Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - Earlonne Woods and Nigel Poor
Episode Date: May 28, 2022Earlonne Woods and Nigel Poor, hosts of Radiotopia's Ear Hustle podcast, play our game about the Steer Hustle, AKA, the rodeo. They are joined by panelists Maz Jobrani, Adam Burke and Paula Poundstone....Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, it's Peter Sagal. Ever wonder what our panelists will be like without me holding them back? Find out with the Wait, Wait! Stand-Up Tour, hosted by Alonzo Bowden, Friday, June 24th at the Eccles Theatre in Salt Lake. Tickets and more information at nprpresents.org.
Chicago. This is, wait, wait, don't tell me, the NPR News Quiz. You'll never escape Bill Catraz. I'm Bill Curtis. And here is your host at the Sidney Goldstein Theater in San
Francisco, California. He's my San Francisco treat. It's Peter Sagal. Thank you, Bill.
And thank you,
San Francisco.
Thank you all.
It is a pleasure
to be back here. The city that can boast
and I don't think anybody's going to argue with me
about this. The city that can boast the
most beautiful, most tempting
prisons in the
world. And I'm not just talking about Alcatraz, but also San Quentin,
that picturesque, involuntary resort by the bay.
Now, later on, we're going to be talking to the two creators of Ear Hustle,
the podcast phenomenon that told us all about life in San Quentin.
But first, we want to hear from you.
So call us at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924. Let's welcome
our first listener contestant. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, this is Steph
Mowry from North Town, Pennsylvania. Oh, I think I know where that is. It's near Philly, right?
It is. It's about 20 minutes outside Philadelphia. Right, and what do you do there?
I am an artist. I have a very small business making soap, candles, and unique snail art.
I'm sorry, did you say unique snail art?
Yes. Yes, snail art.
Okay.
It is art that focuses on snails. So I make sculptures out of snails. I do drawings of snails. It's all snail-related art. There's no snails involved.
Wait a minute. So when you say you make sculptures out of snails,
you're not actually making sculptures out of snails.
And if so...
No, no, no.
No, no, no.
Sculptures of snails.
Sculptures of snails.
Right.
Made out of paper.
Oh.
Do they ever, like, fool a snail who ends up being very frustrated?
All the time.
Sure.
That's the true test of a snail artist.
Well, let's walk back from there All the time. Sure. That's the true test of a snail artist.
Well, let's walk back from there and introduce you to our panel this week.
First, a comedian you can see at the Dania Beach Improv in Florida, June 16th to 18th.
All his tour dates can be found at mazdrobrani.com.
That's right.
It's Mazdrobrani.
Hey.
How are you?
Next, it's the comedian you can see at CG's Comedy Club in Bolingbrook, Illinois, August 5th and 6th.
It's Adam Burke.
Hello.
Hi, Seth.
And finally, a comedian you can see in Philadelphia June 17th
at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts.
Her podcast is Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone.
You guessed it, it's Paula Poundstone.
Steph, 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.
Any voice from our show, you might choose in your voicemail. Are you ready to go? All right. I'm so ready. Whoa. Okay. I love
Steph. She's great. Steph, here is your first quote. Perhaps rebranded as something that does
not become a punchline on playground. That was a comment on a New York Times article urging the CDC to rename what new disease? Monkeypox. Monkeypox,
yes. Just when we thought we might be done with COVID, here comes monkeypox. The CDC is warning
about a new possible outbreak of this new disease, which they have already traced, to people partying at two different raves in Europe.
And you know it was a great rave when people start hooking up with the monkey.
I've been trying to deny, like, I'm living in denial, like, because it's been two years
of corona.
I'm like, I don't need another, like, until my wife starts making monkey noises.
Yeah.
Like, if I walk in and she's like, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, I'd be like, oh, here we go wife starts making monkey noises. Yeah. Like if I walk in and say,
I mean, oh, here we go. Damn it. I mean, I suppose it depends on the context.
There's certain circumstances. Yeah. I might celebrate it actually. I'm doing something right.
The bad news, the bad news is that the primary symptom of monkeypox are these awful
pustules all over your skin.
Good news is, Zoom has already
introduced a new pustule smoothing feature.
You say
they're horrible pustules.
I did say that. As opposed to the
lovely pustules associated with other things.
No, I've seen them just on the internet
and they're horrible
pustules, but you know,
I don't like tattoos either.
So what I'm saying is, it's all a matter of, like,
and there was probably a time where other people thought the same thing about tattoos,
but then it became in vogue.
So if we could just embrace the pustule.
Yes.
You know what happens when you embrace a pustule?
Yeah, that's actually how it spreads.
Exactly.
Well, if that were how tattoos spread, it would save people a lot of money.
You just don't let it dry and then you hug it.
Okay, Steph, here is your next quote from British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
I'm sure that whatever happened, the rules were followed at all times.
Mr. Johnson was responding to a recent report that he broke every rule during lockdown by hosting what at 10 Downing Street?
