Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - Julio Torres
Episode Date: October 1, 2022Julio Torres, creator and star of HBO's Los Espookys, plays our game about The Addams Family called, "Los Ookys." Joining him are panelists Tom Papa, Dulcé Sloan, and Hari Kondabolu.Learn more about ...sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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So, we're all traveling again, and people are dreaming, visiting cities like Paris or Tokyo or Rio, and all those places are fine, I suppose. But do any of them have Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Live at the Studebaker Theater? Mais non, as they say in one of those places. Come to Chicago, see Wait, Wait Live, and then with the rest of your time, well, I'm told the Cubs are rebuilding. That sounds exciting. More information at nprpresents.org.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
Take it easy. I'm just busting your bills. I'm Bill Curtis, and here is your host at the Studebaker Theatre
at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you, everybody. My gosh. It's great to see you, too. We really
have such a fun show for you today. Later on, we're going to be talking to Julio Torres,
formerly a writer for Saturday Night Live, and now the creator and star of Los Espookys on HBO. But first, I want to
address a controversy. A few weeks ago, the good people of Oregon got upset because I mispronounced
the name of their state on this show. I am sorry, Oregonians. From now on, I will refer to your state properly as South
Washington. Yeah, I like it. So let us know how to pronounce your beloved home. The number to call
is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924. Let's welcome our first listener contestant. Hi, you're on.
Wait, wait, don't tell me. Hi there. Hi, who's this? My name's Alex.
Hey, Alex, what are you calling from? I'm calling from Syracuse, New York.
Syracuse, New York is a beautiful place.
We haven't been there in a while, but I do love it.
What do you do there?
I manage an arcade bar.
Oh!
Do you have a favorite classic video game?
Yeah, I'm a big Pac-Man guy.
I've got a Pac-Man tattoo.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Can you actually, and I've only been told in movies that this is possible,
can you actually beat the game?
Okay, so somebody can.
There was a big controversy.
Somebody actually faked a high score for the past 30 years,
and then was found out he was lying.
Oh, wow.
It was, my God, it was Oh, wow. It was, it was,
my God, it was a hoax. It was a con. If you can't trust Pac-Man. Well, I'll try to get over it.
Welcome to the show, Alex. Let me introduce you to our panel this week. First, it's a comedian and host of the Breaking Bread with Tom Papa podcast. Back on the panel, it's Tom Papa.
Hello.
Hi, Tom.
Hi, Alex.
Next, a correspondent for The Daily Show,
and you can see her October 8th at the 10,000 Laughs Fest
in Minneapolis, and October 14th and 15th
at the Comedy Attic in Bloomington, Indiana.
It's Dulce Sloan.
Hello.
And a comedian you can see headlining
at Tee Hees Comedy Club in Des Moines on October 9th.
And comedy works in Denver October 13th through the 15th.
It's Hari Kondabolu.
Hey, Alex.
Hi.
Hello, Frank.
All right, we've got everybody here.
Alex, you're going to start us off with who's Bill this time.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three quotations from the week's news. If you can correctly identify or
explain just two of them, you will win our prize. Any voice from our show you might choose. You
ready to go? Yes, sir. All right. Here is your first quote. It's like running a golf cart into
the Great Pyramid. That was a NASA engineer explaining their successful mission this week to crash a spacecraft into what?
An asteroid.
Yes.
Yes.
It worked.
Now, this particular asteroid was not headed for Earth.
We just wanted to test to see if knocking an asteroid off course was possible in the event one is ever headed for us.
And it worked.
We did it. So now that asteroid is ever headed for us. And it worked. We did it.
So now that asteroid is headed right for us.
Did you watch this?
Yeah.
I have to say this is pretty great.
And you know Alex is really holding back
because he is swimming in quarters this week
on the asteroid.
Oh, yeah.
The asteroid's machine at his place
has got to be just going gangbusters.
Yeah, why couldn't they do that?
Why couldn't they just send up
a little two-dimensional triangle?
Well, that's why they did it to begin with.
It's a bunch of old nerds
who always wanted to blow up an asteroid
from playing asteroids,
and now this was their chance.
Right.
Press the button,
because it wasn't a threat.
It was just to do it.
Yeah.
It felt like, because, you know, people are like, the moon landing
wasn't real. The moon landing wasn't real. It's obviously
real because Budge Altman will punch
anybody who says it wasn't real. That's true.
I don't know if you ever heard about this, but if you come up
to him talking smack about that, he will knock you
the hell out. Famously. On camera,
he did that once. What a blessing. I love
all this space stuff. I grew up watching, you know,
listening to NPR, watching PBS and all this other stuff.
