Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - Marin Alsop
Episode Date: July 27, 2019Marin Alsop, conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, joins us along with panelists Adam Felber, Faith Salie, and Petey DeAbreu.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adcho...icesNPR Privacy Policy
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
It's all right, Zach Morris, you're saved by the bill.
I'm Bill Curtis, and here is your host at the Chase Bank Auditorium in downtown Chicago, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thanks, everybody. We've got a great show for you today.
Later on, we're going to be talking to the first orchestra conductor we've ever had on our show, the legendary Maren Alsop.
I'm going to ask her how she can get a bunch of emotionally fragile egomaniacs to do what they're told just by waving her arms,
because, frankly, that's never worked for me.
But first, we want to hear your solo, so give us a call.
The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Let's welcome our first listener contestant.
Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Travis Serlin from Chicago.
Hey, Travis, Chicago.
Chicago. Chicago.
Yeah.
Are you far from us right now?
Where are you?
I'm at the Summer House.
Oh, okay.
I don't know what that is.
It's a great restaurant.
Oh, your restaurant.
I'm a hostess.
Oh, yeah, you're not far.
You should come on down.
We'll wait.
We don't have time.
Welcome to the show, Travis.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First up, it's a comedian performing with Phoebe Robinson
September 5th through the 7th at the Arlington Drafthouse
in Arlington, Virginia.
I'm going to hope that was a dog of some kind.
Not an appetizer coming back.
All right, we'll try that again.
You know, dude, hold on.
Travis, what is going on?
I stepped outside so it would be quieter,
but then these cars are driving by with these mufflers.
Oh, my God.
Here we go. We'll try it one more time.
First up, it's a comedian performing with Phoebe Robinson
September 5th through the 7th at the Arlington Drafthouse in Arlington, Virginia.
It's Peter DeBrayer.
Next, a contributor to CBS Sunday Morning.
It's Faith Saley.
Hey, Travis.
And the co-host of the podcast, Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone, is Adam Felber. Hey, Travis. And the co-host of the podcast, Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone, is Adam Felber.
Hey, Travis.
So, Travis, as I'm sure you anticipated, you're going to play 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'll win our prize.
Any voice from our show you choose in your voicemail.
You ready to go?
I'm ready.
All right.
Here is your first quote.
That is outside my purview.
That was the answer that somebody gave, oh, about 100 times on Wednesday
to almost every question he was asked.
Who was it?
That was Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
Yes, indeed.
Robert Mueller.
Very good.
So you know that moment at the beginning of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
when Gene Wilder comes out and he's this creaky old man
and everybody is disappointed and sad,
and then he does a somersault and everybody cheers?
Well, imagine that, but instead of the somersault,
he just kind of dodders around for eight hours.
That was Wednesday.
Former special counsel Robert Mueller appeared
before two house committees with the energy
and enthusiasm of a man facing
his annual prostate exam,
which might explain why he answered
certain pointed questions by just turning his head
and coughing.
I don't know.
Everybody said it was boring, but I was kind of
breathless because I was,
you just know something was going to happen. You didn't want to miss the one moment it did.
And yet nothing did. It was so disappointing to so many Democrats and liberals because liberals
had been building him up for two years as this Clint Eastwood figure, this old tough lawman,
no nonsense, going to come in and kick ass and take names. And in the end, he
was just like Clint Eastwood,
who right now is
89 years old.
He said he
didn't want to testify. I know. He said
he wasn't good at testifying. He said
read the report because there's enough
evidence there to impeach nine successive
presidents. In the movie, Clint Eastwood
says, I don't want to do that. I'm not going to go in there.
But then he goes in there and he beats up the bad guys.
And there was none of that.
And there would have been a little squint.
And instead of Clint Eastwood, we got Sam the Eagle
from the Muppets.
Or maybe, you know,
he also reminds me of those,
what are those, the Easter Island heads?
What are they called?
The big Easter Island heads.
Yeah, he looks like one Heads. The big Easter Island Heads.
Yeah, he looks like one of those.
The MOA.
Thank you, the MOA.
The MOA.
Yeah.
Oh, and I read the MOA report.
It was a perfectly nice visit with an aging relative.
That's exactly what it was.
All right, Travis, here's your next quote.
I will disprove the
doubters, the doomsters,
and the gloomsters. That was
somebody taking office as the new British Prime Minister.
Who is enemy of all gloomsters?
Oh, that's
Boris Johnson? Yes!
Boris Johnson!
Or Bojo, as we hope everybody starts calling it.
Imagine what it would be like to have your formerly powerful and serious country
taken over by an incompetent womanizer with terrible hair.
Hard to do, isn't it?
Well, it happened in Britain this week
when Boris Johnson became prime minister.
Look how far the empire has fallen.
They are so broken.
The good news is they're ripe to be colonized.
Time for payback, India.
What has happened where people who were clowns
are now in charge of everything?