Wild snail sex parties.
Yeah, baby!
Oh, those Brits.
Hadn't heard about the snail sex.
The report of the year-long investigation into Partygate was released this week,
finding there were at least eight drunken parties at No. 10 Downing Street,
while the people at 10 Downing Street, the government,
forced the rest of the country to stay locked inside.
The parties, which Boris Johnson denied knowing about
at the time, even though they took place at his house, included karaoke, quote, wine time Fridays,
and a game called pin the responsibility on the underling. People became suspicious, by the way,
that these wild parties were going on at the time
when they noticed what the prime minister looks like every day of his life.
Boris Johnson always looks like somebody who just said to his best friend,
you can let go of my hair, I think I'm done throwing up.
Does anybody resign over scandal anymore?
Oh, no.
Yeah.
That's very 20th century.
Nobody does.
Yeah, in fact, you run on the scandal next time around.
Yeah, yeah.
You might remember me from all those headlines.
Yes.
Boris Johnson's slogan for his re-election will be,
I will fight for your right to party.
I'll fight for it on the party. I'll fight for it
on the beaches. I will fight for it.
Alright,
Steph, here is your last quote,
and it is Tom Cruise.
36 years after the
first one, it's here.
I hope you enjoy the ride.
Tom Cruise was talking about his big new
sequel out this week. The sequel to what?
The sequel to Top Gun. Yes? The sequel to Top Gun.
Yes, the sequel to Top Gun.
This weekend is the opening of Top Gun Maverick.
Tom Cruise is almost 60.
He is playing the role he created in his early 20s,
and he looks very good,
but as the movie makes clear,
time has had its way with him,
so now his catchphrase is i feel the need the need to
pee many times in the course of an evening that's the one good thing of being i like it being a mac
five and a jet because it's like temporary facelift yeah yeah which is the entire thing
flies back it's you know i've only seen a couple of, like, I liked the one where he's the lawyer.
I liked that.
Because, you know, they talk.
But these action movies, it's all the same movie, is it not?
I mean, I saw a Mission Impossible movie.
And how many have he's done of those?
43.
Yeah, right.
It's all the same movie.
I don't understand.
No, in some of them he runs from right to left,
and other ones he runs...
But, by the way, by the way,
if you do the impossible mission 43 times,
it's clearly possible.
Yeah, exactly.
He's, like, done it 43 times.
Highly probable test.
Bill, how did Steph do in our quiz?
She worked at a snail's pace, but came up with three straight wins.
Congratulations, Steph.
Steph, thank you so much for playing.
Thank you so much for having me.
Take care. Bye-bye, Steph.
Bye-bye, Tep. Bye-bye.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions from this week's news. Maz,
this week, Russia released a list of 1,000 Americans that are now banned from that country. That list included several government officials, as you can imagine,
members of the Biden administration, a whole bunch of journalists they don't like,
and strangely, whom?
Huh. I wonder,
I mean, Sylvester Stallone did
play against the Russian guy.
Oh yeah, they probably feel mad about that.
Do you think they, Rocky?
But remember, at the end, he says, we can all get along.
If yous can change, and I's can change,
we's alls can change.
Yeah, I remember that.
Yeah. I live that. Yeah.
I live by that quote.
I know.
I can tell.
No, youth do.
Youth do.
Can you give me a hint?
I can give you a hint.
And to be fair, they might be confused because this gentleman has, in fact, played the president in a couple of movies.
So maybe they thought he really was the president.
Oh, my God.
Really?
Was it Morgan Freeman? It was Morgan Freeman. He made the thought he really was the president. Oh my God. Really? Was it Morgan
Freeman? It was Morgan Freeman. He made the list? He made the list. I am so jealous. Well, at least
it's for president and not, because he's also played God. That's true. So anyway, Morgan Freeman
has been permanently banned from Russia. He's part of this list of, quote, anti-Russian Americans,
certainly all of them now heartbroken
they won't be able to attend this year's Novgorod Beat Festival.
We don't know.
Putin is apparently afraid that if Freeman were allowed into Russia,
he would unleash the armies of penguins who flock to the sound of his voice.
Yeah, no, it's probably because he made them cry.
You know, Putin probably doesn't cry a lot,
but you can't listen to Morgan Freeman narrate that Penguin movie and not just sob.
Yeah.
Oddly, Donald Trump and a number of his most senior advisors were not on this list,
nobody knows why, except for Ted Cruz, who is banned.
Oh, jeez.
And analysts say, well, that's because, quote, well, wouldn't
you?
Yeah.
I mean, they're human beings.
Come on.
As upset as we are with them, and as horrible
at what they've done, they are human beings.
That'd be amazing if that brought both
sides together. Just a universal
contempt for Ted Cruz.
Finally found a use for him.
That could be the pontoon bridge.
Didn't Sting have a song,
the Russians hate Ted Cruz too?
