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The True Trivia Episode | Kristina Tests Sara's Random Facts Knowledge image

The True Trivia Episode | Kristina Tests Sara's Random Facts Knowledge

S7 E14 · Laughing with Gingers
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A peek inside Sara's brain. Kristina quizzes Sara on random facts and she shows her work in her answers. You won't want to miss this episode.

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Transcript

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Introduction to Laughing with Gingerz

00:00:52
Speaker
It is very long. Hey.
00:00:59
Speaker
Thanks everybody for tuning in to Laughing with Gingerz. The podcasts were two feisty redheads with loud laughs, share crazy stories, play games, and spread Salinas and joy. That little traveling lady over there is my partner in crime on the Laughing with Gingerz podcast, Christina Curry. And that is Sarah Alopin, my little voting co-host. Laughing with Gingerz.
00:01:26
Speaker
Today in real time, as we record, it is 11 seven. So it's November 7. And I voted today and I'm wearing a silly shirt that I love that Christina teased me about on the podcast before like two years ago. I don't even remember. But listen, if you wear your voting shirt two weeks after voting,
00:01:47
Speaker
I'm going to poke fun at you. It was dirty enough it had to be washed, but it was not dirty enough that I needed to wash it and then it had to go away.
00:02:01
Speaker
was still wearing it.

Clothing Etiquette: Clean or Dirty?

00:02:03
Speaker
I know. Listen, you gave me very sage advice one day because I have those clothes where I'm like, it's not dirty enough to put in the laundry. But it's also not really clean enough to throw it back in the drawer, hang it up. And you're like, Listen, you need a chair that you just throw those clothes on to.
00:02:24
Speaker
And so I haven't gotten the chair yet. But I think of it every time I'm like, the shirt isn't dirty enough to go in the laundry, but it's not clean enough to go in my drawer. You can also get a floor basket, which is not to be confused with your hamper. It is just a big basket where you put your lightly used clothing in and then or hang it over the side or whatever.
00:02:51
Speaker
And it looks a little bit neater than throwing it on the bed or on the floor. Or I just need like a workout bike or something to put it on. Not to work out on. Yeah.
00:03:05
Speaker
They make great clothes hanging things. Accurate. Oh my God. Okay. Listen,