Yes, and I wish they were actual clowns are now in charge of everything?
Yes, and I wish they were actual clowns, because those people at least have timing.
Well, Australia... So Boris Johnson, if you don't know, is most famous, at least here in the US,
for being the mayor of London during the 2012 Olympics,
during which he tried to do a zipline stunt to promote it,
and famously got stuck dangling from a rope.
Remember this?
50 feet above the ground.
Maybe that's why he was finally elected to handle Brexit.
He knows what it's like to be just stuck there,
not being able to get out,
looking like an idiot.
He's an interesting bloke,
but he struck me,
and maybe this is just because I'm reading
the Harry Potter series for the first time with my children.
He's super Slytherin.
But he tries to throw you off with this Hufflepuff hair.
I'm just going to say this, and you may not get this yet.
They will.
He's not so much Slytherin as he's Peter Pettigrew.
Wow! Am Irew. Wow!
Am I right?
Wow!
I do get that, Peter.
You just brought our whole theater down the nerd hole.
Except he somehow got stopped while transforming back from a rat.
He's caught halfway.
All right.
Your last quote is from the governor of Puerto Rico.
I have not resigned.
That was an official statement made just one day before he did what?
He resigned.
He did, Travis, yes.
Governor Ricardo Rosselló of Puerto Rico had survived this massive financial crisis
and this terrible hurricane, but the one thing he could not survive was his own texts.
In the leaked messages, the governor mocked his enemies and disaster victims.
He made fun of fat people and the disabled, which is all bad.
But then he went after Puerto Rican icon Ricky Martin.
And that will not stand.
Did he really?
He really did.
And in the end,
as you probably saw,
tens of thousands of people
took to the streets of San Juan
to demand his ouster
led by Ricky Martin.
Yeah.
What?
Yeah, yeah.
This is a musical in the making.
It really is.
If only there were somebody
who could write musicals
from Puerto Rico.
Yeah, I know.
Oh. As he tried to defend himself, Rosselló said he was just blowing off steam
and the texts that were leaked shouldn't be taken seriously,
which is what all of us would say if the terrible, terrible things
we email our friends ever got out.
Oh, my Lord.
Even the protesters who massed in the streets were, like,
marching while still erasing all their emails from there.
How would you guys fare if all the private messages you had sent Even the protesters who massed in the streets were like marching while still erasing all their emails from them.
How would you guys fare if all the private messages you had sent to your friends got out into public?
I would never be allowed to be governor of Puerto Rico again.
That's true.
I'd be even more unemployable.
I didn't think that was possible. But it's amazing because the only good part is this scandal has shown that Puerto Rico is so
full of corruption, racism, and misogyny
that maybe now President
Trump will recognize it as part of the United States.
Bill, how did
Travis do in our quiz? He'll be welcome in
Puerto Rico. He got them all
three. He's a winner. Congratulations, Travis.
Thank you, Peter.
Thank you. Bye-bye.
We want to remind everybody they can
join us most weeks right here at the Chase Bank Auditorium
in downtown Chicago, Illinois for tickets
and more information. Just stroll
your web surfer over to WBEZ.org
or you can find a link at our website,
waitwait.npr.org.
Right now, panel, it is time for you
to answer some questions about this week's news.
Petey, the owners of a giant replica
of Noah's Ark in Kentucky
have filed a lawsuit against them
for failing to cover damage caused to the Ark.
By what?
Water.
Exactly right.
Even worse. Exactly right. Even worse.
Nice and gentle.
Even worse, it was rain.
The 510-foot-long replica Ark
is part of Kentucky's
Nowhere's Ark Encounter theme park,
the perfect vacation getaway
for families
who find Knott's Berry Farm to be a little too racy.
The owners say they were inspired to build the replica
when God's voice told them to gather up two of every animal
and charge them $75 each for admission.
The park opened in 2016,
but was forced to close for a few days right then
when the ark and its surrounding area was damaged by, and I quote, slightly above average rain.
Yikes.
Apparently they skipped the part of the book of Genesis where God tells Noah to spring for the undercoating.
Do you happen to know, Peter, what other experiences they offer at this park?
The Noah's Ark Adventure?
I can't say that I've been, Faith.
I can't say that I've been.
I do believe this is a creationist place,
although not like the primary creationist museum,
which is elsewhere.
So it doesn't have two figures of a unicorn
on a nearby hillside.
Going, wait a minute, guys, guys,
you left us behind.
It should have made it a water park.
That's true.
Absolutely.
Coming up, we don the yellow jersey
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.
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Yeah, between the 2020 debates and the president's battle over immigration, there's a lot going on.
And when there's news you need to know about, the NPR Politics Podcast is there to tell you what happened.
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From NPR at WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
We're playing this week with Petey Diabru, Faith Saley, and Adam Felber.
And here again is your host at the Chase Bank Auditorium in downtown Chicago, Peter Sago.
