Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - Puja Patel
Episode Date: July 16, 2022Puja Patel, editor-in-chief of Pitchfork, plays our game about ceremonial first pitches in baseball games. Tom Papa guest hosts and is joined by panelists Adam Burke, Paula Poundstone and Emmy Blotnic...k.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, it's Peter Sagal here. I'm delighted to tell you that Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is back in front of a live audience every week.
Now at the Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts Building on Michigan Ave.
Get your tickets at nprpresents.org.
From NPR in WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm ready for my close-up. I'm on the Sunset Billabard. I'm Bill Curtis.
And here is your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois,
filling in for Peter Sagal. It's Tom Papa.
Segal. It's Tom Papa. Thank you, Bill. Welcome, everybody. I'm Tom Papa here at the Wait, Wait,
Don't Tell Me Summer Camp. Peter Segal is out after what can only be called a freak pillow fight accident. He's expected to make a full recovery once all the goose down clears his
system. Well, Peter Convaleses, we've got a great show for you.
Later on, the editor of Pitchfork, Pooja Patel, will be joining us to play our game.
But first, it's your turn.
Give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
So let's welcome our first listener contestant.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, everybody.
This is Adrienne from Mechanicsville, Virginia.
Oh, hi, Adrienne.
Thanks for being here.
Hi.
Adrienne, I thought Mechanicsville was West Virginia.
Is there more than one mechanic?
It seems like it.
It seems like it?
you? Is there more than one mechanic? It seems like it. In Mechanicsville, does everything take longer and cost more than they say it's going to? Well, nice to meet you, Adrian. Let me introduce
you to our panel. First up, it's a comedian doing three nights at the Cherry Lane Theater in New
York City, July 19th, 20th, and 22nd. Tickets available at cherrylanetheater.org.
A great place and a great comedian, Emmy Blotnick.
Oh, hello, hello.
Next, it's the comedian who will be at Chicago's Coval Distillery,
July 22nd, and CG's Comedy Club in Bolingbrook, August 5th and 6th.
It's the great Adam Burke.
Hello.
Hi, Adrian.
Hi.
And you can see her in Marin, California at the College of Marin on Saturday, August 13th.
Her podcast is Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone.
It's Paula Poundstone.
Hey, Adrian.
Hi, everyone. Welcome to the show Adrian.
You're going to play Who's Bill this time.
The lovable Bill Curtis is going to read you three quotes from this week's news.
If you can correctly identify or explain two of them, you'll win our prize.
Any voice from our show you choose on your voicemail.
Are you ready?
Yes, but let me just preface it with it's summer vacation, a little bit dumber.
Oh, a little bit dumber because you're on summer vacation. You're going to fit this show perfectly.
Okay. All right. Your first quote is from NASA's official Twitter account.
Personally, I went and had an ugly cry.
What news out of NASA this week is making everyone cry?
Is it like all the galaxies from the Webb telescope picture?
That's right.
Good job.
There you go.
Not so dumb. Photos of the universe. This week,
NASA released its first images of the universe from the James Webb telescope. Everyone that saw
the images was awestruck. Like we heard from Bill there, it's enough to make you cry if you have the
eight years of graduate school required to understand it.
To me, it looks like what I see when I'm driving at night.
Floaters, flares, something that looks like a squirrel bat.
I think that might be glaucoma. You should have that looked into.
Some of them do look like the default screensaver on like a MacBook too,
where I was like, did I just not open the news today?
Yeah.
This telescope is much more powerful than the Hubble.
Suck it, Hubble.
And could help NASA find an Earth-like planet that we won't be able to get to in time.
It is really amazing.
Like, when the Hubble came out,
we didn't have smartphones yet.
We didn't have really a lot of stuff,
so it was like, wow, these are awesome images.
Now everyone has these great phones.
Everyone's like, yeah, I've seen better.
But isn't the James Webb telescope,
at some point, it's like any photos of a vacation.