This is the only thing that NASA has done
where I'm like, you know what?
This might have been fake.
Because they put the camera in the front.
Right.
The only thing I know is it crashed because it turned
off.
Right, so you think what they did was like the asteroid...
Well, we don't get no more picture. It crashed. I'm like, no, it could just be off. Right, so you think what they did was like the asteroid Well, we don't get no more picture, it
crashed. I'm like, no, it could just be off.
Yeah. If you don't put the
like if they don't put a selfie stick on it.
Yeah. Right, well you know what they
did? This is actually, first of all, it's an interesting idea
like it went up there and it just pretended and it's
still up there going, shh, shh,
yeah. But what they did, Dolph, is
they sent another spacecraft up
just to film it as it did it.
This is a completely different spacecraft.
It's the world's most expensive Instagram boyfriend.
It's all math.
It's all math.
None of us understood.
Yeah.
It's all math.
It's all math.
So, like, okay, we're going to calculate where this asteroid is going, and then we're going
to make it late to whatever it was trying to do.
Because it's not like we didn't blow it up we just pushed him right how much did it say hey get out of here and that's
nasa like that's what just happened that's what yeah can you imagine when that when that asteroid
showed up late to whatever was going it's like you were not going to believe what happened
girl i was just listen i was just going through space, minding my business.
And all of a sudden, this little, like, silver thing just bumped into me and didn't even say
excuse me or nothing. Exactly. I was going to bring a present to this party. I'm so sorry.
I got bumped into by a whole damn machine. All right, Alex, for your next quote, here is one of many enthusiastic reactions
to an election that happened this week in Europe.
This will end in catastrophe.
Yes, that was a foreign minister in Spain
talking about the election of the fascist leader,
Giorgio Maloney, as prime minister of what country?
Italy.
Yes, that's right. Italy. Ding!
It's a me.
A fascism. Giorgia Maloney.
The leader of a
hard right party that is a literal descendant of
the original fascist party was elected the new
prime minister of Italy. But come on.
Has a fascist Italian prime minister
ever done anything bad?
No. They've only ever been helpful.
Look at history. Exactly.
She prefers to go by Mussolini.
Listen, this, y'all
been asking for equality.
There you go. This is what it looks like.
I'm so glad
we live in a world in which women can be just as
terrible as men. We've been telling y'all the
whole time.
The good news is that according to
experts on Italian government, the government of Italy is kind of designed to be so completely
dysfunctional that even though she's prime minister, she can't really do anything bad.
So a lunatic is driving the car, but don't worry, we took out the steering wheel.
At least Olive Garden
is still going to have all you can eat breadsticks.
That's really all it comes down to.
It's weird because a lot of their stance,
that political party stance, is the idea of
refugees are coming to Italy.
One thing I read was that
refugees are the reason for the crime and
prostitution problem in Italy.
And I don't
know if you can, I've seen a few films and I'm not sure
if they can really claim that unless they're claiming that what they don't like about this
crime is that it's unorganized. Yeah, you know, I was about to say, crime in Italy? No one associates
criminals with Italians. What are you talking about? There just isn't a hierarchical structure
to this crime. No, I know, I know. All right, Alex, here is your last quote.
I just twerked and played James Madison's flute. That was someone who twerked and played James Madison's flute, a 200-year-old crystal flute, in fact, in concert in Washington this week. Who was
it? That was Lizzo. Yes, Lizzo. We did it. Yeah, turns out Lizzo and the Crystal Fleet,
not just a beloved children's book.
So yeah, Lizzo did a concert in Washington,
and before she did the concert,
she was invited to see the Library of Congress' flute collection,
the largest in the world.
And here you are thinking they had things like books.
And then during her concert,
they brought out this 200-year-old crystal flute,
which had never been played, and she played a few notes.
It was amazing.
It turns out this was in James Madison's Will.
Right?
And it was perfectly preserved, this flute.
There was even a little smallpox in the mouthpiece.
Hallelujah.
I mean, she's the most famous flute player since George
Galway, and I had to Google
that to make this reference right.
Bill, how did Alex do in our quiz?
Alex is so hot.
He got them all right. Yay!
Congratulations, Alex. Yay!
Yay, Alex.
Alex, thanks so much for playing.
Thank you.
Take care.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Hari, there's a new app on the market that will help dog owners find other dog owners,
and it definitely won't ever be used for anything sexual. won't despite the fact that the app is called what you
know what it's called
does it have the word dog in it it does does it send the word style it does all
right and this is and and and PR It's in the Apple App Store.
If it's good enough for them, it's good enough for us.