Coming up, we fix everything.
It's our Bluff the Listener game called 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're playing this week with Paula Poundstone, Maz Jobrani, and Adam Burke.
And here again is your host at the Sidney Goldstein Theater in San Francisco by Bay by the Bay.
It's Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thanks, everybody.
God, it's good to hear your voices again.
Right now it's time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff the Listener Game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air.
Hi, you are on Wait,, wait, don't tell me.
Oh my goodness. Hi
there, Peter. This is Sydney
Rogers, a.k.a. Miss Barbecue.
Hello, Miss Barbecue.
How's by you?
I'm doing amazing. I'm from LA,
but I'm down in San Diego for
a conference. A conference? What kind of
conference, may I ask? Oh, for the
California Workforce
Association Conference. I work for Trans Can Work. I'm the education and trainings manager,
and I'm also a professional drag queen. Well, that's cool.
Yes, I've been doing drag since 1992. Well, I know the drag scene is competitive. As the saying goes,
you've got to have a gimmick.
So do you have a gimmick?
Oh, my goodness.
I think my gimmick is fierce black and keeping it real.
That's a good gimmick.
That's a good gimmick.
Well, welcome to the show, Sydney.
You're going to play our game
in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Sydney's topic?
Solving the big problems.
We have the most powerful science and technology in the world,
but we still can't seem to stop climate change,
endless words, or people who don't know how to thread their tweets.
But this week, somebody actually finally fixed something that we needed fixed.
Our panelists are going to tell you about it.
Pick the one who's telling the truth.
You'll win the weight-waiter of your choice in your voicemail.
You ready to play?
Yes, I am so ready.
I'm so happy to hear it, Sydney. Here we go. Here, first up, Adam Burke.
Ah, the humble burrito. Some say it was invented in Mexico in the late 19th century. Others say
it was created by a Juarez street vendor in the 1940s. Still others say the ancient Egyptians
invented it back when they were addicted to just wrapping stuff.
There are even those that contend the burrito did not reach its true apotheosis until the invention of the mission-style burrito right here in San Francisco in the 1960s and 70s.
But who would say that but a feckless pandora trying to curry favor with a local audience?
that but a feckless panderer trying to curry favor with a local audience.
But there's one thing that we can all agree upon is their fundamental design flaw, that they are so full of meaty, starchy goodness that they often burst forth from their flowery or corny winding
sheet, spilling their cheesy cargo all over you like an overwhelmed frat boy his first night out in the mission.
But fear not, for a stalwart band of Bothans at Baltimore's John Hopkins University had
tackled and possibly solved the issue of structural snack integrity by creating edible adhesive
tape that will fasten your beloved parcel shut like the wax seal on a calorific royal
proclamation. Putatively called Tasty Tape,
the food-safe suture, is patent pending, so hopefully in the near future we can chow down
on our favorite doughy meat sack without fear of a Tex-Mex-plosion.
Burrito tape. Edible tape to hold your burrito together.
Your next story of a problem solved comes from Maz Jobrani.
Anyone who's ever had to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night
knows it can be a precarious endeavor.
Well, designed for people who have a long walk to the bathroom down a dark hallway,
Swedish engineers at home furnishing giant IKEA
have come up with a mattress that senses when you get up to urinate
and proceeds to illuminate a dimly lit path of nightlights that you follow from your bed to the toilet where the toilet seat is also lit.
The invention known as the P-landing came to Anders Andersson when he was flying in the LaGuardia one night.
I looked out into the pitch-dark black night,
and as we approached the airport, I saw the landing strip lights,
thinking, if those lights can help a plane hit its target,
they can help me hit my target, too.
The P-landing, an automatic system that lights your way to the safety of the toilet in the middle of the night.
Your last story of a thorn removed from all of our sides comes from Paula Poundstone.
A team of University of Helsinki graduate students took on one of life's greatest challenges.
How do you open clear plastic clamshell packaging without damaging the product within or without losing a limb?
And they won.
Their device, informally called the clamshell cracker, subjects the package to specially calibrated vibrations and radiation
so that after only an hour inside, the plastic is soft enough to be easily manipulated.
inside. The plastic is soft enough to be easily manipulated. The hard part wasn't coming up with the process to weaken the polymers so the package would open easily. The problem was making it safe
for home use, says team member Yargo Alali. So it has to be a little bigger than a commercial
refrigerator, but we think it's worth it. Parent Karen Miller explains, my daughter actually outgrows toys
before I can get them out of the package.
So what? The machine is big.
We'll decorate it.
My wife's career as a surgeon
was cut short by nerve damage
she received while opening the plastic packaging
containing a laser pointer for our cat,
says Charlie Roop.
We're getting this machine. Yeah, it's big. We'll
put it in my son's room. He can sleep on the couch. All right. One of these problems has been solved.
Is it the problem of your burrito opening and spilling everywhere, solved with new burrito tape?