Surprise Game and Fun Facts

00:03:14
Speaker
you guys. Today's episode, Christina has taken over. It's a takeover. And I am surprising Sarah with a game that she has to play. And this game is called, is that a real fact or is that a fake fact?
00:03:32
Speaker
Oh, nine. So if we need that tiebreaker, I made it an odd number to make it like a weird tiebreaker. But I don't really know why we need a tiebreaker. It's only you. I'm just not like thinking about this. Well, because I could technically get four right and four wrong. Yeah, okay. Win or lose. Okay, thank you. Pass Christina was smart about this current Christina's like, Wait, what?
00:04:00
Speaker
What is what is answers and what are math? Math and numbers. Oh God, I'm excited. I did not know what I was in for today. It could have been anything and I showed up anyway.
00:04:16
Speaker
Yeah, and I feel like you are really good at random facts. I really wanted to challenge you in this comfort zone of yours just to see how comfortable you are. We'll see. It's 50-50.
00:04:31
Speaker
Oh yeah, it could go either way. I also tried to lay it out because they know how you are, how you try to game the system, and you're like, oh, she did one fake one, now one real one, now one fake one, now one real one. So I tried to be very random about how I lined it up. So just so you know, I added an extra layer of security for you and all those listeners out there that try to game the system.
00:05:01
Speaker
Oh, God. And I want you guys to all play along, please. Let us know how you did on Instagram later. All right. Let's do it. Okay. Here's the first one. If you hold in your farts long enough, the gas can be reabsorbed and come out of your mouth. False. Is this real?
00:05:25
Speaker
I don't know. I fact checked it. It came up as real. I know. It seems super weird. I mean, it's so long for it to travel backward up the system. Yeah. But, you know, gravity, air rise, hot air rises. It also says it's the best way to deal with gas. But honestly, just fart. That's the best way. I don't agree with the second statement.
00:05:55
Speaker
Well, yeah, I mean, I feel like it's probably healthiest not to send something back in the wrong direction in your body. It's like the way you phrase that is like, no fart, not today, go back up here. It's like you're telling it what to do.
00:06:19
Speaker
Oh, my God. Farts are funny. OK, number two, a cork corkette is actually the feminine noun of a cucumber. Oh, what? A corkette. C-O-U-R-G-E-T-T-E. Feminine noun of a cucumber. OK, what are those little tiny
00:06:46
Speaker
Cucumber is called. A gherkin. That's not what we call them in this house. We call them by the real name. Oh, it's not gherkin. Gherkin's not the real name. Those little like, you know. Gherkin is the English version of it. I mean, that's how I assume. Yeah, it's a super weird word. They have a different name, though, that is French, I think.
00:07:15
Speaker
What are the, oh my God, this is gonna join me nuts. I'm gonna say it's false. It is false.
00:07:29
Speaker
Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. It's like not even a cucumber, it's a zucchini. I was gonna say it doesn't sound right because it would have to be like a specific type of cucumber that has something done that is from a different country because cucumber is very much an English word.
00:07:50
Speaker
Yeah, yeah, exactly. So yeah, it's actually a word that they use in Malaysia, New Zealand, Britain, South Africa, blah, blah, blah. And it's loaned from the French, meaning like, I guess marrow. And I don't know why that would be. I mean, maybe zucchini is like a mirror. I don't know. But anyway, yeah, it has nothing to do with cucumbers or the feminine version of cucumbers.
00:08:19
Speaker
Corny shown is the word. Oh, is it gherkin? Yeah. Oh, you're teaching me. I was like, this is the only way that that could be a thing. I like the word gherkin better. That's more fun to say.
00:08:40
Speaker