Thank you so much, Bill.
Auditorium in downtown Chicago.
Peter Segal.
Thank you so much, Bill.
So listen, 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 in the air.
Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hey, this is John Dealy
from New Brunswick, New Jersey.
New Brunswick, New Jersey?
I'm from New Jersey.
What do you do there?
I'm a chemical engineer
working at L'Oreal.
L'Oreal? The skincare products company?
That would be it.
I'm going to ask you a question, and I want you to tell me the truth.
Of course.
I see ads, especially for skincare products, and usually in magazines,
and they're amazingly elaborate about how this amazing product is anti-aging
and is going to make you look like this supermodel or maybe that supermodel and is going to solve all your problems and so on and so forth.
Are any of those claims true?
I mean, only if you buy L'Oreal products, especially CeraVe.
Absolutely.
All right.
Fair enough.
Well played.
Glad to know we heard it from a scientist.
Well, welcome to our show, John.
You're going to play the game
in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is John's topic?
I'm just here for the chafing.
There's so much casual fans don't know
about the Tour de France.
For example, did you know
Tour de France is French for Tour of France?
But not all of the stars of that bike race
are on the bikes.
Our panelists are going to tell you about an unsung hero,
somebody who works in the background of that great race.
Pick the real one, and you'll win our prize,
the weight-weighter of your choice on your voicemail.
You ready to play?
Yes, sir.
All right, first let's hear from Faith Saley. Old black and white photos of Tour de France riders
show them smoking cigarettes on their bikes, their lean, gallic cheeks inhaling the smoke they
believed opened the lungs. It was only 2002 when the tour officially outlawed cigarettes within 100
meters of the route. But do you think this has stopped tout le monde from smoking?
Oh, no, no, my friends, this is France.
Enter Didier Lupin.
His job, his métier, is official cigarette extinguisher of the Tour de France.
He's a stone-cold man in a beret who stalks the crowd looking for smokers.
When he sees a lit cigarette,
he casually places his thumb and index finger in his mouth,
covers them with spit,
and douses the burning stick with a sizzle as he swans by,
earning him the nickname Monsieur Les Droits Magiques,
Mr. Magic Fingers.
And you can't miss him.
To travel with the tour, he rides his 1964 Peugeot motor scooter,
a contraption that's so terrifically loud, it warns smokers he's coming
and therefore leaves a wake of hastily cast-off cigarettes.
Didier celebrates his work every night with a nice pernod and a single galoise.
Problem, he says,
nothing wrong with a little smoke
as long as it's away from the course.
The official cigarette extinguisher of the Tour de France
riding along in his moto.
Your next story of a tour helper
comes from Adam Felber.
The cycling world was stunned last week by the revelation that the venerable Tour de France is rigged.
No, the winner isn't predetermined, but now we've learned that the loser is.
In fact, for the past ten years, tour officials have paid an actor to come in last
as a means of encouraging slower racers who may be thinking of giving up.
Now, if this sounds like evidence of an overweening, everyone-gets-a-trophy,
nanny-state culture run amok, let me assure you, that's exactly what this is.
It's a good job, says New Zealand actor Leon Grice, who was just exposed as this year's paid
loser. Quote, you don't have to train as hard, you can have a pint or two each night, and you
make friends with a lot of wonderful,
funny people whose only sin is being
hopeless wankers when it comes to cycling.
But now that the jig
is up, Grice knows that the gig is over and we
can all rest assured that next year's
last place finisher will be a real
loser. For his part, Grice
expects he'll return to acting and maybe someday
to cycling. Quote, now that I've
come in 168th
place, it'd be fun to see if I can improve on that. Or I'd be just doing what I did this year,
but for free and with more training and no drinking. In fact, never mind.
Leon Grice, the designated loser of the Tour de France, who always comes in last. Your last story
of the wind beneath the Tour de France's
wings comes from Petey Debreu.
One of the great traditions of the
Tour de France is fans writing encouraging
messages for cyclists on the road.
Stuff like, Go Lance!
Hooray Miguel! You don't even need
those training wheels, Franz.
But many fans write bad words
or draw profane pictures,
which the tour doesn't want showing up on the TV broadcast.
It's hard enough to keep people watching ever since they cracked down on drugs
and all the cyclists walking their bikes up the hills.
So the tour has hired two men whose sole job is to drive the course every day
and paint over those dirty messages.
They are called
officially erasers. Says one, quote, people draw genitals. I have no idea why.
Because it's fun. Mostly the erasers just paint over the images, but they also let their artistic
side show. According to the Wall Street Journal, one of the erasers turns larger renderings
of the male anatomy into butterflies or owls.
By the way, now you know the backstory
of everyone you meet who has a butterfly tattoo.
All right.
So the Tour de France happening now in France
is helped along by one of these three people.