Is the problem not being able to find the bathroom accurately and quickly enough in the middle of the night solved by the P-landing automatic lighting system,
or the problem of not being able to open those damned clamshell packages
solved by the new large but efficient machine invented in Helsinki?
Oh my goodness, I've tried to eat a burrito in the movie theater.
Never do that.
No, don't do that.
No, that's not very smart.
And the clamshell thing, I'm allergic to shellfish.
So I'm going to go with the burrito tape
because now I can go to the movie theater and eat a burrito in peace.
Well, Sydney, I really like the way your mind works.
To find out if you're right, we spoke to one of the real problem solvers.
Tasty Tape allows you to keep your burrito wrap or any food like that securely closed during
cooking and consumption. That was Erin Walsh. She is a recent graduate from Johns Hopkins
University and one of the developers of Tasty Tape. We anticipate a statue of her in the mission
any day now. Congratulations, Sydney. You got it right.
You earned a point for Adam.
You've won our prize.
The voice of your choice and your voicemail.
Thank you so much for playing with us today.
Enjoy that conference.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Take care, Sydney.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
And now the game where people who have never dreamed of something like this find out why they never dreamed of something like this.
It's called Not My Job.
So back in 2017, the podcast network Radiotopia ran this contest
to find a great new podcast idea.
And the winner was the show made by two people
who had no experience in audio at all.
Nigel Poore, a photographer who volunteered as a teacher
at San Quentin Prison,
and Erlon Woods, a prisoner serving a life sentence there.
Their podcast, Ear Hustle,
about daily life in San Quentin and other prisons
became a global phenomenon.
We are delighted they are both free to join us now.
Nigel and Erlon, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you.
I'm glad to be here.
Now, the origin story, which you tell beautifully in your new book
about the podcast and your experience,
is that you, Nigel, were teaching art in San Quentin.
You volunteered there.
Yeah.
And you were there, Erlon.
I was just posted.
You were just posted up.
And how did you guys meet?
How did you end up sort of,
how does this partnership start?
I started going down into the media lab.
After I stopped teaching,
I wanted to do some more projects down there.
And I met him.
He volunteered down there as well.
And he was the quietest guy in the room.
And I thought,
hmm, that's interesting. If this guy doesn't talk, I bet he'd be great on a podcast. Exactly. But neither of you had ever done a podcast before. He didn't know what a podcast was.
Right. It was interesting. I thought we was just going to be talking, but it was way more
scripted than that. I know you said, oh, this is going to be easy. Definitely.
I mean, listening to Snap Judge, I was like, oh, yeah, that's easy.
Oh, yeah.
And the great thing about Ear Hustle, for those who haven't heard it,
is usually when people read or write things about prisons,
it's about unjustly sentenced people or our carceral system, large themes.
You guys intentionally didn't go there.
Exactly.
You were like, so tell me what the decision you made about,
especially like you talk in your book about like the very first episode
and why you wanted it to be that.
Yes.
We really wanted to tell stories about everyday life
and things that people who are not incarcerated could relate to.
So what was in the first episode?
Oh, how to find a cellie.
So how do you find a roommate?
Do you get to choose your roommate in prison?
Not all the time, no.
But when you do, you want to have that answer ready.
Especially.
Are there auditions?
Yeah.
I mean, you don't want to go in there with somebody
that you don't like.
Can you choose somebody who's not in yet?
What?
Because I got some ideas. Erlon, is there something about prison life, a particular episode maybe, that was most surprising to people who don't
know anything about prisons, like me and most of your listeners? The thing that just blew everybody's
mind? Probably, I would think, the fishing expedition.
Oh, yeah.
What is that?
Talking about how you can deliver a burrito
from one floor to the next using the toilet system.
Yeah, that was bad.
That was bad.
You can't just say that and not explain.
I wouldn't imagine explaining that one.
I mean, I'm familiar with a burrito delivery system
involving a toilet, but that's the...
The outcome.
Yeah, no, this is before.
This is called fishing.
Fishing.
I think Jesse Vasquez explained that one.
Yes, Jesse Vasquez told us how you could...
You said you have to get all the water out of the toilet first,
which you said you do by...
Squatting.
Squatting back and forth on the toilet.
Getting all the water to... Wait a minute, so you squat back and forth on the toilet. Getting all the water to... Wait a minute. So you squat
back and forth on the toilet. Up and down.
Up and down. So you create suction.
Exactly. So your butt
is a plunger. Right.
Your body is a plunger.
That was John Mayer's first
draft of that song.
And he proved it.
So then
you have the water out of the toilet.
You've accomplished that.
Whoa, you say, I have done this, and now
what? Hold on. The goal here is to
get a burrito intact,
pre-digested burrito from your cell to somebody else's
cell. Without the tape, it's really important.
So now you've got the water out
of the toilet, and now what? So now your mission
is to flush
something. Well, first I thought you had to
clean it. Once you clean it out, you're going to clean it out.
