sometimes to start looking 33 00:01:41,200 --> 00:01:42,679 Speaker 4: for it. 34 00:01:42,800 --> 00:01:48,040 Speaker 3: Fascinating or yeah, mid mildly interest. 35 00:01:49,040 --> 00:01:54,920 Speaker 2: Tracy cat's whiskers grow to the same width of the cat. 36 00:01:55,320 --> 00:01:59,080 Speaker 3: Shut the door. Die owning one guinea pig. 37 00:02:02,040 --> 00:02:03,280 Speaker 4: Next person's called. 38 00:02:05,280 --> 00:02:07,680 Speaker 3: Patsy. Just die, called up Bill toombs. 39 00:02:07,800 --> 00:02:11,440 Speaker 2: No die here, Diane, only one guinea pig. In Switzerland 40 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:14,720 Speaker 2: is considered animal abuse as being social creatures. 41 00:02:14,720 --> 00:02:18,079 Speaker 3: They struggle with loneliness. You have to have more than one. 42 00:02:18,240 --> 00:02:18,840 Speaker 3: I love that. 43 00:02:19,960 --> 00:02:21,960 Speaker 2: All right, let's go to the lines. Now we have 44 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:25,160 Speaker 2: another die on the line. Nobody died, please, Dina, Good morning. 45 00:02:25,520 --> 00:02:29,040 Speaker 5: Good morning, Christian Jack and text me here are you well? 46 00:02:29,160 --> 00:02:31,959 Speaker 2: Here, we're fining you. Okay, you're a little bit croaky. There, 47 00:02:31,840 --> 00:02:32,760 Speaker 2: are you right, Diana? 48 00:02:33,360 --> 00:02:36,320 Speaker 5: No, I'm sine, I've got. 49 00:02:35,880 --> 00:02:38,160 Speaker 3: Bills, got life one she ain't nice. 50 00:02:38,880 --> 00:02:41,519 Speaker 5: My one of my vocal cords is paralyzed. 51 00:02:45,880 --> 00:02:53,800 Speaker 6: Yeah, it is fascinating, It is fascinating, all right, So Diana, 52 00:02:53,919 --> 00:02:57,359 Speaker 6: what hello, You're still here? 53 00:02:57,360 --> 00:02:59,679 Speaker 3: I'm here, You're there, and what's your fact for us? 54 00:03:00,600 --> 00:03:05,080 Speaker 5: Did you know you can be bitten by a dead 55 00:03:05,200 --> 00:03:08,560 Speaker 5: snake for a few hours after it's died. 56 00:03:09,960 --> 00:03:10,680 Speaker 3: Fascinating? 57 00:03:10,760 --> 00:03:13,000 Speaker 4: What it's like a chicken running around with a ted car? 58 00:03:14,200 --> 00:03:17,480 Speaker 5: I was thinking too. Apparently it's true. And I had 59 00:03:17,520 --> 00:03:21,320 Speaker 5: a vision of like kids walking along going hey, mom, 60 00:03:21,360 --> 00:03:24,240 Speaker 5: there's a dead snake, and then chasing after its siblings 61 00:03:25,800 --> 00:03:26,840 Speaker 5: and then they get bitten. 62 00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:30,600 Speaker 3: Yeah, it's quite dark vision, isn't it. I got more 63 00:03:30,639 --> 00:03:35,640 Speaker 3: on ther give it to Timber and was one of 64 00:03:35,640 --> 00:03:39,400 Speaker 3: his movies. I have heard that being born in the bush. 65 00:03:39,440 --> 00:03:42,040 Speaker 1: My grandfather used to say, yeah, after he killed a 66 00:03:42,080 --> 00:03:44,400 Speaker 1: steak snake, don't go near it can still bite you. 67 00:03:44,440 --> 00:03:47,760 Speaker 4: And I thought it was But how does it do it? 68 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:48,280 Speaker 3: I don't know. 69 00:03:48,440 --> 00:03:51,720 Speaker 5: Is it blood still circulating the biting reflex yea, and 70 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:53,200 Speaker 5: the venom is still yeah? 71 00:03:54,240 --> 00:03:59,200 Speaker 3: Wow, I'm sorry, this is