Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - Andrew Bird
Episode Date: December 17, 2022Singer-songwriter and world class whistler Andrew Bird plays our game called, "Put Your Lips Together and Blow" Three questions about referees. Joining him are panelists Adam Burke, Tom Papa, and Zain...ab Johnson.Sign up for Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm not Gen Z, I'm Gen B, Bill Curtis.
And here is your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois,
from the greatest generation, Peter Sago.
Thank you, Bill.
Thank you, everybody.
We have a great show for you today, of course.
Later on, we're going to be joined here on stage by Chicago's own Andrew Bird,
the acclaimed musician who is, among many, many other things,
the greatest whistler alive. He is to whistling what Bill Curtis is to just talking.
That's high praise indeed.
We want you to whistle while we work, so give us a call. The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924.
Now, let's welcome our first listener contestant. How you doing? Wait, wait, don't tell me.
Hi, Peter. How are you? It's Scott Applebaum calling from Philadelphia.
Hey, how are things in one of our favorite cities, Philly?
Oh, Peter, it's always sunny in Philadelphia.
I've heard that. I've heard that. What do you do there?
I work in pharmaceuticals. I'm a pharmaceutical lawyer.
Are you really?
What sort of devious things do pharmaceutical lawyers have to do?
We're the ones who make sure that we don't do the devious things.
We just spend our time helping everyone live healthy lives.
Oh, that is a good line.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week, Scott.
First, his new stand-up comedy special, What a Day,
just debuted and is available now on Netflix.
It's Tom Papa.
Hey.
Hi, Tom.
Hello.
Next, a comedian who will be headlining Zany's in Chicago
on January 16th.
It's Adam Burke.
Hello.
Hi, Billy. Hi, Adam. And making her debut on our panel,
a comedian and actor, you can see an upload on Amazon Prime. It's Zainab Johnson. Hey.
Hi, Zainab. Hi. Scott, welcome to the show. You're going to play Who's Bill this time.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three quotations from this week's news.
If you can correctly identify or explain two of them, you will win our prize,
the voice from our show that you might choose on your voicemail.
Are you ready to go?
Yes, I am.
All right, let's do it then.
Here is your first quote.
I burst into tears and I was jumping up and down in the waiting room.
That was a physicist describing the moment she found out her lab in California
had accomplished what scientific breakthrough?
Something about nuclear fusion.
Nuclear fusion, yes, indeed.
Nuclear fusion, yes.
Yay, nuclear fusion.
Nuclear, it turns out nuclear fusion
is not just a disgusting energy drink
that your teenage son is obsessed with.
It's a very big deal.
Now, the reason this is important is because what nuclear power plants do now is fission.
And that involves ripping an atom apart, leaving a lot of waste.
While fusion involves smashing atoms together.
And if you need more detail than that, just ask the most tedious person you know.
When you say smash atoms, you don't mean Adam Burke, right?
No, I don't. I've tried that. It generates no energy. In fact, I just get tired.
Okay. You think this is really going to take off because I have made a substantial investment in a windmill in Iowa.
And I was pretty confident that that's the way we were going.
Pretty much.
Have you tried smashing the windmills together?
Actually, there was only one.
It was in this guy's yard.
Is that not how windmills work?
In fact, there are people who are like, come on, we've got solar panels.
Those are great.
We've got wind power.
Why aren't you excited about that?
But here's the thing.
Fusion.
That's like, that's the stuff that powered the spaceships in Star Wars and Star Trek.
And even better, fusion powers the DeLorean in Back to the Future 2.
That means that as of this week,
we are a vital step closer to being able to kiss
our young, hot moms.
It's nice to hear fusion being used for something
other than an awful culinary mashup.
Exactly, yes.
Like the worst music
you've ever heard. It's
amazing that when they turn on the fusion reactor, what
you get out of it is like kimchi on a taco.
You're like, whoa.
Zainab, were you excited by this announcement,
as all the geeks were?
I mean, I would like to be, but I don't
know. The reason, the way
I read it was that now we'll have to pay for
the sun. Right. I wouldn it was that now we'll have to pay for the sun.
Right.
I wouldn't put a bathroom if like what they did was they figured out how to bill us for sunlight.
All right.
Here is your next quote, Scott.
Put your mask back on. That was not you talking to another passenger in the bus this morning.
It was a warning from a doctor at Vanderbilt University about what new health threat we are facing this winter. Would that be COVID?
It is COVID. I'm going to give it to you because it's not just COVID. It's COVID plus the flu plus
a disease known as RSV. It is the tripledemic. The tridemic. The tridemic, the tripledemic,
The tripledemic.