And NPR can...
Okay.
Is it doggy style?
It is called doggy style.
Doggy style, the app, was invented to connect dog owners who all live in the same area.
So they can set up like doggy play dates and other meetups, doggy walks.
The company hopes it'll be much more successful than their last app, which helped women sell their horses. It was called Reverse Cowgirl.
The app seemed like a great idea until the first time you messaged somebody and they're like,
wait, you need a dog for this? There's nothing worse than when your dog watches, though.
There's nothing worse than when your dog watches, though.
That's always a weird feeling.
It's on a cat person.
What are you doing to mom?
What are you doing to mom?
Coming up, it's safety first, second, and third in our Bluff the Listener game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT-TO-PLAY.
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're playing this week with Jolce Sloan, Hari Kondabolu, and Tom Papa.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, everybody.
Thank you so much.
Right now it is time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff, the listener game. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to play our game in the air.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, Peter.
This is Erin Mackey calling from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Hey, Milwaukee is one of my favorite
places. What do you do there? I work for a company that manufactures probiotics and food cultures.
It's really exciting stuff. I even get free yogurt. Is this like the good biome stuff?
The idea is like you're supposed to like improve your gut flora or is that something else? I'm
actually in the livestock side of things, so I'm not as well versed in the human health side. So wait a minute, you're trying to improve
the gut flora of livestock? Correct, yes, so that we can make them healthier.
Isn't forcing a dairy cow to eat yogurt a little cruel?
Yeah, think about it. Think about it. Well, welcome to the show, Aaron.
You're going to play our game in which you must write to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Aaron's topic?
Buckle up.
You cannot be too careful behind the wheel of a car.
That's why to this day, I still drive anywhere sitting in a rear-facing infant car seat.
Our panelists are going to tell you about another way drivers are staying safe.
Pick the one who's telling the truth, and you'll win the weight-waiter of your choice in your voicemail.
Are you ready to play?
Yes, I am.
All right, Erin.
First, let's hear from Hari Kondabolu.
Cars get safer every day with new features to protect you from the dangers of the open road and a cold butt.
But what about protecting you from yourself?
Not to worry.
Engineers at Toyota have invented the moral GPS.
It doesn't just tell you where you are, it tells you where you shouldn't go.
For example, if you're leaving one bar and typing the address of another,
it says things like, really? Don't you have work tomorrow?
Go home.
And it then highlights a route home.
But this robotic buzzkill can do more than just that.
Through machine learning, it finds out where your exes live, and if you attempt to drive to their
houses, it immediately initiates a U-turn and sends you right back home. Moral GPS will also
refuse to show routes to casinos, strip clubs, and Ikea.
Because you're too old to live like that anymore.
Quote, an accident starts to happen long before you get in the car,
says chief engineer Tad Matsui.
It starts when you say to yourself,
if I hurry, I bet I can make it while they still have those free wings during happy hour.
Moral GPS that prevents you from going to places that just aren't good for you. Your next story of auto safety comes from Dulce Sloan.
In an attempt to appeal to young drivers and their parents, Fiat is developing a new line of
subcompact cars called the Fiat BMP. Designed to keep new young drivers safer on the road,
Fiat has created a new impact system
with a spring-loaded barrier running around the entire circumference of the car. These new impact
dampeners will distribute the force of any impact around the car and away from the passengers
inside. In addition, the car has an open cockpit to allow 360 degree visibility and to keep youngsters
off the road if there are hazardous
conditions like rain or snow. Fiat had a demonstration of the cars at Simmons High
School in Carlsbad, California. The students were very impressed, but the teachers and parents on
site were more than a little skeptical. School football coach Martin Hughes stated,
they ain't fooling nobody. These are damn free range bumper cars. This is ridiculous.
stated, they ain't fooling nobody. These are damn free-range bumper cars. This is ridiculous.
The new Fiat BMP, which seems to be just a bumper car you can drive on the street. Your last story of how to survive while you drive comes from Tom Papa. As self-driving cars become commonplace and
we are promised that they will run our errands, pick us up, and drive us to make out point,
promise that they will run our errands, pick us up, and drive us to make out point, everyone is wondering, will they also run us over and kill us? Well, some Japanese researchers have come up with
an eye-popping solution, fitting the car with giant googly eyes. Big cartoon eyes that look
something out of a disturbing Pixar movie are put on the front of the car, enabling pedestrians to know
that they've been spotted by the car's
onboard detection systems.
If the car is looking at you,
you know it sees you,
and you can act accordingly.
If, however, its googly eyes
are looking up at a really sexy billboard,
pedestrians will know that the car is a pervert.