Around about the ninth, it's like,
yeah, I get it. It looks very nice. I can't afford to go there. Right. I'm so happy you're having a
great time up there. Oh, you've got to see this one I took of the fireworks on July 4th.
This is the kind of paradigm shift in understanding that can unite humanity. Democrats were excited about the
victory of science. Republicans were excited that those galaxies 13 billion light years away
are the closest legal abortion for someone living in Texas.
I knew it was going to be spicy, but Peter's not here.
All right, here's your next quote.
It's a tweet from the world's richest man.
Poop emoji.
That was a tweet from Elon Musk,
and it was entered as evidence when he was sued by whom this week? Twitter. Good job.
Two in a row in the summer. Twitter. If you haven't been following, Musk bought Twitter for
$44 billion, and now they're suing him because he backed out of the deal. He says it's because Twitter lied.
Yeah, that's like returning a car because it drives.
This is going to go down in history as the biggest impulse buy of all time.
It's like he was in the checkout aisle and he's like,
I'll grab some gum, a chapstick, and ooh, a Twitter.
Shouldn't Elon's poop emoji be gold plated?
Maybe that's why he wants to buy it.
It's a self-crapping poop.
Maybe he's just doing it just to be cool with his kids. You know, he's got all those kids now.
Just ask his kids, X117 Delta. How many was that? That's cool with his kids. You know, he's got all those kids now. Just ask his kids X117 Delta.
How many was that?
That's one of his children.
And his other child, Sound
Amodim Makes.
Adrian, you're doing great. You've got two
right. Your last quote is about
this summer's animated blockbuster.
Are they lemon or
banana flavored?
That was Taylor Garan on
Twitter asking an important
question about the main characters
in what movie?
Minions, maybe?
That's right. The Minions movie.
Great job, Adrian.
Minions, The Rise of Gru, is the biggest movie in America.
It had a huge opening weekend, and it's a certified TikTok phenomenon.
For those who aren't familiar, the Minions were the breakout stars of the Despicable Me movies,
made by Illumination Studios, a company which dared to ask
the question, what if Pixar
wasn't good?
Wait, what makes it a certified
TikTok phenomenon?
All the cool kids like it?
Well, no, it
sparked this trend called
Gentle Minions, where teenagers and 20-somethings
dress up in suits and ties and then they go to the movie.
And it's freaked out some theater owners who won't even let them in.
I mean, look, if you want to dress up for a movie, sure, but you put on Boba Fett's
full body armor or you stay the hell home.
This is how broken we are.
We're so broken that the way kids rebel
is to dress for the job they want.
It's horrible.
Yeah, they're not letting some of the kids in
because they're dressed up in suits and ties.
And they won't let them in?
Yeah, they won't let them.
It's freaked some of them out.
They're like, why is everybody showing up at the
movies? I thought the pandemic was still happening.
The funniest thing was
because apparently they go and they're quite rowdy
and some people, especially
in England, some people complained.
You're like, you're ruining this movie about
tiny yellow people who speak gibberish.
I can't follow the plot.
You're overdressed.
Oh, so they're not letting them in,
not because they're dressed in suits,
but because this is identifying them as these kids who go in
and then are rowdy during the movie.
I don't know.
How rowdy are kids in suits?
What are they doing?
They're running around.
They're filling out people's taxes.
Yeah.
A lot of them have been involved
in smash and notarize incidents.
Bill, how did Adrienne do?
She did great.
Adrienne, you're an expert.
Woo!
Thank you.
From Mechanicsville.
Thank you for playing, Adrienne.
Enjoy the rest of your summer.
Thanks, Adrienne. Thank the rest of your summer. Thanks, Adrienne.
Thank you.
Bye-bye.
And now it's time for another installment of the game we call...
What's Martha Stewart up to?
Emmy, what's Martha Stewart up to this week? Is it
A, announcing her new
collaboration, the Burger King
Martha Stewart meal,
or B,
wishing death upon her friends
so she can date their husbands?
Is there a C?
There is not.