The tridemic.
The tridemic, the tripledemic, the disease threesome, wherever you want to go with it.
It's fine.
Free virus here. So COVID, which is still with us, and it's made even worse this year because we have the tripledemic.
That's when you have the COVID plus the flu and the RSV, and you've won the Belmont Stakes.
Why do they always come up with the cool names for bad stuff?
Yeah.
Like tripledick is pretty cool
Yeah
You know, or Tri-Demick
It does sound like a late-career Sylvester Stallone movie
It sounds scary, but it is very convenient, isn't it?
I mean, we were so close to having to go home to see our families this Christmas
Oh no, it's the Triple Demick
Just in a nick of time our families this Christmas. Oh no, it's the triple-demic.
Just in a nick of time.
It's not a triple-demic,
it's a Christmas miracle.
Now doctors do say that there's no reason to worry about a quadruple-demic
that's only been landed in competition once.
All right, Scott, here is your last quote. Being a wife is really draining.
That was somebody telling the New York Times about why she and her husband are trying the
latest thing in relationships, being married but living how? Maybe in separate houses? Yes,
exactly. Living apart. More and more married couples are finding...
I love the audience is like, that sounds good.
Except for one guy in the back was like, yes!
The one guy whose wife's not here.
Exactly.
She's in a different theater.
More and more couples apparently are finding that the secret to happiness is sleeping in separate beds,
which are themselves located in separate houses.
But you want really true married bliss,
fake your own death, move to another country.
This does sound kind of nice.
I don't know.
I've been married 22 years,
and I never thought about living apart, but I thought that we should get a girlfriend.
No, just, everybody wins.
You should each get a girlfriend, or a girlfriend for the couple?
For us. For the house.
For the table.
Exactly.
I would say it could be a boyfriend, but that's going to be trouble because it's a guy.
So a girl just to be there and to fill in for all the stuff we don't want to do after 22 years, which is a lot.
I'm not quite sure where you're going with this.
No, no.
I know where he's going with this.
He's going to divorce court.
So this is what happened.
The Times profiled three couples who said they found that they needed to inhabit their
own spaces to pursue their passions, and the constant presence of the other was smothering
to their spirits.
By the end of the article, you didn't want to live with any of them either.
I mean, people have been doing this already, right?
Women have she sheds.
Right.
Guys have the bathroom.
I'm just going to say, assuming that's correct,
that doesn't sound fair.
Like, I'm going to have this beautiful space just for myself, and you can have the bathroom.
You guys chose the bathroom.
Oh.
I think you'll find this bathroom chose us.
Bill, how did Scott do on our quiz?
Scott was perfect.
Boy, you've been practicing, Scott.
Congratulations, Scott.
Well done. Thank you so much for practicing, Scott. Congratulations, Scott. Well done.
Thank you so much for playing, Scott.
Thank you very much.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Zainab, science has now proven something we have always known.
Women are just not attracted to men who don't do what?
So many answers.
They proved one.
First one that comes to mind.
Or maybe not that one.
Maybe the second one.
I'm going to go with the 14th one.
Who don't walk on the outside of the sidewalk.
That's pretty...
I said the 14th one.
That's interesting.
That's pretty classic.
I'm going to give you the answer
because the fact of the matter is
the answer is women are just not attracted to men who don't do anything.
And that counts as something.
Sorry, my bros, but the era of the man-child is officially over.
Now, you've heard this story.
A lot of straight men say that once they move in with their girlfriend
or they get married, their partner loses sexual interest in them. And now we know why. Well, men now know why. Women are like, duh.
Playing video games, does that count as something?
Well, remember, no. Remember, the problem is, is that if a woman feels like she's taking care of
a child, all her sexual romantic interest will vanish because, you know. So think, is a video game something like a grown-ass man would do?
Unless, unless, unless that child is a billionaire. I said it.
There you are. I will say, this is true. I was playing a video game once and part of the video
game was to clean up the house.
Really?
And I was like, if my girlfriend finds me doing this,
she's going to murder me.
Really?
You're actually like, you're pressing X, A, Y, B,
and that moves the guy around the house,
and he's like putting the dishes away?
I'm cleaning up a virtual house while surrounded in filth.
Don't just sit there.
Coming up, it's a souped-up
Luff the Listener game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT-TO-PLAY.
We'll be back in a minute
with more Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
We are playing this week with Tom Papa, Zainab Johnson, and Adam Burke.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thank you, everybody.
You're very kind. From Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segal. Thank you, Bill. Thank you, everybody.
You're very kind.