Is it from Faith, the official cigarette extinguisher,
a guy who rides along the course
and takes the cigarettes out of the mouths
of the people who might dare to smoke them near the riders?
From Adam Felber, Leon Grice,
the man whose job it is to ride and come in last
so nobody else has to?
Or from Petey, the stories of the guy who go along the course
and erase the obscene messages that people might have left for the riders
so they don't appear on TV.
Which of these is the real story of the Tour de France's little helper?
I really wish it was all of them, but I'm going to go with number three.
You can go with number three.
That's Petey's story of the graffiti eraser.
The audience likes it.
All right, then.
To bring you the real answer,
here's somebody who knows a lot about the Tour de France.
The most inappropriate graffiti you see out on the roads of the Tour de France
is really a thing out in Australia, which seems to be a favorite.
That was Joshua Robinson.
He is the European sports reporter for the Wall Street Journal
who wrote about the official Tour de France erasers and what they have to do.
Congratulations.
You got it right.
Petey was telling the truth.
You earned a point for him for being honest,
and you have won our prize, the voice of anyone you might choose.
Congratulations.
Thank you so much.
Take care.
Bye-bye.
Thank you.
And now the game where we ask pioneers to go discover something completely uninteresting.
It's called Not My Job.
Marin Alsop discovered her passion for music at an early age,
but Juilliard wouldn't admit her to their
conducting program, so she
just started her own damn orchestra next door
presumably to drown them out.
She's now the music director of the Baltimore
Symphony and the Sao Paulo State Symphony.
We are delighted to have her with us. Marin
Alsop, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you.
Thank you.
So, I always ask sort of musical geniuses like yourself,
were you like a musical prodigy?
Did you have to be forced to practice the piano, or did you love it?
No, I was born with a job.
My parents were professional musicians.
My dad was a violinist, and my mom a cellist,
and so they needed a pianist, and so they said,
oh, let's make one.
So I was born with a job, And so they needed a pianist. And so they said, oh, let's make one.
So I was born with a job.
And really, I hated the piano.
I hated it.
I retired when I was six from the piano.
Now, was that because you didn't like the piano or because you just resented your parents?
Like, this is why you were here.
Well, how much time do we have now?
No, they tricked me into playing violin.
And then I, you know, for every
kid, there is the right instrument.
How do you trick a child to playing the violin?
I've left some candy inside this
odd wooden object.
It was very close, because
they said, you want to go
to summer camp? You know, and so
I already had an archetypal image of
summer camp, you know, with sailing and swimming
and horseback riding.
Somehow horses got in there.
And they said, oh, before we go, we forgot to tell you, you might have to play the violin.
And this camp is called Meadow Mountain.
It's fondly called the concentration camp for violinists.
So that's where this came from.
And when you got there, they just put you in your little cell and handed you a violin?
Yeah, the teacher said, so you're going to practice from 8 until 1 every day, 5 hours.
Luckily, I was 7.
I had no real sense of time.
Right.
Wow.
Well, 7 years old, and they made you practice your violin 5 hours a day, and this was supposedly
for pleasure.
This was camp.
Right.
I mean, there's so many things to say.
But she was on top of a horse while she was practicing.
What were the other activities, like weeping? No, no. Yeah, I mean, there's so many things to say. But she was on top of a horse while she was practicing. What were the other
activities, like weeping? No, no,
yeah, weeping.
The only sport we were allowed to do
was ping pong.
And so, I am awesome
at ping pong.
And is it true, we read
that you decided at some point you wanted to be
a conductor? Well, what happened was that
after practicing for five hours for eight weeks,
I was pretty good,
so I got into Juilliard right after that.
But I played in the orchestra, which I loved,
and they got some complaints
that somebody was trying to lead the whole orchestra
from the back of the second violins.
Wait a minute, so they actually brought you in?
Did they complain about you?
They brought my...
How do you try to conduct the orchestra from the second violin?
I think the problem was I was having a really good time.
I liked the timpani guy was really cute back there,
and I was just having fun.
And, you know, I was just moving,
and everybody else was, you know, already like Stonehenge,
and I was busy.
And then, luckily, my dad took me to a concert,
and I saw the conductor.
He came out, and he started talking to me, talking to the audience, talking to me, I thought.
And, you know, he was really excited, and then he started jumping around and conducting,
and I thought, oh, nobody's yelling at this guy.
I could do that.
In fact, he's doing the yelling.
Exactly.
And he was sweating and spitting, and that was Leonard Bernstein.
Oh!
Wow.
Why? So you saw Leonard Bernstein, and I should say somewhat famously,
you became, I guess, a student isn't a good enough word, one of his protégés.
I did, luckily. That was the highlight of my life.
How does one become a protégé of a conductor?
Like, I'm thinking of Karate Kid.
You know, like, is there a lot of work with the swish of the arm?
There's a lot of that, yes.
I mean...
Yes, said Maestro Bernstein to a student.
It's all of the swish of the arm.