fascinating. That is a great one, Dina, 72 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:01,080 Speaker 3: that's a pretty one. Thank you very much. You give 73 00:04:01,160 --> 00:04:01,600 Speaker 3: us a call. 74 00:04:02,200 --> 00:04:03,520 Speaker 5: Thank you, Bye bye. 75 00:04:03,320 --> 00:04:09,280 Speaker 3: Bye, Ash, good morning, Hello, Christian, there we go. 76 00:04:10,200 --> 00:04:16,720 Speaker 2: More paralyzed course, Ash, good morning and yeah, yeah they 77 00:04:16,760 --> 00:04:17,080 Speaker 2: were good. 78 00:04:17,080 --> 00:04:17,960 Speaker 3: Ash. What's the fact. 79 00:04:18,600 --> 00:04:22,360 Speaker 1: There's over seven and a half thousand different varieties of apples. 80 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:29,159 Speaker 3: M that is interesting. Lot, it's a lot. 81 00:04:29,520 --> 00:04:32,599 Speaker 1: That's not something you would have thought that they'd true. 82 00:04:32,760 --> 00:04:36,160 Speaker 3: You're right, you're right, right, but mildly interesting. All right, 83 00:04:36,200 --> 00:04:37,600 Speaker 3: thank you for that one. Ash is going to add 84 00:04:37,640 --> 00:04:39,840 Speaker 3: him here. Adam, what the fact where you got for it? 85 00:04:39,920 --> 00:04:42,080 Speaker 3: You've got a dinosaur one, correct. 86 00:04:42,360 --> 00:04:45,440 Speaker 1: Hey, guys love the show. So my fact is there 87 00:04:45,520 --> 00:04:48,960 Speaker 1: is a bigger time gap between when the Stegosaurus lived 88 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:52,240 Speaker 1: and the Tyrannosaurus Rex than when the Tyrannosaurus Rex lived 89 00:04:52,279 --> 00:04:53,120 Speaker 1: and today. 90 00:04:54,400 --> 00:04:55,680 Speaker 4: I have heard that sort of thing. 91 00:04:55,800 --> 00:04:56,680 Speaker 3: I haven't. 92 00:04:56,760 --> 00:05:01,560 Speaker 2: I've heard the one about Cleopatra and the Ipho. Tell 93 00:05:01,640 --> 00:05:03,320 Speaker 2: me that way again. I love a dinosaur. 94 00:05:03,320 --> 00:05:09,560 Speaker 6: Foss Breachtegosaurus and Tyrannosaurus Rex lived further apart than what 95 00:05:09,640 --> 00:05:12,000 Speaker 6: you and I do today to the Tyrannosaurus Rex. 96 00:05:12,440 --> 00:05:14,920 Speaker 3: Wow, I thought they coexisted at the same time. 97 00:05:15,640 --> 00:05:18,520 Speaker 1: No, there's about a I think there's about a seventy 98 00:05:18,560 --> 00:05:21,040 Speaker 1: million year gap between them, or an eighty million year 99 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:23,360 Speaker 1: gap between them, And there's only sixty five million years 100 00:05:23,400 --> 00:05:25,520 Speaker 1: between us and the two rectly. 101 00:05:25,680 --> 00:05:29,320 Speaker 2: Sixty can you say the word only in front of 102 00:05:29,400 --> 00:05:30,440 Speaker 2: sixty five million? 103 00:05:30,839 --> 00:05:33,240 Speaker 3: I'm not sure. Adam. That is a great one. I 104 00:05:33,279 --> 00:05:37,160 Speaker 3: love it. Fascinating, Thank you very much. I might cut 105 00:05:37,279 --> 00:05:40,720 Speaker 3: off there, jagged enough of that one, is it? Ryan? 106 00:05:40,760 --> 00:05:43,960 Speaker 3: Good morning? How are you Christian? I'm good Ryan? How 107 00:05:43,960 --> 00:05:44,680 Speaker 3: are you? 108 00:05:44,760 --> 00:05:44,960 Speaker 5: Yeah? 109 00:05:45,040 --> 00:05:48,400 Speaker 3: Good mate? What's your thing for us? Ryan? The goldfish 110 00:05:48,480 --> 00:05:50,919 Speaker 3: have a better memory in cold water than they're doing 111 00:05:50,920 --> 00:05:56,279 Speaker 3: warm water. Kids, Do not try this at home, okay, 112 00:05:56,360 --> 00:05:57,200 Speaker 3: don't put them in the spa. 113 00:05:58,040 --> 00:06:02,919 Speaker 4: Fascinating in the hot water, they're just trying to survive. 