Right now it's time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff, the listener game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to play our game on the air.
Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi there.
My name is Natasha, and I am a recent transplant to Chicago, Illinois.
Hey, welcome.
Welcome.
Where did you come from and why? Yeah, good question. I'm asking myself that right now.
Hey, Lewis, and for some career opportunity. Oh, wow. That's great. Well, welcome to town.
It's great to have you enjoying it so far, I hope. I am. I am. It's a beautiful city and I
live right on a park, so really get to enjoy the outdoors. Yeah, and I know the weather is bad now, but by
August, it will be
nice.
I'll move Memorial Day weekend, so I came
just for the best part, and now it's
offering. And now
you know.
We fooled you. Natasha, welcome
to the show. You're going to play our game on which you must
try to tell truth from fiction. Bill, what is Natasha's
topic? Christina was face down in a bowl of soup.
You've heard of, it was the best of times, it was the worst of times. You've heard of,
it was a dark and stormy night. Well, we found the real best sentence ever to start a story.
Christina was face down in a bowl of soup. We found the story in the week's news. Each of our
panelists are going to
tell you one that begins with that sentence, but only one of them is real. Your job, pick that
story. Do that and win the voicemail of your choice from anyone on our show. Ready to do this?
All right. Your first story comes from Adam Burke. Christina was faced down in a bowl of soup, much to the
alarm of the other diners at the Taste
of Tokyo ramen stop in
Portland, Oregon. Not so her sister,
Stella Wilshire, who
sat across from her filming the episode
on her phone while giggling hysterically,
especially when Christina spat
out the straw she had been using to
breathe and exclaimed,
I should have waited it for it to cool down first.
So it is with the latest viral TikTok trend,
urban snorkeling,
in which participants are urged to submerge their heads,
and if they can, their whole bodies,
in various containers of liquid,
and then post the results.
Part of the allure of the trend
is capturing the bewildered
reactions of passers-by.
Some people say it's a political statement about
the decline of natural snorkeling environments
around the globe, says Clyde Talbot,
assistant professor of media
studies at Colorado State University,
whereas I think kids
just like doing dumb stuff.
Christina was face down in a bowl of soup
as part of a TikTok trend called urban snorkeling.
Your next soupy salesperson is Zainab Johnson.
Christina was facedown in a bowl of soup
when her loving husband, Craig Spearman,
returned home from his job as a biology professor at Iowa State.
Knowing his wife had been exhausted the past few months
working on her doctorate thesis, he decided the best way to take care of his wife had been exhausted the past few months working on her
doctorate thesis, he decided the best way to take care of his wife was to just let her sleep.
The following morning when she woke up, she was not only well rested, but her skin was glowing.
According to Professor Spearman's analysis, the salt content of the soup at room temperature left
to soak on her skin acted as a natural and gentle exfoliate.
And the vegetables, mostly broccoli and cauliflower, are high in vitamin C and antioxidants.
Both Christina and her husband have quit their jobs and are now marketing their new beauty treatment as skin soup or as the influencers are calling it, hashtag soup facing.
influencers are calling it hashtag soup facing. Drew Barrymore recently tried it on her daily talk show and she said after that she felt great, she looked younger and smelled delicious.
Christina was facedown in a bowl of soup and discovered a new skin treatment.
Your last stew story comes from Tom Papa. Christina was facedown in a bowl of soup and discovered a new skin treatment. Your last stew story comes from Tom
Papa. Christina was face down in a bowl of soup, but why? Even if Christina really loved the soup,
why would she eat it that way? Maybe Christina was just playing around, or maybe Christina was dead.
That's what someone thought when they saw her through the window. They thought it looked
odd, a fully dressed woman sitting at a table for two, for over two hours, not moving with her head
face down in a bowl of soup. That's when the unidentified passerby called the police.
About 20 minutes later, officers forced entry to the address where they uncovered that the person who was indeed face down in a bowl of soup was in fact a mannequin.
The police didn't know it at first, but they were actually in an art gallery owned by Banksy's former agent.
The mannequin was a work by American artist Mark Jenkins.
The mannequin was a work by American artist Mark Jenkins.
Jenkins' Christina was commissioned by the gallery director who wanted a portrayal of his sister of the same name
who passed out and buried her face in a bowl of soup.
Is that real sister who was facedown in a bowl of soup still alive?
Only Banksy knows.
All right.
only Banksy knows.
All right.
The one thing we do know is that Christina was face down in a bowl of soup,
but was it from Adam Burke,
part of a new TikTok craze called urban snorkeling?