All right. One of these is a safety feature of a kind that you might be able to get on a car soon.
Is it from Harikanda Bolu moral GPS that sort of just keeps track of what's good for you
destination-wise? From Dulce Sloan, a new car from Fiat, which really is just a bumper car,
From Dulce Sloan, a new car from Fiat, which really is just a bumper car, or from Tom Papa,
googly eyes put on the front of autonomous cars so you know if they can see you. Which of these is the real story of a new automotive safety feature? I want it to be true, so I'm going to
guess C. You're going to guess C. That would be Tom's story of the googly eyes on the front of
autonomous vehicles, right? Yes. Okay. Well, to bring in the correct answer,
we actually have for you now the sound from a promotional video
for the real automotive innovation.
We introduce Gazing Car,
robotic eyes on cars development for pedestrian safety.
That was from a promotional video for the Gazing Car design team.
So you did win.
You earned a point for Tom just for telling the truth in an entertaining way.
But I am thinking, like, autonomous cars are scary.
Wouldn't it be more scary if it sort of pulls up
and its eyes slowly move to gaze at you?
Yeah.
Or if it just starts leering at you when it sees you getting into another car.
Really? You're going home with her?
I knew it.
Congratulations, Erin.
Thanks for playing.
Thank you so much. You have a great one.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
And now the game where we invite on really inventive and original people
to do the same old thing.
It's called Not My Job.
Julio Torres has always been as much a designer as a writer.
He convinced his family in El Salvador to pay for sending him to New York
and once there became a comedian, a writer for Saturday Night Live,
and now the creator, writer, and star of Los Espookys, an indescribably delightful TV show now starting its second season on HBO.
Julio Torres, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
So anybody who's watched your skits on SNL or your comedy special knows you are obsessed with
design and objects. has that always been true
did you did your dolls come to life when you were a small child yeah i mean my i i i played with
barbies a lot when i was a kid like my i i always like had these ideas for like barbie houses and
then my mom would help me make them out of cardboard. Yeah. Because I always wanted, like, very specific window shapes
and very specific door shapes.
Right.
And now, as you may know, they make houses for Barbie.
Yeah, but no.
They're always, like...
I don't know why Barbie architecture is always so, like, sexy.
You know? I don't know why Barbie architecture is always so like, like sexy. It's always these like, like heart shaped tubs.
Yeah.
And like, like sexy little elevators.
And I'm like, no, like my, my, my gals are, have no time for that.
What were, what were, what were your Barbies doing rather than romancing Ken in the Heart Shaped Hubs?
I think in my mind, the cardboard houses were very bare bones New York lofts.
Really?
Kind of like bleak in a way.
Well, very industrial.
Very meat packing kind of gals.
There's a sketch you wrote for Saturday Night Live
about Barbie's Instagram feed
in which three people,
especially a character played by Donald Glover,
pitch captions for Barbie's Instagram feed.
And Donald Glover's captions
are incredibly dramatic interior monologues
about Barbie having basically an ongoing existential crisis.
Yeah. And I'm assuming that's what you did with your Barbies.
Well, there were definitely times where I played the Barbies as if they were slowly
realizing they were dolls. Right.
This is what happened. Like the Barbie was was, like, living in his dream house,
and it looked around and said,
what am I doing? I'm a doll.
Yeah, yeah, basically.
Yeah.
I am so amazed that some of your sketches
for Saturday Night Live got in the air
because they're so specific,
which makes them brilliant.
Also, Wells for Boys is kind of amazing.
And I'm wondering, did you come up with anything for them
that was just too weird for them to broadcast?
I don't think too weird, but definitely not funny.
Oh, yeah, that's another problem.
Definitely, I definitely wrote a lot of like,
huh, that's interesting.
Is it comedy?
Probably not.
Therefore.
You can remember any of the examples
of the ones they just didn't like that you loved?
There was this,
I remember this one where a woman
was throwing a dinner party
and she kept getting headaches
because she could hear the sound of silver
the sound of silver you mean like silverware or the metal silver like all of it and she
it was like giving her headaches and it was definitely more eerie and cinematic than it was
funny yeah although headaches usually in my experience comedy gold am i right guys
yeah yeah it's definitely very internal yeah i know i so let's talk about los espookys your
show which just started the second season this is a true story so on our staff at wait wait we
have a number of people, including myself,
who love the show and some people who haven't watched it.
There's nobody in between.
And those of us who love the show,
we're trying to explain it,
what it is to those who hadn't seen it,
and we all failed.
We just couldn't do it.
So can you explain what Los Espookys is?