Oh, yeah. Well, we don't really expect that.
That goes without saying.
You're not going to clean the pipes. You're going to clean the toilet.
I thought you took the sheet and the sheet went through
and cleaned the...
In theory.
In theory.
That's what you told
the guy you were sending the burrito to.
He said, well, of course I cleaned this with cheese.
This is a good plot for the next Mission Impossible.
Exactly.
I've got to ask, that's a lot of effort to get somebody a burrito.
Why was it so important that you get that person the burrito?
Well, it wasn't me that was doing it, but from the story,
I think dude was hungry.
There was an administrative segregation.
I'm guessing he's never had prison food.
Wow.
It's worse than a burrito that's been through a toilet.
That's exactly.
It's so bad.
You'd rather have.
But isn't there a chance that you get the water out and you're like, here we go.
And then somebody next door flushes and you're like, ah, it's a system.
Everybody work together.
Oh, okay.
Everybody's trying to get on that highway.
It's like Chipotle. It's kind of like Chipotle.
Everyone's got their section.
Well, Nigel and Erlon,
we have asked you here to play a game
we're calling...
Ride them, cowboy.
You are the hosts of Ear Hustle,
so we thought we'd ask you about the steer hustle,
which is what we call rodeo.
Ooh, horse stuff.
If you answer two or three questions
about the world of professional rodeo correctly,
you will win a prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who are our guests playing for?
Michaela Wilson of Redwood City, California.
Okay, okay.
Thank you.
Here's your first question The rodeo is exciting to watch
It's also dangerous
At the Range Days Rodeo in Rapid City
A drunk fan who jumped the fence
To run around the arena
Was lucky to escape serious injury
After a collision with a 275 pound what?
A. Bull
B. Goat
Or C. Rodeo Clown?
I love goats, but
Yimmy, yimmy.
Yimmy, yimmy. What's that?
That's the sound a goat makes.
I know you've been inside a long time. That's not what a goat sounds like.
Hey, that's what it sounded like
in my neighborhood growing up.
Street goat.
Street goat.
That's the hard streets
of South Central.
That's what the goats say.
Yiminy, yiminy.
I'm poking too much.
But you said 200 pounds?
I said 275 pounds.
It's going to be a clown.
I'm going to say C.
You say clown.
It was the rodeo clown.
That's right.
Yes, yes, yes.
This famous rodeo clown
named Justin Rumpshaker.
Rumpur just leveled the guy.
I mean, seriously,
these guys are used to dealing with bulls,
so a guy is not a problem.
All right, here's your next question.
Like all sporting events, rodeos have good years and bad years.
A 2011 rodeo in Utah is particularly memorable for what reason?
A, all of the bulls could sense there was a huge thunderstorm coming,
so instead of bucking, they all just sat down and refused to move.
B, one of the horses bucked a rider off its back
and then immediately gave birth to a foal in the middle of the arena.
Or C, due to an outbreak of horse herpes,
all of the riders were forced to use toy stick ponies instead of the roller.
It's Utah, so probably no herpes.
A.
A?
Erlon thinks A.
Like the bulls just sat down.
I don't think they sit.
Bulls don't sit.
Well, they do.
You never heard a bull sit before?
I must say.
I think I make her up.
Everybody knows this.
The bulls sit down and they just sit there quietly going yippity-yippity.
I'm going to say B, but if you want to go for A.
I'll go A.
So you're picking A, Erlon.
You're saying the bulls just sat down.
You're saying B, Nigel, the horses bucked the rider and this gave birth.
The answer is, in fact, C.
What?
All the horses were out.
They couldn't use the horses, so they just said here,
and they got those stick hobby horses.
Hilarious.
All right.
All right, you have one right with one to go
if you get this, you win. Okay, pressure.
Steer roping, bull riding, mainstays of your rodeo,
but they're not the only ones. Which of these is a real
event at the Angola Prison Rodeo
in Louisiana? This might be in your lane.
A, the bull kissing booth
where whoever sneaks the most kisses on a rampaging
bull's lips wins. B, the rider
spelling. B, where if you spell a word
wrong, you get lassoed offstage. Or C,
a game where four men sit at a table playing
poker and then an angry bull is released and the
last man to flee the table wins.
I think it's C.
I'm going to go with C. You're going to go with C. That sounds right to you.
Yes, that is correct.
Wow!
And because it is a prison rodeo,
it is called
convict poker.
Yeah, there you go.
Wow, you've got to be quick with the poker face.
You do. There's a bull
coming, you've got to be like...
I don't know,
why are all my cards red?
Bill, how did Nigel
and Erlon do in our quiz? Two out of three,
you won this game.
Yay!
Nigel Poore and Erlon doing our quiz. Two out of three, you won this game. Nigel Poore and Erlon Woods are the hosts
of Radiotopia's Ear Hustle, their new book
This Is Ear Hustle is out now.