Was it from Zaynab,
the discovery of a new skin treatment,
or was it from Tom Papa,
an artwork that in fact was so realistic
that the police were called and broke into the art gallery?
Which of these is the real story from the week's news?
They're all pretty dark, but I'm going to go with C.
All right, so your choice is Tom's story
about Christina with her face down in a bowl of soup being a statue.
To find out the correct answer,
we spoke to someone familiar with the true story.
Officers have broken into their gallery
and it's actually just a sculpture.
That was
Deborah Wright.
She's director of another art gallery,
Cultivate 712 in Waco, Texas.
She was talking about the talk of the gallery,
seeing the sculpture mistaken for a
soup emergency. Congratulations,
Natasha. You got it right. You've won
a point for Tom Papa,
just for telling the truth. And you've won the voice of anyone you might choose from our show
for your voicemail. Thank you so much and welcome to town. Come down and see us live sometime.
Thank you so much. I will. Take care. Take care. Bye-bye.
And now the game where people with multiple talents
are given the opportunity to use none of them.
Andrew Bird grew up around here, north of Chicago,
as a student of the violin,
but he didn't really love classical music.
Instead, he devoted himself to playing folk music
and then swing and pop,
and eventually his own style,
which has been called a lot of things,
but is really just Andrew Bird.
He always comes back home this time of year to do a series of beloved holiday concerts
and we are delighted he could join us here.
Andrew Byrd, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you.
I spent a fair amount of time trying to find somebody who would define your style and I
couldn't.
Can you? Can you say, Andrew
Bird's music is? I wish I could have get me out of a lot of awkward elevator conversation. Really?
New conversations like, oh, you're a musician. What do you play? And you're like, you don't want
to know. Yeah. Um, I guess it's kind of experimental songwriting, pop, indie rock.
Right. Right. Do gives a hyphenated...
Yeah, just keep adding hyphens.
Eventually you'll describe it.
And is it true that, as I said,
you grew up, you were a student of the violin
when you were a young kid,
but you didn't actually groove the classical music too much?
Well, I did.
I learned the Suzuki method from early age.
That's when you play violin riding on a motorcycle.
Exactly, yeah.
Yeah. Violin is hard, but doing that is really, um, I just wanted to write my own music. Really?
Yeah. Really. Do you, uh, do you have like your first songs that you wrote back when you started
writing your own songs? Yeah. Um, the first one I wrote was, I think it was called Nothing Doing Waltz, and it was about
a dog with a nasal disease.
Okay, I'm going to say it right there.
I mean, that's just branching off from the typical path, because most guys and girls
write their first songs about love or loneliness or homesickness or something like that, and
you were like dog
with a nasal disease? Well, it was
about loneliness and love. The dog was a
subplot, I suppose. But it's the most
memorable thing about the song. Really?
I think the line was, I'm just
an old ute with a cane made a root
and a dog with a nasal disease.
Beat that, Billie eilish i have to ask you about whistling uh you are truly one of the great whistlers if there's a
better one i don't know it uh i have a lot of questions did you have to devote as much time
to learning to whistle as well as you do no as you did to say the violin no that's the thing it's
like the violin is so difficult and there's all sorts of contortions takes years to to to to
master it and then the thing you do when you're doing the dishes becomes where the money is right
isn't that funny it occurs to me that you have a certain disadvantage. Most musicians, you know, are not walking around carrying their guitar.
So people won't say, oh, wow, it's you.
Can you play me a song?
But you are always ready to whistle.
So do you get like requests from people who recognize you in elevators or other places?
No, no, no.
But do you ever like whip it out at parties, for example?
Whoa, whoa.
Peter, Peter.
Look, I expected better from all of you.
You're a public radio audience, act like it.
We expected better of you.
The whistling.
Like, oh, you're at a oh you start whistling and start gathering
people so many better ways to phrase that i i did find myself at a fancy party in new york
that was thrown by like vanity fair and interview magazine and it was a music
people party and i was at like the indie rock kids table So it was me and Joanna Newsome and peaches and
Those are cool because it wasn't actually like a little small table the side of the room like in the kitchen
It felt that way I felt like the kids table because the the guests of honor were
John Bon Jovi and Mariah Carey
Okay, big kids table. So I had a few drinks and I went over to talk to Mariah
And she said oh, what do you do?
And I said, I'm a songwriter and violinist and I whistle.
And she goes, oh, I whistle with my throat.
Okay.
And I said, yes, you do, Mariah Carey.
You whistle with your throat.
That's her thing.
Like that super high, like squeezed.
And then she said, hey, let's jam.
Yeah.
And we started, I don't know, we just started with sitting on the dock of the bay.