It sounds so brutal. I know. I know. It's like a violent treatment of cucumbers. Yeah. All right. Okay. So the next one. Originally, the Fonz was going to wear a leather vest, but the popularity of the village people made them switch to a jacket. That would not surprise me. So you're saying it's true.
00:09:08
Speaker
And I know that there were a lot of changes that they made about the character when they brought on Henry Winkler. Who is who plays the Fonz? Yes. So I also wouldn't be surprised if that was the case because he got some like creative input and things that was he recently said in his memoir that that was the first time that he was able to fully access his own emotions when he stepped into the Fonz role.
00:09:38
Speaker
Oh, that's cool. I do know a lot of weird facts. Yeah. Yeah. Did you read his memoir? I did not. I saw an interview that he did with, I think, Stephen Colbert. Yeah. I didn't even know he had a memoir out, so.
00:10:05
Speaker
Everyone has one out these days. That's true. That feels like the thing that everyone did during the strikes is broke. To keep those writers employed. Got to do something. He was so busy. In all fairness, we are in full support of paying people what they deserve. Yes. So I'm going to say that that's probably true.
00:10:33
Speaker
It's false. Here's why. So ABC didn't want him to wear a leather jacket at all. They had very specific reasons for thinking that characters should dress differently. And it had to do like rebel without a cause and the whole like, it like felt very, felt too on the edge, you know? So the leather jacket came when the executive producer Gary Marshall made a deal with ABC.
00:11:02
Speaker
He said, okay, here's the deal. Yes, all right. You can use him in leather only when he's with his motorcycle. So because they wanted to sort of like pair it together, but then have him be more softer when he wasn't around his motorcycle.
00:11:20
Speaker
So what happened was they never wrote a scene without his motorcycle in it. So he was always standing next to it or his insider outside in the apartment didn't matter where he's like, I always had my motorcycle with me. And that's how I got out of the golf jacket and into leather. Oh my god, that's hysterical. I should have thought through the way you phrased the question to be because of the village people.
00:11:48
Speaker
Oh, yeah. Because like, is that even time wise line? I thought you might think that way of like, when timeline when does the village people line up with the, you know, fawns and happy days? I did think about that. But I think village people, even if it predates, they're still pretty close together. Yeah, yeah. And if village people does predate, then happy days, then it would have still been applicable.
00:12:19
Speaker
Yeah. But I was more thinking about Henry Winkler having creative control over some of the character and not so much the rest of it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:12:32
Speaker
I think we should do a whole episode on like things that TV shows like defied or got around like weird things they got around. It was sort of like they stuck it to him like, okay, cool. Then his motorcycle's in his apartment. It's going to the bathroom with him. It's in the bar. It's everywhere, you know? Yeah, that would be such a good episode for so many reasons. And we could do a specific to the Simpsons episode of that because there are other things too.
00:13:02
Speaker
that The Simpsons ended up, when it became mainstream, they stopped doing it. That's so interesting. I feel like there's so many shows that sort of like middle fingered the network and like, yeah, yeah, like Family Guy. Oh, my God.
00:13:20
Speaker
They definitely did that. I mean, there's a reason they got canceled. I was going to say a bunch of times that that's unfair. Yeah, it is unfair. But maybe, yeah, maybe it failed. Their middle finger failed for them. But they got brought back every time, so. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yep, yep. Here's the next one.