So she's either making a Burger King meal
or putting like a hex on her friends.
These are both...
A or B.
It's the death one, isn't it?
It is.
All right.
B.
Asked about her love life on Chelsea Handler's one, isn't it? It is. All right. B. Asked about her love life on Chelsea Handler's podcast,
Martha Stewart complained the only way she meets men
is when they're married to her friends.
How wonderful a hostess she must be.
Her guests have a lovely evening.
Even though she's envisioning the flower arrangement,
she'd like to leave on their graves.
The cool thing about Martha Stewart
when she puts a hex on you
the voodoo doll is just beautifully crafted
from locally sourced linens.
Yeah, your grave looks amazing
if Martha's doing it.
That is a weird way to try and find a boyfriend.
But it'd be weirder if she made a Burger King meal, right?
That was what I was waiting.
Yeah.
Coming up, keep your eye
on the ball in our Bluff the Listener
game. Call 1-888-
WaitWait to play.
We'll be back in a minute with more of WaitWaitDon'tTellMe
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 Paula Poundstone, Emmy Blotnick, and Adam Burke.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theatre in Chicago
Illinois in for
Peter Sagal Tom
Papa
Thanks Bill
Right now
it's time for the Wait Wait Don't Tell Me
Bluff the Listener Game
call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT
to play our game on the air
Hi you're on Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hello.
Who are you?
This is Rebecca.
Hi, Rebecca.
Where are you calling from?
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
How's life in Chattanooga?
Chattanooga's a wonderful town to live in.
That's nice.
I used to work a club there a thousand years ago,
and I stayed at the Chattanooga Choo Choo Hotel.
At the Choo Choo, yeah.
I went in the gift shop one day,
and I was just sort of singing,
Pardon me, but it's for that.
And I said to the woman,
Boy, I'll bet you nobody ever sings that in here.
And she went, no, they do.
All the time.
All right, it's nice to have you with us, Rebecca.
You're going to play our game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
What's the topic, William?
Play ball.
Okay.
Going to a baseball game is boring
except for those brief, wonderful moments
when they stop playing baseball.
We're going to ask you about something that happened
between innings at a recent minor league game.
Pick the one who's telling the truth
and you will win our prize,
the weight waiter of your choice on your voicemail. Okay. League game. Pick the one who's telling the truth and you will win our prize, the wait-waiter of
your choice on your voicemail. Okay. All right, here we go. First up, Emmy Blotnick. Thanks to a
cross-promotion with the local aquarium, fans at a recent Long Beach Armada game were treated to a
visit from a special guest, an octopus with a talent for throwing baseballs. Scientists have seen octopi unscrew the lids of childproof jars and untie large
knots, but never before had they seen an octopus bring a stadium of baseball
fans to their feet. The frighteningly dexterous creature was discovered
launching objects like projectiles in his tank and over time learned to throw
pretty mean pitch.
After watching the octopus throw eight straight strikes,
one with each of its arms,
Armada's manager inquired about acquiring the cephalopod for his roster,
because by the transitive property of air bud law,
there's no rule that says an octopus can't play baseball.
All right, we have Octopus Pitching from
Emmy Blotnick. Your next story of
a baseball breakthrough
comes from Adam Burke.
The seventh inning stretch
is a vaunted tradition in baseball.
A chance for fans to get up, stretch
their legs, spill the remainder of your
beer on the guy in front of you, and
listen to a version of Take Me Out to the Ball Game,
sung by a celebrity you thought had died in the 90s.
But to celebrate Men's Health Awareness Month,
one manager of the single-A baseball team, the Eugene Emeralds,
added a bit of urological mindfulness to the usual late-game intermission
by singing the popular song while simultaneously receiving
his annual prostate exam. That's right, general manager Alan Benavides had the understandably
strained notes of his rendition of the National Pastime's unofficial anthem piped into the
grounds of PK Park, while from the seclusion of the executive box,
he and a certified medical professional brought new meaning to the terms knuckleball,
sliding into home, going deep into the infield, seventh inning stretch, and of course, the sweet spot.