But we were sort of trading fours.
And she would do four bars, whistle.
All right.
I really wasn't going to do this
because I assumed
that you would find this annoying, but I'm going
to do it anyway. Could you share
some of like what you were whistling with
Mariah Carey? Please.
Please.
And that
Zaynab's going to do the Mariah part.
Exactly.
I mean, I couldn't think...
The first thing I thought of was sitting on the dock of the bay,
so I just whistled.
And then she did, like...
I don't know.
We're not going to do that.
No, we're not.
But I...
See, ever since that day, I always thought,
it'd be great if I could reach out to Mariah Carey
and we could do a slow jam duet.
Yeah.
And all I know is that the video,
there's going to be lots of candles and lots of sex.
Oh, very romantic.
Very romantic.
That'd be pretty amazing.
Yeah.
Well, Andrew Bird, it is a delight to have you here.
We have asked you here this time to play a game we're calling
Put Your Lips Together and Blow.
As we have discussed, you are known for whistling,
so we thought we'd ask you about other people who are famous for whistling,
referees.
Answer two or three questions correctly, you'll win our prize for one of our listeners,
the voice of their choice on their voicemail. Bill, who is Andrew Bird playing for?
Ken Alba of Boston, Massachusetts.
All right.
All right.
You ready?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
NFL referee Ben Dreith went down in history after the Jets' Marty Lyons tackled the Bills quarterback and then started punching the quarterback repeatedly.
The ref gave Lyons a 15-yard penalty for what?
A, quote, really, really unnecessary roughness.
B, quote, giving him the business down there.
Or C, reckless endangerment of his own fist.
B. Andrew chose B, and you sons of guns are all wrong, and he's right. It was B. 15-yard penalty for giving him the business down there.
All right. Next question. During a soccer game in Britain
in 2009, both teams got frustrated with the referee's constant whistling, but all was
forgiven after they realized what? A, the referee had a sinus infection, was just breathing.
B, the whistling was coming from a parrot who had learned to imitate the sound of a ref.
Or C, the ref was in love and simply had a song in his heart he couldn't contain.
to the sound of a ref, or C, the ref was in love and simply had a song in his heart he couldn't contain?
I like C, but I'm going to go with A, I think.
You're going to go with A.
He had a sinus infection and was just breathing.
Yeah.
That's some sinus infection.
No, it was actually B, the parrot.
There was a parrot in the stadium
that was imitating the sound of the whistle.
And once they figured that out, they banned the parrot from the match.
Because that would have been confusing.
You might want to get that parrot for your band.
I'm just saying.
All right.
It's okay.
If you get this one right, you win.
Last question.
A ref named Andy Wayne did something in another English soccer match that has never been done before or since.
What was it?
A, after it started pouring in the middle of the match,
he called a penalty on God.
B, frustrated with one team's very poor performance,
he just ran in and kicked in a goal himself.
Or C, he gave himself a red card
and removed himself from the match.
So,
yellow card to God.
Second choice
was he just got frustrated,
ran in, kicked the ball in.
Yeah, or C, gave himself a red
card, removed himself from the match.
I can't see a ref
being that
apologetic about anything.
You know, turning on themselves like that.
So I'm going to say...
Really?
Is your experience with refs is that they're just too arrogant to do something like that?
You have to have this resolve, you know.
If you give a little weakness, they'll tear you apart.
That's true.
But of course, if you throw yourself out
you're not there to be torn apart
Andrew I'm not trying to tell you anything
but listen for the clue
yeah I'm picking up a little something
picking up what I'm putting down here
I haven't mentioned I'm a big fan
he kicked himself out of the match
he did do that
he showed himself a red card.
What happened was
he got very angry
at a player and he sort of squared
himself up to fight the guy
and then he realized what he had done. He held up
a red card at himself and he walked off the pitch.
True story.
Bill, how did Andrew Bird do in our quiz?
He whistled a winning tune.
Two out of three.
Pretty good.
Pretty good.
I don't think Mariah Carey could have done that.
Andrew Bird's new album is Inside Problems.
You can see him now on tour.
Andrew Bird, thank you so much for coming down and joining us.
Andrew Bird, everybody.
In just a minute, Bill is making a limerick list and checking it twice.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
We are playing this week with Zainab Johnson, Adam
Burke, and Tom Papa.
And here again is your host
at the Studebaker Theater in
Chicago, Illinois, Peter
Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
In just a minute, Bill tells the
wild things to let the wild reimpus start in our listener limerick challenge.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Right now, a panel of some more questions for you from the week's news.