I guess what's really under the question
is that every kid who goes to see
a concert thinks he or she can be
a conductor, right? The actual
movement that you make,
forgive me, looks simple.
So what is it that goes
into conducting? Oh my
God, these questions. You said they were going to be
easy, Peter.
I said my questions were going to be
easy. I said nothing about were going to be easy.
I said nothing about faith.
But listen, you know, it's true.
It is a lot of it.
I think about who we are as human beings that creates a different sound
and elicits a different response.
It's all about body language and connecting.
Not only that, and I say this
because I'm privileged enough to see you work.
Something I noticed, most people can't see this because I'm privileged enough to see you work, something I noticed,
most people can't see this
because the conductor
has their back to the audience,
but because music is playing,
you cannot shout instructions.
You must indicate
what you'd like a musician to do
through facial expressions.
You have to have
a wide range of dirty looks.
Really?
Or encouraging looks
or question marks.
Or maybe it just looks like
you're not really going to play it that way, are you?
Sort of more like that.
Or also, you know, you have to anticipate.
Sometimes people are about to play at the wrong moment, you know,
and you have to kind of anticipate, like, preventive conducting, I call it.
You know, like, don't do that.
Well, Marin Alsop, it is a pleasure to talk to you,
but we have, in fact, asked you here to play a game we're calling...
You're a good conductor, but are you a super conductor?
You're pretty good. We have heard, I have seen, at musical conducting,
but what do you know about the other kind of conducting?
Conducting electricity.
We're going to ask you three questions about that other kind of conducting.
If you get two right, you win a prize for one of our listeners,
the voice of anyone they might like on their voicemail.
Bill, who is Marin Alsop playing for?
Lucinda Watson of Chattanooga, Tennessee,
who was this month's winner of our Smart Speaker Quiz.
You could be a winner, too.
Just ask your smart speaker to open the Wait, Wait Quiz.
All right, you ready to do this?
Here we go, Maestro.
Lightning rods were all the rage
after they were invented in the late 18th century,
so much so that they turned up where?
A, attached to racehorses,
hoping they'd give them an extra kick.
B, on cannonballs,
in the hope that it would attract lightning
onto someone's enemies.
Or C, on top of ladies' hats,
because they looked cool.
Oh, let's see we got the horseback you have the cannonball so it fly over there lightning would hit
the cannonball blow up your enemy or ladies hats because they looked stylish
yeah but that would hurt wouldn't it the ladies that that could be that could be
really dangerous well ladies have already made sacrifices for fashion we're going with the hat yeah
okay we're going with the hat you're all right
it's amazing how you got them all to work together like that all right next
question electric fences are excellent conductors, of course,
but they're not just for farms.
Someone once seriously suggested
using an electrified fence for which of these uses?
A, surrounding mixed martial arts fighters
at the first UFC bout.
B, keeping the political press from harassing senators.
Or C, managing the line,
which gets quite extraordinary,
at Franklin's Barbecue in Austin, Texas.
Okay, I'm going to go with the barbecue
because the electric and the barbecue,
it sounds kind of...
No, it wasn't the barbecue.
It was the mixed martial arts,
but I just want to say that I'm glad
that you mentioned the barbecue
because the only reason I put it in here
was that they would hear it
and send us some barbecue.
So I appreciate the help. All right. You get this last one right, you win.
Your last question is about superconductors. These are the remarkable materials that conduct electricity with almost no resistance. Very useful in industry and science. In 2010, a group of
Japanese scientists made an incredible discovery about superconductors. How did it happen? Was it A, one of them was picking out ham
at the grocery store freezer section,
noticed it was colder than the frozen chicken.
That led to the discovery that ham
makes an excellent superconductor.
B, an incompetent lab assistant
made contact with two electrical leads
and the current passed through his body
with excellent efficiency without harming him.
So he now works as a professional superconductor.
Or C, the scientist got drunk,
dunked a superconductor in booze,
and discovered that red wine increased its conductivity 62%.
C.
All right, we're going with C.
I'm trusting them.
It is C.
It is amazing.
What happened, they all got drunk, and they were like,
oh, I wonder what all these boozes are.
They tried all the boozes in the superconductor,
and they got amazing results.
Red wine increases conductivity of the substance they were using 62%.
Bill, how did Marin Alsop do in our quiz?
Well, she's a winner in our book.
Congratulations.
Marin Alsop is the music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.
You can see her this summer
at the Ravinia Music Festival outside of Chicago.
Dates and more at marinalsop.com.
Marin Alsop, thank you so much for joining us.
My pleasure.
Give it up for Marissa Alsop.
Woo!
In just a minute, Bill talks to his breakfast
in the 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.
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It is also causing some governments concern.
Listen and subscribe to The Indicator from NPR.
From NPR, WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis. We're playing this week with Petey Diabru, Faith Saley, and Adam Felber.
