Official T-Shirts of Official Things

UPDATE (28 September): T-Shirt designs have been slightly amended to move the logo higher on the chest. We'll also be extending the sale deadline to October 5 to accommodate people who only learn of the shirts in episode 48. Sorry to anyone inconvenienced.

Despite CGP Grey's initial resistance, The Hello Internet Podcast now has an official bird and official rice rat.

I think it is entirely possible that we're the first podcast to appoint an official rice rat.

For a full explanation, listen to episode 47 (discussion from 1h33min onwards).

The chosen rice rat is the now extinct Jamaican Rice Rat.

And, controversially, our official bird is the Reunion Swamphen (not the African Penguin).

To mark the occasion, why not snap up one of these commemorative official T-shirts. Wear it with pride and tweet Grey a picture of it!

Various colours and designs available to suit your taste and gender. 

RICE RAT

More discussion of the t-shirt here at the start of episode 48.

Postcard Recipients

Some pictures from Numberphile fans who received our "89" postcard.

It's a limited edition of 89, but there are still a few left.

They deliberately come through the normal post without an envelope, so get all sorts of nice stamps and cancellation marks! 

@dan_lapsley was happy to get 55 - a palindrome!

@dan_lapsley was happy to get 55 - a palindrome!

@PAShanky was pleased to get 42

@PAShanky was pleased to get 42

Simon in Switzerland

Simon in Switzerland

Lance in San Diego

Lance in San Diego

@mathslinks may frame this one

@mathslinks may frame this one

Here's the video which the postcard is from...

Strange Australians?

There was a time when Europeans had no idea what people around the world would look like.

Maybe they'd look like this, with giant feet they could use to shelter from the sun?

This image is contained within Margarita Philosophica, a famous text book from the early 1500s.

We looked at various editions of the book at the Royal Society for Episode 34 of Objectivity.

And with the summer of cricket rivalry at its height,  it was unsurprising that librarian Rupert Baker (an Englishman) used the strange depictions to poke fun at me (an Australian).