Tom, a lot of our listeners enjoy taking their reusable tote bags
to the grocery store instead of buying those
wasteful single-use plastic bags when this week CNN reported exactly how many times you need to
use one of those cloth tote bags to make it more eco-friendly than the plastic bag. How many times?
I believe the exact number is 239.
That's not true.
Oh.
I'm going to make this a little easier for you.
Okay.
I'm going to give you the point if you guess within 2,000 of the right number.
Wow.
Really?
Really.
Oh.
2,001 times.
No, I'm afraid not. The answer is 7,100 times.
7,100 times.
I'm pretty sure I said that.
Plastic bags end up in the ocean,
and the clerk at Whole Foods always silently judges you when you use them.
But the production of a single cloth tote bag
creates a much larger carbon footprint with all the manufacturing than a plastic one.
So if you really want to help the environment, just remember to take your bag to the store every single day for 19 and a half years.
Oh, my God.
Whoa.
I've got to say, I'm surprised at this anti-tote bag propaganda coming from NPR.
Yeah, I know.
Well.
NPR. Yeah, I know. Well, I mean, there is a scandal. Turns out NPR paid off CNN to broadcast this after the winter pledge drive. So does that mean you can throw out your plastic bag when
you're done using it? Because I try and reuse those. Yes, well, that's very good of you. What
if I use my cloth tote bag to carry plastic bags? Oh, yeah, just the outside,
just to let people know that you're pretentious. And I've got 7,100 plastic bags.
Adam, disgraced crypto banker Sam Bankman Freed was arrested this week, but he asked the judge
not to send him to prison because he says he is just
too what? Too cool for
prison. No, not that.
Can I get a clue?
You can. You shouldn't worry. I'm not sure there is
actually meat in prison food.
Oh, he's too...
Can you be too vegan for prison?
That's what he says he is.
He says he's too vegan for prison.
Crypto dork Sam Bankman Freed requested bail
because he's, quote, a depressed vegan, unquote.
Unfortunately for him, the request was denied
because of redundancy.
His parents have actually been calling the Bohemian prison
to check on his dietary needs,
but the prison says Bankman Free will not get special treatment there,
which is good, because in his case,
the special treatment would just be a little worse than everybody else.
I will say, at least now I know what my next tattoo is going to be,
too vegan for prison.
Exactly.
I think about it, he's the only person for like a crew cut and an orange prison jumpsuit
would be a significant improvement. Zainab, many of us have family coming to visit this holiday
and a new survey finds there's a really nice thing our guests can do in the first
four days of their visit. What is that? Wow. Guest stay for four days. Well,
that's the question, isn't it?
The nice thing that guests can do
in the first four days, leave early?
Leave is the answer, yes.
For anybody going home, perhaps,
to the family to visit this Christmas season,
the survey finds that by day four of your visit,
your hosts want you to leave. That's an incredible finding. How did anyone make it to four days with
their parents to find out? Four days. Four days. That is, is that long? I always find it a bit
rude that my, when I go home, my mother actually has the countdown. Yes. Imagine you're staying
with family for a couple of nights
and you're like, hey, what are you up to? And your cousin's like, nothing
much, just drafting up a social research study
about when guests have overstayed
their welcome. Coming up, it's lightning fill in the blank,
but first it's the game where you have to listen for the rhyme.
If you'd like to play on air, call or leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Or click the Contact Us link on our website,
waitwait.npr.org.
You can see us most weeks right here
at the Studebaker Theater in downtown Chicago.
For tickets and more information,
just go to nprpresents.org.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hello, Peter.
Hey, who's this?
This is Craig Vollmer from Fort Collins, Colorado.
Fort Collins up
north there, north of Denver in the front range.
What do you do there?
I'm a wedding photographer.
How awesome. Is there a secret
to a good wedding photograph?
Because there's a lot of them I've seen, and I'm not going to say
whose wedding it was,
where I looked pretty
uncomfortable.
whose wedding it was, where I looked pretty uncomfortable.
And the absolute secret is just making people at ease and capturing them when they're not self-conscious.
Right.
You have to sneak up behind them.
I love it.
Well, welcome to the show, Craig.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three news-related limericks with the last word or phrase missing from each.
If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly, and two of the limericks will be a winner.
Ready to play?
Absolutely.
Here's your first limerick.
In the malls from L.A. to Atlanta, there's no chubby, white-bearded enchanter.
Being jolly and round is a health risk we've found.
And now there's a shortage of...
Santa!
Santa?
Wait a minute!
He's got Benjamin Button disease.
Hold on, hold on, hold on.
First of all, that's right, Santa's.