And here again is your host at the Chase Bank Auditorium in downtown Chicago, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill. In just a minute.
In just a minute, if you're lost and you look, you will find Bill rhyme after rhyme.
It's the Listener Lumber 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.
Faith, this week, a reporter spent four days
and countless resources getting to the bottom
of a mystery that attracted feverish media
attention from across the country.
How a mysterious what ended up in New York City.
Is this an animal?
It is not an animal.
Oh, it's not.
Although sometimes it comes animal style.
Oh, an In-N-Out burger.
Yes, an In-N-Out burger.
What?
A pristine, uneaten, perfectly wrapped In-N-Out burger
was found in the middle of a street in Queens on Monday.
What?
Now, that is thousands of miles away from the nearest In-N-Out burger restaurant.
It's global warming. It's migration.
It's possible.
They can't be doing that.
Social media became obsessed had New York found a strange and inconvenient way to patch potholes.
Social media became obsessed had New York found a strange and inconvenient way to patch potholes.
Was there a portal to a parallel superior dimension in which In-N-Out was available everywhere?
And how did it survive more than three minutes without being eaten?
I mean, that's a pretty good burger.
Who cares if it's street meat?
What did we discover?
Well, NYPD put out an Amberger alert.
Anyway,
an investigative reporter spent four days on the problem, and she was able to track down
this 16-year-old Queens resident
who had picked up three In-N-Out burgers on her trip to San Diego.
People love them so much, they fly to California, they get burgers, they bring them home.
Somehow she kept them in pristine condition the whole way back,
didn't eat them, But when she got home
she was rushing to catch a bus.
The bag burst open and one of them fell to the ground.
Did a burglar steal it?
Like a
Hamburglar? No. We think what happened was
like a lot of people or
things that come to New York had thought it could finally be a star
so it ran away.
And we'll be appearing with Andy Cohen
next Monday night on
Watch What We Found on the Street Live.
Adam, online dating may actually now
become a thing of the past
because there's a new kind of matchmaking
where you try to get a date
by simply asking your friends
to do what for you?
Find you a date.
Yes.
But using what technique?
On their dating apps.
It's like putting your profile like,
and by the way, I have a friend.
No.
Yeah.
No, not at all.
I'll give you a hint.
Here on slide three,
you can see that you know...
Yes, PowerPoint. I read something about that. Yes. It on slide three, you can see that you know... Yes, PowerPoint.
I've read something about that.
It's a thing where you ask your friends to create a PowerPoint slide deck all about you.
Oh, that's great.
Helping you move used to be the worst thing you could ask a friend to do.
No more.
It's a new dating trend.
It gives you the opportunity to say the sentence,
Hey, can you whip up a PowerPoint to help me get lucky the event is called date my friend dot PPT
oh the office drones know that and it gives your friends a chance to pitch you
to other singles at this big presentation using PowerPoint Wow it
combines all the fun of a work meeting with the people who know all your worst
secrets and if your friend's name is Ted, you can say, thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.
Exactly right.
Wait, so, whoa.
Okay.
So do people, is it an event?
Yes.
The idea is you go to this event, either you're a seller or a buyer.
It's sort of exactly like any other kind of business presentation, right?
Like an investment thing or a sales pitch.
You come in.
You're a buyer.
You sit down.
And the sellers come up and say, no, let me introduce you to my friend, Ted.
And they show you a PowerPoint, including, and this was a real one, such positive points.
You know, it's, of course, it'll be a little bullet pointed list with a star wipe, you know.
Has in-unit washer and dryer.
Are there cons listed too?
You want to feel like you're getting the whole package.
It's sales.
If you're a sale or a new sales,
you don't tell people what's a bad commercial.
I'd rather get it up front.
Yeah, I mean, this is...
Let's produce a commercial.
Yeah, it's like, is this a fix-me-up or can I move in?
What's going on?
Yeah, I know.
Don't sell me a lemon.
I'll sell you a lemon. That's terrible.? Yeah, I know. Sell me a lemon.
That's terrible. Someone's like pitching you a potential date as like a real rehab opportunity.
That's not good.
All Mary needs is some tender
loving care and some ant abuse and she'll
be fine.
This one's a tear down but at a great price.
Exactly. 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, if that's 1-888-924-8924,
or click the Contact Us link on our website,
waitwait.npr.org,
there you can find out about attending our weekly live shows right here
at the Chase Bank Auditorium in Chicago.
And our upcoming show is August 29th and 30th
at Wolf Trap outside of Washington, D.C.
and September 12th at the New Jersey
Performing Arts Center in Newark, New Jersey.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hello.
Hello.
Who is this?
This is Serena from Austin, Texas.
You're from Austin, Texas.
What do you do there in Austin?
I am an x-ray tech at a hospital.
You're an x-ray tech at a hospital?
Yes.
Okay, I know you probably get this question a lot
and I apologize, but I'm genuinely interested.