It's really quite something.
I recommend it both. Nigel and Erlon,
thank you so much for joining us.
Pleasure to see you.
Enjoy your success.
By God, you earned it. In just a minute, Bill warns everyone on the beach,
don't go near the boiling hot water.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us in the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPO.
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 Adam Burke, Paula Poundstone, and Maz Jobrani.
And here again is your host at the Sidney Goldstein Theater in San Francisco,
a man who always calls it Frisco,
Peter Sago.
Thanks, Bill, for that slander.
In just a minute, Bill suffers
from a rare breach of decor rhyme
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, panel, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Adam, a paleontologist here at UC Berkeley
may have solved one of the great mysteries of the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
What?
What?
Why it had that accent. The Tyrannosaurus Rex, what?
Why it had that accent.
What was?
French.
I always thought that was weird.
Roar, roar.
I will eat you.
Jeff Goldblum, get over here.
Get in my belly.
I don't know.
Can I have a clue? Well, I mean, why would an animal evolve so that it couldn't brush its own teeth?
Oh, so they figured out why it had tiny, teeny, tiny arms.
Yes, this is the theory as to why Tyrannosaurus rexes evolved to have such tiny arms.
And the hypothesis offered by Professor Kevin Padian of UC Berkeley is that
it evolved short arms so that their arms wouldn't get hurt in the kind of feeding frenzy that
happened when T-Rexes hunted in packs and found their prey, which means that until they evolved
those short arms, T-Rexes always had to interrupt their meals with apologies. Like, oh, geez, Phil, was
that your arm I just ate? I thought maybe the arms were so they could tickle themselves.
And this is true. There is another theory that was actually put forward at a genuine academic
conference that they use those short arms to sneak up to triceratopses and push them over.
This is right.
Triceratops tipping.
This theory was based on finding some adolescent T-Rexes
next to some fossilized six-packs of old Milwaukee.
Paula, the supply chain has claimed yet another victim.
College graduates are facing an extreme shortage of what this spring?
Those bathing suits that go up the crack of your butt.
G-strings?
I find all bathing suits go up the crack of your butt.
It's hard enough.
If you try hard enough.
You Europeans.
Give me a hint.
Do you have a hint?
Yeah, I guess people will be getting their diploma in the nude this year.
Oh, there's not enough gowns and caps and gowns?
Yeah, there's not enough caps and gowns, apparently.
Colleges across the country are still waiting for shipments of caps and gowns that may never come.
It's so sad this year's graduates can't celebrate four years of getting smarter by wearing the dumbest hat there is.
Yeah, really.
Yeah, I think they could do away with that altogether anyways.
You do?
Don't you?
Of course.
Definitely.
Also, why do they need new ones?
It's not like there's fashions and gowns.
It's not like they're wearing them with a big slit up the side.
Oh, that's this year. Oh, I understand.
Baggy and shapeless is in this year.
Can people share gowns?
Would it be like one gown, two people?
That's a good idea.
Absolutely. Or, you know,
the Supreme Court, they wear gowns,
and they're really not doing a good job.
Nine graduates at a time. Yeah, that's nine that could certainly be given up.
Adam, there is a shortage of contractors and construction workers and according to least
some of the trade, one of the reasons is nobody wants to do what?
Learn
the lyrics to YMCA.
No, they all know that.
I don't know. Can I have a clue? You can have a clue.
The problem may be the snooze button.
Oh, is it
get up early in the morning? Exactly right. They can't
find enough young people willing to get up
early enough to get to work by 7 a.m.
Oh. Well, I agree
with all of them.
One
contractor said, quote, there's an awful lot of
young people that don't like getting out of bed for
7 o'clock in the morning, and that's just a fact,
unquote. In fact, when told that jobs would
start around 7 a.m., most applicants said
there's a 7 o'clock in the morning?
Why is construction happening at 7 a.m. in the first place?
Yeah.
Shut the hell up.
We all want to sleep.
Exactly.
We stand with the resistors.
The labor shortage is so bad that one single construction worker is now expected to handle
all the catcalling of a 10-man crew.
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.
That's where you can find out about the Wait, Wait! Stand-Up Tour,
your favorite comedians from this show,
doing the thing you love them to do,
which is standing there.
They're in Salt Lake City on June 24th and in Denver on June 25th.
And check out Wait, Wait! Proper in Philadelphia
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Tickets and info at nprpresents.org.
Hi, you were on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, Peter.
This is Jeff from Burien, Washington.
Hey, Jeff from Burien, Washington.
What do you do there?
I own my own vintage motorcycle restoration and maintenance shop.
No kidding.
I am a motorcycle enthusiast.
What are your favorite kind?
Oh, Love Old Harley is one of my favorite ones that I've done so far. It's the 1956 Royal Enfield.
Oh, wow.
Those are beautiful machines.
They really are something.
Okay, if this conversation gets any more middle-aged, we're going to have to give it Prilosec.