Secondly, Craig, is there someone there with you?
This whole idea is all in with Ella.
So, yes.
Ella.
And what is Ella's relationship to you?
He's my dad.
Wow.
And Ella, how old are you?
I'm 11.
You're 11. Okay, yes, you are absolutely in the center
of our demographic. In the club. Well, Ella, it's nice to have you. I'm glad you're helping
your father. And I don't know if he was going to get it right, but if not, you just jumped in and
saved him because it is Santa's. America is facing a Santa shortage. As malls and stores finally open,
there's more demand for Santas than Santas to fill it.
And we should say to our younger listeners,
we are talking about the helpers
who portray Santa at the mall,
not the real Santa of whom there cannot ever be a shortage
because reindeer fly over your supply chain.
All right, you crazy two.
Here's your next limerick.
In the mornings, my laptop is off-key,
but one cup of Joe makes it blast off-y.
Caffeine in the wires helps synapses fire.
The AI speeds up with some
caffeine? Oh, you're close.
It just has to rhyme with off-key and
off-y. Coffee.
Coffee, yes, exactly.
Thank you.
Scientists have for decades been
trying to improve the performance of semiconductors.
That's what's at the heart of all
our tech, and it turns out coffee seems to make semiconductors work faster. I would tell
you more about this story, but as soon as I read the first couple of sentences, I immediately poured
a full cup of coffee onto my laptop. It no longer works. All right, guys, here is your final limerick.
To protect and to care, I am duty sworn. And there's grazing space here,
grass is newly shorn. My mythical horse will be loved here, of course. I am licensed to have my
own unicorn. Yes, unicorn. I'm so glad you got that too. A six-year-old girl wrote a letter to L.A. County asking,
I would like your approval if I can have a unicorn in my backyard,
if I can find one, unquote.
So they issued her a unicorn license,
and now it's all up to her to hunt one down,
break its spirit, and force it into captivity.
break its spirit, and force it into captivity.
The girl's biggest dream was to keep a unicorn,
but her second biggest dream was to apply for a license through the appropriate bureaucratic channel,
so things are going well so far.
I'm sick of all the unlicensed unicorns
running around my neighborhood.
It's true.
Also, people, pick up after your unicorns.
Please. Just rainbows
everywhere.
Bill, how
did Craig and Ella do on our quiz?
Well, Ella got three. Craig got
none.
Well, congratulations, Craig and
Ella. You have won our game.
Thank you so much for playing.
Woo-hoo!
Thank you.
Thank you guys so much.
Take care.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
In our next bonus episode,
we are challenging one of our young producers
to answer questions about the week's news.
Questions that appeared on our actual show.
Here's the catch, though.
That show aired 20 years ago.
Remember, this is 2002.
2002.
They had never been into a house before.
And there's marmalade in there.
That's when they were searching for WMDs.
Oh, and they found them, didn't they? Well, they found weapons of lunch deliciousness. and there's marmalade in there. That's when they were searching for WMDs.
Oh, and then they found them, didn't they?
Well, they found weapons of lunch deliciousness.
Marmalade.
It's some recent history you might remember or wish you could forget.
That's in our next bonus episode
for Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Plus listeners.
Sign up to hear it and support NPR
at the link in our episode notes.
Now onto our final game, the link in our episode notes.
Now onto our final game, lightning fill in the blank.
Each of our players left 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill in the blank questions as they can.
Each correct answer is now worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Adam and Tom each have two.
Zainab has three.
Wow.
I'm not sure how that happened, but I'm glad it did So, okay then, that means
that I'm going to arbitrarily choose
Tom to go first, the clock
will start when I begin your first question
fill in the blank. On Wednesday
the House passed a one-week spending bill
aimed at avoiding a blank
Government shutdown. Right, on Monday, Elon Musk dissolved blanks, trust, and safety council.
Twitter.
Right.
This week, France defeated Morocco and will face Argentina in the championship game of the blank.
World Cup.
Yes.
On Monday, dozens of homes were damaged as a powerful blank blew through the West Coast.
Tornado.
I mean, winter storm.
Yes.
Officials are warning people this week to check their Christmas trees for pinecone-like growths which are filled with blank.
Fentanyl.
No. Hundreds of praying mantises on Thursday.
An Air Force veteran in captivity since June was released as part of a prisoner swap between Ukraine and blank.
Russia.
Right.
On Sunday, NASA's Artemis 1 mission to the blank successfully splashed down in the Pacific Ocean.
To Mars.
No, to the moon.
This week, police in Michigan were called to a holiday party after a man dressed as the Grinch blanked.