Sunglasses and Historical Trivia

00:13:48
Speaker
The first sunglasses were actually animal skin scraped so thin that it became transparent. So I saw something not very long ago on the Smithsonian channel about the first pair of sunglasses and it was like during one of the lithic periods. I want to say cavemen, but I realized that's a giant chunk of time and also how adorable cavemen and sunglasses
00:14:18
Speaker
So they were like slits like this. They actually mimicked. So I don't know how much you know about eye shape. But the reason that goats have eyes that go like this is because they're prey. And they're looking for those that can't see what she's doing. She's a horizontal versus cat eyes, which go vertical. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So prey, they go
00:14:48
Speaker
horizontal predators, they go vertical. And there's a bunch of science behind why that is the case. And of course, there are probably situations that that is not accurate. But this is like, historically speaking, a generalization, let's say, also not a scientist. And if you're coming to Laughing with Jinders to get your science facts, then please check them and diversify your news sources.
00:15:12
Speaker
even this game could be like not accurate. We are not professional researchers by any means. So they like it was like a single slit that went like the same way that goats eyes go like horizontal so that it would block some of the sun but still give them the like the ability to see predators.
00:15:40
Speaker
but I don't think there was anything over the slit. So I'm gonna say false.
00:15:51
Speaker
Yes, you're right. It's false. Okay, so here's what the first sunglasses actually were made of. So, they took flat panes of smoked corrots. Oh, this is way more recent than what I was talking about.
00:16:11
Speaker
Exactly. ITI translates to dark clouds. And so they didn't offer any kind of corrective powers, obviously, but it helped block the rays of the sun. And they were first used in China in the 12th century, possibly even earlier than that, they're speculating. So literally the first sunglasses were like rocks, which is so cool.
00:16:39
Speaker
I mean, that makes total sense. I'm also sure you could have taken some sort of animal skin and made sunglasses out of them. Like that's not, it's plausible that that would happen. Yeah. I feel like you could totally do that. Why not, you know? Yeah. I feel like it's more likely during the time when we use the whole animal, but, and I'm not sure the technology, well,
00:17:07
Speaker
I don't know, maybe magical things and dimension. They didn't use smoke courts. They used, you know, animal skin. It was a good question. Yeah, yeah. Okay. You're bioluminescent. That's right. You as a human is bioluminescent. The light just isn't perceivable to the human eye.
00:17:32
Speaker
I could see that as being totally feasible. You've seen the shrimp that can see a completely different color spectrum that I think would be the most overwhelming, insane thing that we would ever see. I think it would break your brain if you could put on the shrimp goggles. I want shrimp goggles. I'll get them for you for your birthday and send them to you in four years.
00:18:01
Speaker
I can't wait four years from now. But light is a very interesting thing in the way that it actually moves through. Objects is based completely on what we as humans see in our minds. So we imagine, you know, light being a very specific, like things looking a very specific way.
00:18:33
Speaker
But yeah, so I'm going to say that that's probably accurate. I bet you that shrimp does think we are bioluminescent. Yeah, you're right. Ding, ding, ding, ding. I can't remember what the shrimp is. It's the coolest shrimp. It's the coolest looking one. Oh my God, such a lucky shrimp.
00:18:58
Speaker
I might have to look this up while you tell me why this is correct. Well, that's it. That's it is correct. You are right. Like it's the you know, the way we like we can't see all the colors. We can't see that we're bioluminescent. It is the mantis shrimp. I thought it was. So we can process three channels of color, which is red, green and blue. The mantis shrimp can perceive the world through 12 channels of color and can
00:19:28
Speaker
detect UV light and polarized light aspects of light humans can't access through the naked eye. That's so freaking cool. How confusing. Well, and its eyes also move independently. So all of it is like, it would just break my brain to like be that if I had to change places with something, and that's what I changed places with.
00:19:53
Speaker
I would just have a seizure or something. Like my brain or like a stroke. They are just used to it. Like we, you know, we're all used to the things that our bodies have done since birth. So it's bodies done that since birth. But if I had to switch with it today, I would explode. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'd be like, this is the hardest acid trip I've ever been on. What is happening? Someone ground me.