Well, Jeffrey, welcome to the show.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three news-related limericks with a last word or phrase missing from each.
If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly in two limericks,
you'll be a winner.
Ready to play?
Let's do it.
Yes, indeed. Here's your first limerick.
It's the nightmare of Airbnbs.
The buzzing brings me to my knees.
Of sleep, I'm deprived.
Because I bunk in a hive.
I am roommates with one million bees. Bees, yes, and Airbnb
in Italy is available for the vacation of your dreams if your dream is sleeping in a room with
one million bees. What? The house was either created by a bee enthusiast or abandoned,
screaming by a normal person. And if you show up there, it includes
several bee-themed snacks for visitors. So that's honey and honey. If it gets to be too much, you
can't hide from the bees in the bathroom. The house itself, though, has no bathroom. So you have to go
to the cottage up the road to hide from the bees in the bathroom. So that's a disadvantage. But again,
the bees in the bathroom. So that's a disadvantage. But again, in the house, there are one million bees. That's the selling point. That's the selling point. If you'd ever wanted to take a vacation
with a lot of bees. And the thing is, if that was listed in San Francisco, the rent would still be
$80,000. Exactly right. It would still go $100,000 over asking. Okay, here is your next limerick.
I calm down when I'm wrapped up and snug
because cuddles are better than drugs.
I am feeling at ease when I'm in a tight squeeze.
I relax when I'm given a...
Hug.
A hug.
This week we learned that hugs are a great way to make women feel better
in a new study that is sure to keep the people down in HR raking in the overtime for years to come.
But this is important. The benefit of the hugs only help women, not men. So that male co-worker
who walks up arms wide and said he's a hugger, remember he's doing it for you.
who walks up arms wide and said he's a hugger,
remember, he's doing it for you.
Now, we should say,
this study only found a significant decrease in stress levels in women
when they were hugged by their romantic partner.
Right?
So stand down, Phil from customer service.
And it turns out,
men get no benefit in this same way from being hugged by their romantic partner.
So women, you need to comfort men in stress the way other men do,
by staring into the distance and saying, yeah, well, anyway.
I got to go.
Here is your last limerick.
The TV week is leaving its marks on the predators in the deep dark.
Now the horror begins.
Extra teeth, extra fins.
A volcano that spews mutant sharks.
Sharks, yes.
After an underwater volcano erupted recently in the Pacific Ocean,
scientists discovered a group of mutant sharks living around it.
The sharks mutated to survive in the hot sulfuric water
and can only feed and thrive on human skin.
Okay, the last part isn't true, but you're ready to believe it, right?
You're ready to believe it because what now, God?
Sounds like Sharknado.
Well, that's the funny thing.
This underwater hot zone is, of course, instantly dubbed the Sharkano.
And a quicker horror movie about it will be appearing on the Sci-Fi Network
before I finish this sentence.
And they're at war with the Jets-cano.
Exactly. When you're a Shark war with the Jets Kano. Yeah, exactly.
When you're a Shark Kano, you're a Shark Kano.
Bill, how did Jeffrey do? Perfect.
Jeffrey, you got them all right.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
Jeffrey,
thanks for calling and playing our game and keep the
rubber side down. Thanks, you as well.
Take care.
Now onto our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank.
Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill-in-the-blank questions as they can.
Each correct answer is worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Maz has two.
Paula has two.
Adam has three.
Okay.
I'm going to arbitrarily pick Maz to go first.
The clock will start when I begin your first question, Maz.
Fill in the blank. In response to dwindling
enrollment, lawmakers in Russia removed
the maximum legal age for blank service.
Military. Yes. On Monday, President
Biden said the U.S. would defend Taiwan
if it was invaded by blank. China.
Yes. According to the minutes from their latest meeting,
the Fed is looking at more blank hikes
to fight inflation. Interest rate. Yes.
On Tuesday, an Iraqi national was arrested
for a failed plot to assassinate blank. George W. Jr. That's right. George W. Yes. On Tuesday, an Iraqi national was arrested for a failed plot to assassinate blank.
George W. Junior.
That's right, George W. Bush.
On Monday, the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife
was forced to remind citizens that bear spray does not blank.
Help your body odor.
They said, bear spray does not work like bug spray.
Oh, God.
And then they just left you to imagine the context
in which they would have to say that.
On Wednesday, the
January 6th committee heard testimony
that Trump reacted approvingly to crowds
chanting to hang a blank.
Mike Pence. Yes. Best known for his
roles in Goodfellas and Field of Dreams, actor
blank, passed away at the age of 67.
Ray Liotta. Yes. After a mom gave her phone to
her two-year-old, she was shocked when he blanked.
She gave the phone to the two-year-old, she was shocked when he blanked. She gave the phone to the two-year-old and she was shocked when he bought a house.
No, when he ordered the delivery of 31 McDonald's cheeseburgers.
Oh, I saw that.