Yes.
All right.
What Los Espookys is?
Yes.
All right.
Los Espookys is a half-hour television show. a group of friends in a made up Latin American country who
create
false
supernatural and horror
experiences
but in their world
supernatural
things also
happen naturally
and
none of it
is troublesome
to anyone.
It's like
nobody ever stops and goes, wait a minute.
Something just actual supernatural
just happened. They just go about their day.
So like for example,
like the very
very first episode of the show,
a priest hires them
to orchestrate a fake exorcism
so that he can show off to the other priests.
Right.
But also, my character can speak to the moon.
Right.
That has nothing to do with anything.
Which he never mentions.
I see.
When you pitched this to HBO, did they have any questions?
They were like, okay.
Sounds good.
You know, HBO is sort of
like, in my experience, they're sort of like
a
cool aunt
that is
just sort of like,
you know, as long as
you're happy and you seem healthy, they're like,
I don't want to pry.
Whatever you're doing, if it's making you happy.
Well, Julio, it is a joy to talk to you, and I love everything that you do, but we're going to see how you do at this, a game we're calling Los Ukis.
So your show is Los Spookys, but we were thinking about another show
that is altogether uki, The Addams Family.
That's your two out of three questions about the 60s spookiest monster-based sitcom
that was not the Monsters,
and you'll win our prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who is Julio Torres playing for?
Bethany Matthews of Phoenix, Arizona.
There we go.
So, here's your first question.
The Addams Family began even before the TV show as a series of cartoons by Charles Addams, thus the name,
in The New Yorker starting in 1938.
But it actually stopped appearing in The New Yorker
when the TV show started in 1964.
And the question is why?
A, Charles Adams couldn't handle the pace of writing both,
saying, quote, I'm not made of creepiness.
B, the editor of The New Yorker banned them
because anything on TV was too lowbrow for his magazine.
Or C, The New Yorker cut out all cartoons that year,
saying, we shall not laugh until there is peace in Vietnam.
So I'm going to go with B.
You're right.
That's what happened.
Editor of The New Yorker, William Shawn,
famously a snob,
would not have cartoons if they were associated with television.
I mean, look at their logo for crying out loud.
I know.
Next question.
Dutch master cigars, big sponsor of the TV show,
which led to a running gag of Gomez Adams, right, the father,
putting out lit cigars in his pocket.
How did the show pull off that trick?
A, all of that actor's suit pockets
were lined with asbestos.
B, Dutch masters made trick cigars for the show
that only looked like they were burning.
Or C, they would always cut away to a close-up
of a pinstriped ashtray.
Oh, okay.
Well, C sounds fun.
Right.
Last minute.
Pinstriped ashtray, right?
C is how I would solve
that problem, but I'm going to say B.
No, it was actually A.
The great John Astin, who played
Gomez Adams,
had a suit
with asbestos pockets so he could
put out the lit cigar.
Entertainment magic. It's amazing.
Alright, now the last question. If you get this
right, you win.
Although it only ran for two years,
the TV show The Addams Family was credited with many firsts, such as which of these?
A, the first use of computer animation
as the hand-playing thing was all digital.
B, it featured the first married couple on TV
who were actually hot for each other.
Or C, it featured the first on-camera actual murder?
I'm going to say...
Wait a minute.
Wait, but how do you measure...
You can't say that this is the first couple
that was hot for each other,
but how do you measure that?
Well, have you ever seen other early 60s television?
Okay, if the answer is B, I am contending that.
I love this.
All right.
So you're saying that even though, say, Ozzy...
I'm saying that the answer for this quiz is B,
but that's a problem.
We will accept your correct answer under protest.
But, Bill, how did Julio Torres do on our quiz?
He got two out of three, and that is good enough to win.
Congratulations, Julio.
Julio Torres is one of the creators and stars of Losa's Spookies,
now in its second season on HBO.
It is inexplicable, but trust me, you should watch it.
Julio Torres, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you.
As well as everything else you do.
Thank you so much, Julio.
Thank you, thank you.
Bye-bye.
Bye. In just a minute, we reveal the secret to getting rid of roaches for good
in our Listener Limerick Challenge.
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 at WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
We are playing this week with Hari Kondabolu,
Dulce Sloan, 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 attends Rimey and Michelle's
high school reunion on our Listen limerick challenge game.
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.
Tom, the CIA is investing in a new technology
that if it works, will bring back what?
If it works, it'll bring back the dead.
You're almost right.
That's not good.
See? Not quite.
Not so much dead as extinct.
The woolly mammoth. Exactly right.