00:20:21
Speaker
I need to touch seagrass. Take me to a patch of seagrass, please. And leave me be. Oh, man. Oh, God. Okay. All right. Here's another one.
00:20:39
Speaker
The air you breathe in a train station is 15% human skin. And if you think leaving a train station will save you from inhaling skin, just know that about 80% of the floating specks you see in a sunbeam are also skin. Well, dust, a lot of dust is skin cells. So I guess technically,
00:21:04
Speaker
Are we talking skin cells or skin? Now I'm getting really technical on you because you tricked me on the fonts one. We're just saying skin because that's all that I've been told. Okay. So dust, the majority of dust in your home is some sort of skin cell, whether it be hair particles, skin particles, all of that stuff. Like dander from dander is skin cells. So like,
00:21:33
Speaker
If you're allergic to pet dander, you are allergic to pet skin cells that slough off their body. Have you never thought about this? I mean, it's a thing that I know is a thing, but it's like breathing. Would like to not think about it. But I don't think about it. Yeah. So I think about these things.
00:21:56
Speaker
Um, so yeah, by the way, for those of you who aren't watching the video, Christina just made a very grossed out face. I was saying that which is why I asked if she had ever thought about it. Like how we have bugs on our skin and our eyelashes and whatever whatever like that just I can't think about it too much because then you know I spiral. Yeah, I mean, I just think of it like bacteria. I
00:22:23
Speaker
I try. Anyway, if it was a cockroach, it would not fall in that bucket or anything subterranean. Any subterranean bugs are not welcome in my house. Sprickets. Or on your eyelashes. No, but anything on my body, I tell myself it's like bacteria that is also alive and living in and on my body. I am a colony of life.
00:22:55
Speaker
Everyone turns off this podcast. For the one of you still listening. So I wouldn't know the percentages of that.
00:23:06
Speaker
So that would be the way that you could potentially get me here But it wouldn't surprise me especially given that most train stations are very old So, you know when you're thinking about train travel and whatnot like this is gonna be before airline travel So there is like Union Station has been open for how long? It's also one of the dirtiest places
00:23:34
Speaker
I guess it would not surprise me, so I will go with it's accurate, although I don't know the actual percentages, so you could totally be getting me there. It is accurate. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Oh my God, you have four check marks and two Xs. You're doing great. Thanks, Christina. You're always rooting for me when you try to trick me.
00:24:03
Speaker
I want you to win. Thanks. I always want you to win when I bring a game too. Even if it's haunted Victorian dolls. You're like, I want you to win these weird haunted Victorian dolls. Oh, God.
00:24:30
Speaker
Okay, let's head on over to Paris. And the Eiffel Tower has these bumps along the legs that spelled a French national motto in Braille.
00:24:44
Speaker
OK, so the Eiffel Tower was never intended to be a permanent installation. So it would it just gained so much popularity with tourism that they ended up leaving it. But I'm going to say they wouldn't have put that kind of legwork into something that was temporary because that is. Also, are you are you talking about like the where the screws are like we're not the screws, but like the
00:25:14
Speaker
Like the legs, the loop. Yeah, but are the bumps, are they decorative? Oh, no, no, different than the screws, different than the screws. Okay, so structurally, we don't have to consider that in this. Yeah, it was actually, it was intended to be turned into scrap metal. So I'm going to say they wouldn't have put that amount of effort into something they were going to tear down and turn into scrap metal. You did not know this, did you?
00:25:42
Speaker
I feel like this is a little known fact. I'm going to go with false. There is no Braille, French. What did you say was on there? French national motto. I'm going to say it's not there. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Okay, another check mark for you. Do you enjoy that I'm showing my work here? I know. This is a peek inside Sarah's brain.
00:26:12
Speaker
All right, there's no need for a tiebreaker, but I'm still going to give you the last two to give you a chance to win. Wait, you have five, six, seven checkmarks. Peaches and nectarines are the same fruit. A recessive gene can prevent them from being fuzzy, and that's what makes the difference.