You see, this happened in Texas and the woman, of course, put it online and it went viral.
The mom says she has no idea how her son managed to both unlock her phone and then open DoorDash.
So she was shocked when all of a sudden this delivery guy showed up and
said, are these your cheeseburgers? 31 of
them. They say, you know, that every
child is who they will
be from the moment they're born.
And apparently this kid
was born a hungover college
student.
Bill, how did
Maz do in our quiz? Very well. Six right,
12 more points. He now has 14, and Maz takes in our quiz? Very well. Six right, 12 more points.
He now has 14, and Maz takes over the lead.
All right.
All right.
All right.
That would mean, Paula, you are up next.
My work is cut out for me.
Please fill in the blank, Paula.
On Tuesday, Brian Kemp beat the Trump-backed David Perdue in the GOP primary for governor in blank.
Georgia.
Yes.
On Wednesday, over 1,000 people attended a candlelight vigil for the victims of the shooting
in blank?
Texas.
Uvalde, Texas.
Yes.
This week, the House Ethics Committee launched an investigation into North Carolina Representative
Blank.
Madison Cuthbert?
Yeah.
This week, a company in Singapore announced a new beer made out of the country's blank.
A new beer in Singapore made out of the country's collective urine.
No.
Oh, gosh.
You know, I'm going to give it to you.
It's their recycled sewage.
So, yes.
There we go.
Okay.
Following a dip during the pandemic, the U.S. blank rate rose this past year.
A dip during the pandemic, the rate of...
Lightning, lightning.
Say something. IQ. IQ, lightning. Say something.
IQ.
No, birth rate.
After nearly two decades on daytime TV, talk show host Blank signed off on Thursday.
Ellen DeGeneres.
Yes.
This week, a rat in New York City immediately regretted its choice to casually stroll through
a blank.
Casually stroll through a rat shop.
No, a dog park.
Fortunately, this terrible life choice was recorded on video,
so we know about it first.
You see this rat casually walk into the middle of the park,
and then all the dogs see it, and chaos ensues.
The rat eventually escapes, runs out of the park,
and is immediately awarded the Rat Heisman Trophy.
Bill, how did Paula do in our country?
Really well. Don't ask Bill.
Well, she did get five right for ten more points.
Total of 12, but Muzz still has the lead.
And how many does Adam need to win?
Six to win.
All right, here we go, Adam.
This is for the game.
On Tuesday, NATO called Russia's invasion of blank a, quote, huge strategic mistake.
Oh, Ukraine.
Yes.
On Monday, Pfizer said their blank vaccine was effective in kids under five.
COVID.
Yes.
On Tuesday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted an unusually active blank season.
Sharkano.
No, hurricane. This week, attendees of an athletic park in India say they've
been asked to evacuate several times just so a government official could blank. Good lord.
Walker's dog? Exactly. Ikea upset many customers when it was revealed this week that their Swedish
meatballs were not blank.
Self-assembly. No, they were not, in fact, Swedish. Bad news for all of you IKEA meatball lovers who said, I don't care if they're made of horse as long as they're Swedish. The meatballs are
reportedly imported from Turkey, which is not a problem. Problem, once again, is that they are
made of horse. Bill, did Adam do well enough to win? Well, he got three right for six more points,
total of nine, which means with 14,
Moz is this week's champion.
For the home team.
In just a minute, our panelists will predict after Top Gun
what would be the next ancient movie to get a brand new sequel.
But first, let me tell you that Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago Our panelists will predict after Top Gun what would be the next ancient movie to get a brand new sequel.
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, benevolent overlord,
thanks to the staff and crew at the Sidney Goldstein Theatre.
Philip Godica writes our limericks.
Our tour manager is Shane O'Donnell.
BJ Lederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dernbos, Lillian King, and Nancy Seychow.
Our production assistant is Sofia Hernandez-Mionides.
Our patient zero for Peter Gwynpox is Peter Gwynn.
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 Michael Danforth.
Now, panel, what will be the next long-awaited sequel
to an old movie?
Mazda or Bronny?
The next ancient movie to get a sequel will be Scarface,
where drug dealer Tony Montana comes back as a pharmaceutical rep
and screams lines like,
Say hello to my little pill.
Adam Burke.
Citizen Kane 2.
Citizen Musk, an eccentric billionaire,
baffles everyone with his mysterious final words,
buy crypto.
And Paula Poundstone.
Disney's beloved, incredible journey,
only one of the dogs has wheels for his two back legs.
They don't make it.
Well, if any of those movies come out,
we'll ask you about it.
Yeah, we will.
On Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you, Bill Curtis.
Thanks also to Maz Jobrani, Adam Burke, Paul Lopasso.
Thanks to everybody at KQED
and everybody here at the Sidney Goldstein Theatre.
Sidney, we miss you.
And thanks to all of you for listening.
I am Peter Sagal.
We'll see you next week.
Thank you.
This is NPO.