Paul?
It's Bob Wilson.
You've won the Nobel Prize, and so they're trying to reach you, but they cannot.
They don't seem to have a number for you.
We gave them your cell phone number.
Yeah, I have.
Wow.
That was the moment at two in the morning, Californian time,
when U.S. academic Robert Wilson had to rouse his sleeping neighbour and Stanford University colleague Paul Milgram to deliver the news
that the two had just won the 2020 Nobel Prize for Economics,
a moment preserved for us all to enjoy on Paul's doorcam.
Although there are many rumours every year, there's no shortlist,
so it always comes as a surprise for those who win what is one of the most globally revered academic awards.
The Nobel Prizes were established in 1900 at the behest of Alfred Nobel,
a Swedish chemist, inventor and industrialist, known in particular for his invention of dynamite.
In his will,
he stated that his fortune was to be used to reward those who have made the most significant contributions to humanity.
The prizes would recognise achievements in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and peace.
Economics would come much later in 1968.
The prizes are awarded in October every year.