114 00:06:02,960 --> 00:06:06,720 Speaker 3: No time to remember things. Ryan, that's a great one. 115 00:06:06,760 --> 00:06:10,040 Speaker 3: Thank you very much. Thank you. Is he getting high 116 00:06:10,160 --> 00:06:11,920 Speaker 3: or something? It's just a bit too giggy for this 117 00:06:11,960 --> 00:06:14,359 Speaker 3: time of the morning. Uh. There, we got a race, 118 00:06:15,120 --> 00:06:17,719 Speaker 3: how are you? Yeah? Good race? What the facts? What 119 00:06:17,800 --> 00:06:19,600 Speaker 3: have you got for us? Right? 120 00:06:19,720 --> 00:06:21,880 Speaker 1: We're driving the Beth Thirst and we had a discussion 121 00:06:22,320 --> 00:06:26,000 Speaker 1: and humming birds are the only birds that can fly backwards? 122 00:06:27,200 --> 00:06:28,800 Speaker 4: What do you mean you had a discussion about it? 123 00:06:28,839 --> 00:06:29,960 Speaker 4: Either it's a fact or it's not. 124 00:06:30,320 --> 00:06:32,239 Speaker 3: No, we discussed it. It's a fact. 125 00:06:33,120 --> 00:06:33,880 Speaker 4: That's pretty interesting. 126 00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:37,640 Speaker 3: You've so nowhether bird can reverse? Yes? 127 00:06:38,120 --> 00:06:44,440 Speaker 2: No, yes, no, yeah, no, fascinating. I like you about her. 128 00:06:44,839 --> 00:06:47,680 Speaker 2: Fat there, Thank you very much. Reese's squeezing Ricky. 129 00:06:47,720 --> 00:06:53,640 Speaker 1: Now, Ricky, Hello, Ricky, Yeah, how you going. I've got 130 00:06:53,640 --> 00:06:59,360 Speaker 1: another whole of the world one for you added everything 131 00:06:59,520 --> 00:07:02,520 Speaker 1: elder in the world. The soulful pressed cockatoo is the 132 00:07:02,520 --> 00:07:03,799 Speaker 1: only one that's left handed. 133 00:07:07,320 --> 00:07:09,760 Speaker 3: I love that left handed. 134 00:07:09,720 --> 00:07:12,800 Speaker 1: Because they're artistic. You see there are and what are 135 00:07:12,800 --> 00:07:13,160 Speaker 1: they doing? 136 00:07:13,440 --> 00:07:15,120 Speaker 4: What do they do with their left handed left wing? 137 00:07:15,240 --> 00:07:16,360 Speaker 4: That lets people know. 138 00:07:16,960 --> 00:07:18,680 Speaker 1: So when they're when they're feeding and stuff, when you 139 00:07:18,720 --> 00:07:21,600 Speaker 1: see them scraunging around, picking things up and doing their thing, 140 00:07:21,880 --> 00:07:24,119 Speaker 1: they always eat with their left hand or left foot. 141 00:07:24,360 --> 00:07:26,400 Speaker 4: I thought they pecked things off the ground with their beat. 142 00:07:26,320 --> 00:07:28,640 Speaker 3: That's what I thought. I've never seen them use their 143 00:07:28,760 --> 00:07:32,520 Speaker 3: the wings or not their wing wing. 144 00:07:33,560 --> 00:07:35,240 Speaker 1: They would fly with their wings, but they eat with 145 00:07:35,280 --> 00:07:39,840 Speaker 1: their feet, with their feet like toes. Right right, yeah, 146 00:07:40,000 --> 00:07:44,360 Speaker 1: well left handed, so left footed safety almost gotcha? 147 00:07:44,680 --> 00:07:50,000 Speaker 3: Gotcha? All right, Ricky, thank you very much. You're listening 148 00:07:50,120 --> 00:07:52,280 Speaker 3: to the christ you know Carl's Show podcast