Genetics and Biological Facts

00:26:33
Speaker
Is the fuzziness? We're recessive genes.
00:26:35
Speaker
Yeah, literally every gene I have is a recessive gene, except my height. Oh, there you go. I think. I'm average height, so that can't be recessive. I feel like no, I feel like average height is normal height, normal genes. Yeah, I feel like that has to be a dominant gene, right? Or else it wouldn't be average. Yeah.
00:27:03
Speaker
Now, do we each get a half a point for that? Okay, so nectarines have a recessive gene. So the reason that I'm leaning toward false here is going to be because you're only calling out the fuzziness and there's actually a difference in texture and taste.
00:27:25
Speaker
So, and actually there is a difference in the, I mean, I guess this could fall into the texture bucket, but there's a difference in the delicacy, like you drop it and it bruises or you drop it and it bursts. If you drop a nectarine, it doesn't like, it's somewhere between an apple and a peach. You drop it.
00:27:52
Speaker
and the bruising level, maybe more like a pear. Well, a little bit closer to a peach than a pear, but still on that spectrum where if you drop a peach, it could explode or it's going to have like that giant bruise. And so since you're only calling out the fuzziness in the recessive gene, I'm going to go with false. It's actually real.
00:28:19
Speaker
Okay. I mean, you can still fact check me but it's real. I mean, it's like that's why there's some bald people and some not bald people. Makes total sense. Three X's I mean, you're still winning by by enough. Okay, final question. Giraffes and humans have the same number of neck bones actually all males do.
00:28:48
Speaker
are not males, mammals. I mean, I guess males as well. Male mammals. I feel like I've read that somewhere. So that, well, I don't know about all mammals, but I feel like I read that about giraffes.
00:29:15
Speaker
And I thought it was odd, so I feel like I looked it up and fact-checked it in that moment. Always fact-check, friends. I know. If it's something that surprises you, always fact-check it, including stuff we share here. I'm going to say,
00:29:40
Speaker
It is accurate that giraffes have the same number of cervical vertebrae as humans. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Yes. All right. So we have six check marks and only three X's. You did so good on this quiz, Sarah. I mean, technically I still got a D.
00:30:10
Speaker
I mean, we're not looking at it from the teacher's lens. I'm looking at it of, oh, look, the check marks are a lot longer than the X's on my piece of paper. True. I mean, I got two thirds correct. And also, it's not like I studied for this pop quiz. Exactly. And you provided your own additional questions.
00:30:35
Speaker
You're like, and here's another question for you for next year's class. Basically, unlike every question.
00:30:48
Speaker
So I think that that was a win. That's a win in my eyes. Well, thanks. Yeah, yeah. All right. This was fun. I want to know how you did. What do I win? You win a really cute vote shirt. This was designed by my former student, Ty. Oh, I know that. Oh, that's right. It's all coming back to me now.
00:31:18
Speaker
I remember that part of the story. Good job, Ty. You did good. I like that. I like that shirt. He's pretty rad. He's pretty talented. Let us know how you guys did too. I'm curious if you got them all right or all wrong or three-fourths of the way correct.
00:31:43
Speaker
Did you get a D? Let us know if you beat me. Yeah. Because I got 66.66%. Which you're still passing and moving on to the next grade. It's fine. That's true. It's a D plus. And it's kind of like I didn't go to school the whole year and then just took the final two. Yeah. I think that's great. Thanks. I was definitely a student that slid by with Bs and Cs and some Ds.
00:32:12
Speaker
I've never gotten a D. Oh my God. I've gotten like S. I've gotten all the thing. I've like just not even take a test, you know, a zero. My high school history teacher still, I see him like all the time. When I go home, he still talks about the time that he couldn't accept my homework because there was someone else in there who turned in his homework late every day. And I had left mine in my locker and he didn't want to let me go during class.
00:32:41
Speaker
so he said I could go get it and come back. And I knew what was going on, so I tried to not be part of it. And he was trying to get rid of this other kid, so he called me forward forgetting and being so overwhelmed with what was going on with this other kid. And then I was like, you said you would take, I was like, no, I'll wait, I'll wait. And he was like, no, Sarah, let's go. Actually, he used to call me Sanimal.
00:33:13
Speaker
Sarah, the animal. So I had to give it to him and then he rejected it because he had to be consistent as a teacher, which I understand completely. And he still talks about having guilt. I am 40 years old. Oh, he needs to let that shit go. He was 28 at the time. Oh my God. Oh my God. You got to let it go, dude. It's okay, hot rod.
00:33:43
Speaker
pretty sure Sanimal made a really good life of her own. I still made it without that 15 point homework. Yeah, yeah, I think she's doing okay. Oh, man. All right, guys.

Engagement and Podcast Closure

00:34:03
Speaker
Listen, thanks for joining us on this episode today of laughing with gingers.
00:34:08
Speaker
We are so happy that you listened to our silly podcast. And if you like the show, give us a follow. I think that's where it matters more now. I don't know who effing knows what is going on with anything. What is time? But you can give us a follow rate and review on your preferred podcast platform. And we always get really excited to see what you all have to say.
00:34:30
Speaker
And follow us at Laughing with Ginger's on Instagram. Let us know how you did on the quiz. We'll post photos from stories, and we'll let you know when the next episode drops. I can't wait. And you can also send us funny stories, ideas for episode, or just general fun. We love hearing from you all. It's one of our favorite things.
00:34:52
Speaker
And get access to premium content, including ad-free episodes, swags, special events, access to us, and more. Start to just $3. Check us out at patreon.com slash laughing with Chingers. And tune in next week for more good times while I try not to burp as I say it. Bye. Bye. Bye. Hey, Christina. Hey, Sarah. Question. What's the first thing people notice when we meet them?
00:35:22
Speaker
Um, our loud laughs? Well wait, did you mean our ginger hair? Our hair, our hair! So it's really important that our hair actually looks good. That's where Love Song Beauty comes in. Their vegan, cruelty-free hair and body products keeps us looking like fiery redheads. That means there's not a ginger animal heart in the process.
00:35:49
Speaker
So if you want your hair to stand out, even if you're not a redhead, you can use the code ginger for a 10% discount. That's ginger to save 10% at love song beauty.com.