In addition to making us all too aware of men's health, Benavidez also
hoped the performance might give his team a morale boost, but that seems to have been fruitless.
Ah well, as with both baseball and the recommended frequency of prostate exams,
there's always next year.
All right, that's prostateostate Stretch from Adam Burke.
And your last story of passing the time at the great pastime comes from Paula Poundstone.
For fans of baseball's Fred Nats of Fredericksburg, Virginia,
one of the Washington Nationals minor league teams,
taking a couple of hours off from listening to January 6th committee hearings,
even to watch their beloved team, is not easy. So at the inning breaks, the team's mascots are
acting out various scenes revealed by the hearings. They are doing an amazing job,
says fan Bob Whitey. I knew the Lehigh Valley Iron Pig mascot was Donald Trump right away.
The crowd went nuts. They had a bunch of furry bears in Wichita wingnut jerseys and a giant
eclair wearing an Eau Claire shirt. I didn't realize it was Rudy Giuliani until some of the chocolate started dripping down the side of the big pastry with a face.
Baseball, it's America's pastime.
Okay, Rebecca, you've got a pitching octopus, a prostate exam, and mascots reenacting the January 6th committee hearings.
Which of these is the true story?
Well, they're all pretty strange, but I'm going to have to go with Emmy's The Octopus.
Okay, you've chosen Emmy's story about the pitching octopus.
To find out the correct answer, we have this very special piece of tape.
Listen for the word crowd.
Take me out to the ball game. Take me out to the crowd.
Wow.
That was the general manager of the Eugene Emeralds singing,
take me out to the ball Game while getting a prostate exam.
Sorry, Rebecca, but thank you for being with us.
That's okay. Thanks. It was fun.
Take care. Bye, Rebecca.
We love you, Rebecca. And now for the game where we invite trendsetters to just chill out with us for a second.
It's not my job.
For over a decade, Pitchfork has been the go-to music publication for the independent music world,
the place to hear about the next big thing or the next big flop.
And since 2018, the website has grown under the guidance of editor-in-chief Pooja Patel,
who went from nerding out as a kid reading music criticism in the library to running it herself.
Pooja Patel, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much for being here. It's really nice to meet you. So happy to be here. Yeah,
this is very exciting. So how did you get into music journalism? What was your relationship
with music when you were a kid so i grew up in a house full
of music um the kind of house where you wake up to your mom blasting music and that really sets
the tone for what her mood is for the day so you know if it was something really like if it was
chaka khan or tina turner we were gonna you know it's gonna be a great day um if it was Chaka Khan or Tina Turner, we were going to, you know, it's going to be a great day.
If it was something sad,
I pretended I was asleep for another hour.
Yeah.
And when you were a little kid just listening to the music, were you rating things?
Yeah, it was slowly, you know,
this is four tomatoes out of five,
just taking household objects
and starting to rate things. Yeah.
So everybody talks, and I know you get this question a lot. Everybody talks about the
rankings of, of albums and songs on Pitchfork. Uh, is there a difference between like an 8.2
and an 8.6? Yeah, I'm not so different from my mother in that it's affected by my mood that day.
That's so upsetting.
There's a band out there just trying
their best in the garage. They finally
get it all done. I haven't had my two coffees yet.
So it can be
extremely arbitrary
to you, but if you care, you really
care. Right. It really, really
means something. Really care. Yeah. And do you get
a lot of pushback? Do people go crazy?
How could you rank this?
Yeah. Does that happen a lot?
It happens all the time. It does.
It happens all the time. Where the fans
get angry. The fans get really,
really angry. And do they show up with,
I don't know, some kind of implement? I can't think
of one of the big...
Shovels. Shovel big... Shovels.
Shovels.
And are you still a passionate fan?
Do you still really love music?
If you want to relax and just
enjoy yourself,
does music even do it for you anymore?
Because you're working every single day?