The CIA is investing
in a biotechnology company
that believes they can bring the
woolly mammoth back via cloning,
and if they do that, the woolly mammoth will protect the tundra and stop global temperatures
from rising.
Yes.
Sure, we could do all of that, or I could just keep bringing my own bags to the grocery
store.
Why do we need a new, can we eat it?
Oh, yeah.
Well, that's what we did the first time.
Yeah.
I'm down for new meat.
Then you're going to love woolly mammoth fingers.
I mean, we won't, like, listen,
after eating chicken enough times,
you're like, bro, I get it.
I don't, why do we need a new animal?
Why can't we use the CAA
to save the ones we're losing now? Because none are
as cool as a woolly mammoth.
We have a snuffleupagus.
What about the other animals that live there
already? Aren't they going to be like, what the
what are we doing? Are they going to eat them?
What's going to happen there? What do woolly mammoths
eat? Polar bears.
No!
Yeah. It's going to be a hell
up there.
Man, the poor mastodon.
Nobody thought about the mastodon as an option?
No, I know.
Mastodons are too old.
They're not wooly.
This is stupid!
I mean, it's got to... You got to see the world burn.
Okay, I see you.
No, Grant, I mean, it's to stop global warming.
It's to get these guys up there and stomping around.
No, it stops global warming and all the stupid stuff that we're doing to the environment.
Not a new animal. We're bored.
Don't say, you're acting like the CIA
can't be trusted.
You know what?
And no one trusts the CIA
more than me.
Alright.
Recovered.
Tom, if you are single and you are tired of dating apps and the bars,
the hottest new place to find a date, we are told, is where?
Vaccination sites.
No.
A little poke will do you.
Valid point.
Help me, Peter.
I will, I hope you
it's the place you can get a large bunch of Swiss chard
and a soulmate
oh at the buffet
where do they sell vegetables
what buffets do you go to
where they have like big platters with Swiss chard
where do they sell vegetables
French Laundry
oh at the farmers market
thank you
more and more people are apparently turning to farmers markets to find love it makes sense That's a French laundry. Oh, at the farmer's market. The farmer's market, Tom, yes. Thank you.
More and more people are apparently turning to farmer's markets to find love.
It makes sense.
If you meet someone there, you know you already have at least one shared interest paying way too much for vegetables.
Yes.
Apparently, popular farmer's markets can see over 7,000 visitors a day.
The likelihood of running into someone who's also in the market, as it were, is very good.
The likelihood of literally running someone who's also in the market, as it were, is very good. The likelihood of literally running into someone is also pretty good because, oh, my God, why are you people all walking so slowly?
Right?
Jeez.
I get recognized at farmer's markets a lot, and I think it's because of all my NPR appearances.
It's kind of where my people are.
It really is.
Some farmer's markets are even capitalizing on this trend.
They're setting up matchmaking events at the farmers market.
They put out some wine.
They have music.
Because nothing's going to get you in the mood like a glass of Pinot and eight middle-aged men with fiddles playing Woody Guthrie covers.
I always thought there was people doing dirty things in the bouncy castle.
Because they always put it at the end of my farmer's market,
and there were never kids there.
If the bouncy castle's rocking, just walk away.
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 and 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 catch us live in person most weeks here
at the beautiful Studebaker Theater in Chicago
and in Boston October 20th and at Carnegie Hall in New York City December 8th and 9th.
And you can catch the Wait, Wait stand-up tour.
Kalamazoo, Michigan, Portland, Oregon, and Eugene, Oregon are now on sale.
Tickets and info for all of that at nprpresents.org.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Rachel Cazette from Chicago, Illinois.
Hey, Chicago.
Yay!
What do you do here in town?
By day, I'm a therapist, and on the side, I run a small business helping people find therapy,
and I'm a race announcer for endurance sports.
Oh, my gosh.
What kind of endurance sports?
Are you doing, like, ultra races, Ironman, what?
I just did my first Ironman recently, actually, And I mostly do things like half marathons, marathons, 5k, 10k. I read your
memoir. It was awesome. Oh, thank you. Thank you very much. And I'm not going to make fun of you
anymore. Rachel, welcome to the show. 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
in two of the limericks, you will be a winner.
You ready to play? Absolutely.
All right, here's your first limerick.
Our wiretap network will contrast.
Earwolves and gimlets
will trod paths.
It's our spies' PR
scheme to record
you and stream.
Yes, the CIA now has a podcast. That's right, podcast.
The Wrangling Files is the CIA's new podcast. It's finally here. It's meant to show people that
actually working for the CIA is really, really quite dull. Finally, a boring podcast.
is really, really quite dull.