What is the weirdest thing you found inside a human being?
I don't know if that's appropriate for public radio.
Say more. Well, welcome to the show,
Serena. You are going to play the game in which you must, of course, complete the rhyme. Bill Curtis is going to read for you three news-related limericks, but he's not going to finish them.
Your job, provide that last word or phrase. Do that two
times out of three, you win our prize. You ready to play?
I'm ready. Here we go.
Here's your first limerick. My herd
leaves a long, slimy trail.
I'm a farmer,
but on a small scale.
A cream from their
slime seems to turn
back the time, and
that's why I'm milking a...
Snail.
A snail, yes.
As if oat milk wasn't gross enough,
they're now milking snails.
Do snails have nipples?
Do snails have nipples?
Suck on that, all things considered.
Oh, my God.
No, we're talking about snail mucus creams
that are being used as cosmetics.
People pay hundreds of dollars for this,
although for half the cost, I will send you
what just came up from my stomach
as I started to talk about this.
Apparently, snail slime is a moisturizing agent with many benefits, collagen production,
heals acne scars, and more people complimenting your wet, sticky face.
Hey, handsome, did someone just sneeze on you in the subway?
Here's your next limerick.
In their shells, they don't have beaks nor legs.
But for gossip, they are powder kegs.
With vibrations of sound, lots of news goes around.
There is chatter amongst all the...
Eggs?
Eggs, yes.
Eggs in the nest, it turns out, can talk to each other.
They do this by vibrating their shells, an incredible discovery,
and an efficient way to pre-whisk egg yolks for baking.
It is believed that these vibrations of egg to egg act as a warning call
if a threat is detected, and it's not safe to hatch,
but also can trick the mama bird into thinking her cell phone is going off.
It's not safe to hatch.
Like creatures out in the wild don't eat eggs?
Well, apparently.
I'm just telling you what the scientists have told us.
Quick, remain an egg.
We'll be safe inside here.
All scientists know is that they notice that when, say, a seagull, say,
makes a distinct distress call, which they do, a warning call,
the eggs start vibrating in a distinct way, as if they're telling each other, stay low, you know.
But maybe it's also like that kind of communication you have with your siblings when you're sort of like,
dude, like this is not a good day to talk to mom.
By the way, I should say, this only applies to wild, fertile eggs in the nest.
Don't worry about the eggs in the fridge talking about you the second
you close the door.
Here is your last
limit. For my baby,
I'm changer and wiper.
But at false alerts,
I am a griper.
Sometimes when there's stink,
it's less full than you'd
think. So I get text
alerts from the...
Ooh, diapers.
Yes! Pampers
has created a new line of electronic smart
diapers, which send data to your
phone, alerting you when the diaper
is dry. Using WiWiFi.
Exactly.
Ooh, that's a strong signal.
Wait, wait, can I have the past turd for your wee-wee five?
Anyways, it lets you know how your baby's doing.
It lets you know if the diaper is dry, wet, very wet,
and you'd be better off putting her up for adoption.
Think of it as a nappy app.
That's called your nose.
Well, this is, and I speak to you as a fellow parent, this is supposed to help you avoid
the we've all seen it, we've all done it, pulling the diaper back, smelling it, worse,
sticking your finger down there to find out.
Even you wouldn't do that, but the idea is like it'll just tell you.
It's like, you know, oh, I see.
I don't have to do any of those gross things.
My phone tells me that my baby has just wet herself.
Wherever she is, I have no idea.
I'm staring at my phone.
Bill, how did Serena do in our quiz?
Perfect. Three and O.
Congratulations, Serena.
Thank you so much. Take care.
You too.
Now it's time for our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank.
Each of our players will now have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill-in-the-blank questions as he or she can.
Each correct answer now worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Petey and Adam each have three.
Faith has two. Bill, can you give us the scores? Petey and Adam each have three. Faith has two.
Oh, my gosh.
All right, Faith, you are in third place, so you're up first.
Fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, the Department of Justice announced it would not prosecute Attorney General Blank for defying a congressional subpoena.
Oh, bar.
Yes.
On Monday, the White House and congressional negotiators agreed on a two-year blank deal.
Uh, budget. Yes. On Monday, the White House and congressional negotiators agreed on a two-year blank deal. Budget.
Yes. After a five-month delay, Samsung announced the release of the first-ever foldable blank.
Smartphone.
Right. After being found injured in jail while awaiting his trial, disgraced billionaire blank was reportedly put on suicide watch.
Epstein.
Yes. Police in Australia made the world's easiest drug bust when a man driving with $140 million worth of drugs blanked.
Drove into police cars.
Exactly right.
On Monday, India successfully launched an unmanned mission to the far side of the blank.
Moon.
Right.
According to a new study, people without a history of heart disease should not take daily blanks to prevent heart attacks.
Aspirin.
Right.