Died. No. died.
No.
They were called to the holiday party
because the man dressed as the Grinch
punched a man dressed as Rudolph.
He thought he had a red nose before.
Exactly.
Bill, how did Tom do in our quiz?
Close to perfection.
Five right, ten more points.
Twelve gives him the lead. All right.
Adam, you are up next.
Fill in the blank. In preparation for a spike in case numbers, the White House announced it was
relaunching its free blank test program. COVID. Yes. On Thursday, Russia warned the U.S. of
consequences if they supply blank with a Patriot missile system.
Ukraine.
Yes.
This week, a petition to unionize was filed by the employees of Blank Street Coffee.
I don't know.
No, the answer is Blank Street Coffee.
That's the company's name.
Boo!
That's the company's name.
After being sworn in on Sunday, Karen Bass officially became the first woman to serve as mayor of blank.
Los Angeles.
Right.
According to a new study, intermittent fasting may help patients suffering from type 2 blank.
Diabetes.
Yes.
After saying he had a major announcement this week, Donald Trump revealed blank.
A series of sort of baseball trading cards with his face on it.
Exactly right.
For only $99.
The set of cards, it's not even real.
They're NFTs.
They feature drawings of Trump in superhero outfits,
shooting lasers out of his eyes and riding on elephants.
Does NFT stand for no effing thanks?
Bill, how did Adam do in our quiz?
Five right.
Ten more points.
Twelve makes him tied with Tom.
So how many then?
Tied.
Tied.
How many then does Zainab need to walk in here and win on her first appearance on our show?
To take it away, five.
Here we go, Zainab.
I'm so afraid.
Don't be afraid.
This is for the game.
Here we go.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, President Biden signed a bill protecting same-sex blanks into law.
Marriage.
Yes.
On Wednesday, the Senate unanimously agreed to ban social media site blank on into law? Marriage. Yes. On Wednesday, the Senate unanimously agreed
to ban social media site blank on government devices.
TikTok.
Yes.
This week, the Federal Reserve signaled
they would continue to raise blanks in 2023.
Interest rate.
Yes.
This week, the son of the president of Uganda
agreed to take over for his father,
but only if he can blank.
Take over his father?
Oh, I don't know.
He'll take over only if he can get enough likes over his father? Oh, I don't know. He'll take over only if
he can get enough likes on Twitter. This week, the New York Times released their most stylish
people list for 2022 and surprised readers by including blank. Someone who's not that stylish.
Mark Zuckerberg. All right. All right. That's not the answer we were looking for,
but on the list, it wasn't Mark Zuckerberg.
It was Mark Zuckerberg's metaverse avatar.
Really?
That was one of the things on the list,
so I'm going to give you the point.
The one we were hoping you'd guess at
was among the most stylish lists in the New York Times
was the spotted lanternfly.
The invasive species is decimating crops,
but damn, girl, that carapace
is fire.
Bill, did
Zaynab do well enough to win?
Zaynab is the newbie, and she got
four right. Eight more points.
Eleven is just one short
of our winners that have tied.
Adam and Tom.
In just a minute, we'll ask our panelists
what will be the next big scientific breakthrough
now that we have fusion.
But first, let me tell you that
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is a production of NPR
and WBEZ Chicago
in association with Urgent Haircut Productions,
Doug Berman, but Neville and Overlord.
Philip Godica writes our limericks.
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shana Donnell, thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre.
BJ Lederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Our production assistant is Sophie Hernandez.
If you need this, special thanks to Vinnie Thomas, Monica Hickey, and Kelly Wessinger.
Peter Gwynn is our most stylish Peter Gwynn of 2022.
Our intern is Vaishnavi Naidu.
Technical direction is from Lorna White.
Our CFO is Colin Miller.
Our production manager is Robert Newhouse.
Our senior producer is Ian Chilock.
And the executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mike Danforth.
Now, panel, what will be the next big breakthrough?
Adam Burke.
Scientists will create a drug that will actually allow you to be excited about fusion research.
Zainab Johnson.
Redistribution of consciousness and or body swapping.
And Tom Papa.
A single universal credit card machine so we can pay for stuff without feeling like a moron.
Well, if any of that happens, panel, we're going to ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. card machine so we can pay for stuff without feeling like a moron.
Well, if any of that happens, panel, we're going to ask you about
it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much to Bill Curtis. Thanks to Attenberg, Tom Papa.
Congratulations to Zainab Johnson on her great debut.
Thanks to all of you for listening.
Thanks to our audience here at the Studebaker Theatre.
I am
Peter Sagal. We'll see you next week. This is NPR.