Finally, a boring podcast.
The first episode features an interview with CIA Director Bill Burns,
who says that the job is mostly patient, quiet work,
while also taking credit for some of the CIA's recent successes,
including Putin's plans to invade Ukraine
and their assassination of Queen Elizabeth.
Yo, I don't think the CIA knows what it's doing anymore. You don't. Why is the CIA
having a podcast? You're supposed to be telling secrets. Right. Well, you're telling secrets.
Like I thought the whole point of CIA was to murder people and to be quiet. Right. Well,
remember the management of the CIA is still mainly white men and eventually all white men
have to have a podcast.
Meanwhile.
Get a mistress, bro.
I wonder if the NSA is going to have a podcast.
Imagine if it was
just snippets of our phone conversations.
Yeah.
That'd be amazing.
The best of you.
Here. Here's your next limerick.
To kill a disgusting fridge grazer, I brought in an AI appraiser.
We'll bring on the fight with some amplified light.
It will zap every roach with a...
Laser.
Yes, a laser.
They... Laser.
Yes, a laser.
Researchers have created a tiny laser
designed to kill cockroaches,
eliminating the one remaining reason
to buy a magazine.
The laser...
Done.
They just killed the industry.
The laser has different power levels.
At a lower level, the roaches are simply sort of
warded away.
At a useful level, the bugs can be tracked and killed
with a laser controlled by artificial intelligence.
This is great.
Burning household pests used to be a helpful clue
that your kid was a future serial killer.
Now it's for everyone.
But then you've got to pick up the bodies.
And the good thing about roaches is when I lived in New York,
like you would come in, they were riddled with roaches,
but when you turned the light on, they all hid.
Right.
So you could pretend you didn't have roaches.
What you'd have to do, I had this problem too when I lived in New York,
is you'd have to sort of just sort of, without going into the room,
you'd just reach in, turn on the light, and just wait a second
before you turned into the room and you were like, oh, no roaches here.
You'd say loudly so the roaches knew not to come out again.
Yeah.
We live different lives in New York.
Yeah, I guess so.
Yeah.
But wait, but y'all are thinking about is the smell.
Yeah.
You think burnt hair is bad?
You think burnt roach won't be terrible?
Well, it is not entirely inhumane.
On the lightest setting, the laser just zaps the roach's bikini line.
Love a summertime roach.
It's true.
Here is your last limerick.
These kids and their dang flipping phones
just stare like some worshiping drones.
I just wish they would wake, find flat rocks by a
lake, and spend quality time skipping stones. Skipping stones, yes. For some, skipping stones
is just a fun way to spend time with loved ones without actually having to talk to them.
But for Kurt Mountain Man Steiner, it's his life.
This week, we learned that the professional stone skipper
set a world record of 12 skips.
Wow.
I'm just kidding.
The world record is 88 skips.
But for a moment, I wanted all the dads listening
to feel really good about this.
88? 88.
88.
You can see it on video.
It's not easy, and it takes over your life.
For Steiner, it turned into an obsession that ended his marriage.
What can we say?
He was out of rocks, and his wedding ring was a little small, but otherwise perfect.
It's a big cost to play a sport where the top prize
in the top competition, as far as we can tell,
this is true, you get a trophy and a pound of fudge.
That's what you get.
I'm in.
Although no one's knocking a pound of fudge,
especially after a divorce.
I have a feeling she left him.
You think?
I have a strong suspicion that it was her call.
You think so?
Yes.
This is what it was for?
Fudge?
Fudge.
Fudge.
Bill, how did Rachel do in our quiz?
Fantastic.
Rachel, you were really good.
Thank you so much for playing, Rachel.
Maybe I'll see you at a race one of these days.
That would be amazing.
Thank you so much.
Take care, Rachel.
Now on to 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 now worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Dulce and Hari have two apiece. Tom has three. All right. Oh, it's mine to lose. It is, Tom. All right, I'm going to
arbitrarily choose Hari to go first, so Hari, fill in the blank. After devastating parts of Florida
midweek, Hurricane Blank made landfall in the Carolinas on Friday. Ian. Right, Hurricane Ian.
Following the announcement of Liz Truss's temporary budget, the blank fell to record lows against
the dollar.
The British pound.
Yes, the pound sterling.
This week, Russia granted citizenship to former U.S. security consultant blank.
Eddie Snowden.
Right.
On Tuesday, the funeral for Shinzo Abe, the assassinated former prime minister of blank,
was held.
Japan.
Right.