After being arrested by local police on a minor charge, a Dutchman blanked after being released.
Dropped his children in the woods.
No, he sent the officers flowers.
The flowers, which arrived at the station shortly after the man was released,
came with a note that said, quote,
thanks for the good service, definitely five stars.
It's a sweet gesture, really.
How often do the police get that?
But police did get to the end of the note,
which said, can't wait to do business police get that? But police did get to the end of the note, which said,
Can't wait to do business with you all again very, very soon.
I think Faith did pretty well, Bill. What do you think?
She may pull this out. She got seven right.
Fourteen more points, total of 16, and the lead.
Okay, we have flipped a coin, and Adam has elected to go next, so Adam, fill in the blank.
Okay, we have flipped a coin, and Adam has elected to go next.
So, Adam, fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, a federal judge blocked the White House's new policy blocking blank requests from Central America.
Asylum.
Right.
On Sunday, masked men attacked anti-government protesters at a train station in blank.
Amsterdam.
Hong Kong. This week, officials reported that blank fired two short-range missiles into the ocean.
North Korea.
Right.
On Tuesday, the Senate voted to indefinitely
extend the compensation fund for the survivors of Blank.
9-11.
Yes.
After being re-released into theaters,
Blank beat out Avatar to become the highest-grossing film in history.
That would be that Avengers movie, Endgame.
Exactly.
A Missouri woman was upset when the cake she ordered
for her two-year-old daughter didn't say,
Happy birthday, Lizard, but instead said Blank.
Happy birthday, Lizard. No, instead said blank happy birthday lizard no it said happy birthday loser
mom was hoping to get her daughter elizabeth the cake with her nickname lizard
but thanks to a rushed conversation with the bakery she instead got a cake declaring happy
birthday loser fortunately elizabeth is only two and can't read. What a loser.
Bill, how did Adam do in our quiz?
All right, eight more points, total of 11.
He's in second place.
All right.
How many, then, does Petey need to win?
Seven to win.
Here we go, Petey.
This is for the game.
Fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, President Trump vetoed three resolutions that would have blocked his arms deal with blank.
Russia.
No, Saudi Arabia.
On Tuesday, the Senate voted 90 to 8 to confirm Mark Esper as the latest blank.
Spy.
Defense Secretary.
This week, the White House announced that the federal government would be resuming blank after two decades.
Capital punishment.
Very good.
A woman in Idaho is in trouble with police after calling 911 to blank.
Snitch. Very good. A woman in Idaho is in trouble with police after calling 911 to blank.
Snitch.
Ask the police to stop chasing her during a high-speed pursuit.
According to their Ministry of Health, over 19 people died in blank from drinking tainted alcohol.
Russia.
Costa Rica.
Following a huge dip in profits, automaker blank said it will cut 12,000 jobs.
Nissan.
Yes, very good.
Police in the UK investigating a number of suspicious symbols drawn on sidewalks in a small town have determined that they were blank.
Emojis.
No, they determined... They determined that the mysterious symbols were just chalk butts drawn by a little boy.
Toward the France kids?
The butt drawings appeared mysteriously all over the town of, wait for it, Ramsbottom.
Residents were concerned, was this some sort of weird mystical markings of some cult?
No.
The mystery of the Yuna bummer was solved when a woman posted on Facebook,
My son was given chalk in school today, and on the way home he took to drawing bums every 20 yards.
Sorry.
Did Peany do well enough to win?
Now Peany got two. He stays in the ballgame.
Four more, and a total of seven.
The winner is Faith.
Faith, congratulations.
In just a minute, we'll ask our panelists,
now that Robert Mueller is finally done with his special counsel probe,
what will he do with the rest of his summer vacation?
Special thanks to the Stock and Ledger Restaurant here in downtown Chicago
for feeding us Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
It's a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago
in association with Urgent Haircut Productions,
Doug Berman, a benevolent overlord.
Philip Godeka writes our limericks.
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our house manager is Tyler Green, assisted by Simon Tran.
Our interns are Panina Beattie and Lila Francis.
Our web guru is Beth Novy.
BJ Lederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
This week, our writing residents are Ron Metellus
and Kate Villa.
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but we don't anymore.
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The executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
is Mike Danforth.
Now panel, what is next for Robert Muller?
Peter Dabru.
I think he's probably going to find somewhere
with no phone service so people can't call him in.
He's going sailing. He's going to buy a yacht and name it Purview.
So he can actually say, I can get into that. That's my Purview.
Adam Felbert.
As to the availability of 64 ounce bags of Cool Ranch Doritos,
I am not prepared to go there,
but welcome to Walmart.
Well, if any of that happens,
we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't
Tell Me. Thank you, Bill Curtis. Thanks also to
Peter Dabru, Kate Saley, and Adam Felbert.
Thanks to all of you for listening.
You can ask, get to home.
I'm Peter Segal.
We'll see you next week.
This is NPR.