This week, the Buffalo Bills scored a safety against the Miami Dolphins after
the Dolphins attempted a punt and their kicker
blanked. Ran out of
bounds? No, hit the teammate right in the
butt with the punt, which knocked the ball out of bounds.
This week, New York announced it was advancing
plans to ban blank-powered cars
by 2035.
Gasoline? Yeah. This week, a woman
in Sweden who wanted the word meow
tattooed inside her lip
was heartbroken after the tattoo artist blanked.
Turned into a cat and scratched her face.
No, she tattooed the word meow on the outside of her lip.
The woman shared the mistake on TikTok where she showed everyone her lower lip,
which had the word meow tattooed on it in giant block letters.
She said she's feeling better about things now that she's getting laser removal and her lip just says
ow.
Bill, how did Hari
do on our quiz? He got five right,
ten more points, total of twelve,
and the lead. Alright.
Dulce. Dang it!
You're up next, Dulce. I don't know nothing.
Well, we'll find out. Here we go.
On Thursday, officials in Russia announced
Putin's plans to annex four regions in blank.
Ukraine?
Right.
On Tuesday, the S&P 500 officially fell into blank market territory.
One of them animals?
Yes, and specifically a bear.
Amid another missile launch, Vice President Harris made a visit to the DMZ in blank.
Oh, Korea.
Right.
On Monday, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that President Biden's blank
relief plan would cost about $400 billion.
Student loan? Student debt relief. Right.
Much to the dismay of residents in
Emeryville, California, the famous blank
cafe has announced it will close.
I don't know. Rudy's Can't
Fail Cafe. On Wednesday,
McDonald's announced they were launching a blank
meal aimed at adults.
Happy Meal. Right. Best known for the hit song, Gangsta's Paradise.
Rapper Blank passed away at the age of 59.
Coolio.
Yes.
This week, an Australian man who was in his kitchen baking
when two robbers broke into his house blanked.
Hit him with a pan.
Close.
He picked up a knife and said, well, you've effed my cheesecake.
Game on.
So he went full Dund-dee on them.
He absolutely did.
The two thieves had already ransacked his garage
when they were chased out of the home by the furious baker
who brandished the knife while yelling,
well, you've effed my cheesecake, game on,
which, spoiler alert, is also how this season
of the Great British Bake Off ends.
Bill, I think Delce did pretty well.
She did very well.
Five right, ten more points.
Total of 12 ties, Harry.
All right.
So how many, then, does Tom Papa need to win this?
I'm five to win.
All right, here we go.
This is for the game.
On Tuesday, the Senate advanced a bill aimed at averting a blank.
Shutdown.
Right.
On Wednesday, a judge sentenced one of the blank rioters to 86 months in prison.
January 6th.
Yes.
On Monday, Cuba passed a referendum legalizing same-sex blank.
Marriage.
Yes.
On Wednesday, the Yankees' Aaron Judge tied Roger Marris' blank record.
Home run record.
In a single season, yes.
This week, a woman checking in on her Southwest flight was informed that her suitcase was over the weight limit, so she blanked.
So she threw it off the plane.
No, so she took her chicken suit out of the bag and put it on.
Bill, did Tom Papa do well enough to win?
So close.
Four right, eight more points, 11-1 short.
Ari and Dulce tied for the win.
Whoa!
Congratulations.
Well done.
Thank you.
Thank you.
In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict
after Lizzo played James Madison's flute
what will be the next historical artifact to make the news.
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, benevolvolent Overlord.
Philip Godka writes our limericks.
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shane O'Donnell.
Thanks, as always, to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre.
BJ Liederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Our production assistant is Sofia Hernandez-Simonides.
Special thanks to Vinnie Thomas and Monica Hickey.
Our crystal flautist 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 Chilog and the executive producer of
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Michael Danforth. Now panel
what historical artifact will
make the news next? Tom Papa.
As seas continue to rise
we're bringing back Noah's Ark.
Dulce Sloan.
Kim Kardashian wore Marilyn Monroe's dress.
Lizzo played James Madison's crystal flute.
And RuPaul will wear Thomas Jefferson's wig to the MTV Music Awards.
And Hari Kondabolu.
Tucker Carlson will wear Christopher Marlowe's codpiece and there will still be room.
Well, if any of that
happens, panel, we'll ask you about it.
Wait, wait, don't tell me.
Thank you, Bill Curtis. Thanks also to Tom Papa, Dulce Sloan,
and Hari Kondabolu. Thanks to our
fabulous audience here at the Studebaker.
Thanks to all of you for listening
at home. I'm Peter Sagal.
We'll see you next week.
Woo!
At home, I'm Peter Sagal.
We'll see you next week.
This is NPR.