Or do you just listen to the microwave going off?
It really depends on my mood but i can't imagine a day without listening to music no yeah do you have any guilty pleasures anything that you listen to that would surprise people
i just got into an argument with with one of our editors on staff about the album Jagged Little Pill by Alanis Morissette,
which I say is very good.
You know, it's so funny because you're so cool.
I immediately wanted to blurt out, I love that album, but I was like, what if it's not?
That's great.
I'm giving you permission.
I love that album.
And at its time when she came out, I mean, it was all grunge, and then
she comes out, and... And
a song about Uncle Joey?
Yeah. Yeah. Wait, was it really
about Uncle Joey? Oh, for sure.
It was in the theater?
No, you ought to know.
You ought to know. Yeah. Yeah, but I know...
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's talking about a very specific
line, which can't be said. All of a sudden, you're talking
for a different language.
Paula, just give me five minutes.
The cool kids are talking.
Yeah.
I'll bring you into it, Paula.
Have you heard of the song Chattanooga Choo Choo?
Well, that is a good question, though,
because I'm a dad of two teenage girls,
and I'm so aware of not being present.
And, like, when you're younger, what happens to us?
When you're young, music finds you.
And then you get to a certain age and hairline, and you have to go find the music.
It's no longer a part of your world, and you don't even world, and you have no reference of whether it's cool or not.
What happens to us?
And has it happened to you ever?
Yeah, I think especially in the last couple of years,
people tend to return to things that feel familiar and comfortable,
and that's the stuff that you listened to when you were younger.
Right.
And our brains are shaped that way too.
I mean, just mechanically, you remember things,
you learn things faster when you're younger.
You associate emotions and sensory memory to things when you were younger.
And then when you get old, you're just like, life is bad.
Let's return to the good old days.
What pitchfork rating would life get?
Right now?
Hovering around at 4.2.
Well, I have to say
I don't feel cooler since you've been here.
I feel like
I still need to know a lot more.
Give me one band that I could
put on
while I'm with my
daughters that they won't give me
an eye roll. Because a lot of times I'll throw something on
and be like, this is cool, and it's
not been cool for a while.
I think you should listen, I met your
daughter, I think you should listen to Doja Cat.
Doja Cat. Yeah.
Everyone loves Doja Cat.
Oh, Doja Cat.
Yeah. Yeah. I love Doja Cat. They, Doja Cat. Yeah. Yeah.
I love Doja Cat.
They did Who Let the Dogs Out, didn't they?
They did a remix of Chattanooga Choo Choo.
All right.
Pooja Patel, we've asked you here today to play a game that we're calling...
Put Down the Pitchfork.
It's time to pitch first.
You know all about pitchfork,
but what do you know about the hallowed baseball tradition,
the ceremonial first pitch?
Answer two of the three questions correctly,
and you'll win our prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who is Pooja Patel playing for?
Joe Edison of San Francisco, California. All right.
Ready? I'm ready. All right. Here's your first question. Everyone is familiar with the president
throwing out the first ball on opening day. What you might not know is he used to do this from the stands. And there was a second part of the
tradition. What? A, he'd throw the ball to his vice president who could play any position he
wanted in the first inning. B, he'd throw the ball to the director of the Smithsonian who would
immediately put it on display. Or C, he'd just throw the ball out on the field
where all the players would fight over it
like bridesmaids going for the bouquet.
I'm going to say B.
B, that he'd
throw the ball to the director
of the Smithsonian
who would immediately put it on display.
This sounds, all of these sound insane.
Okay, so you're telling me C.
I am contractually bound not to tell you anything.
But yes, C.
He would just chuck it out there and whoever ended up with it got to keep it.
Wow.
Yeah, and apparently people went pretty crazy for it.
All right, here's your next question.
To honor the 150th anniversary of baseball coming to Japan,
the New York Mets invited the Japanese ambassador to throw out the first pitch,
but he never got to do it.
Why?
A. A seagull with a hot dog landed on the mound
and chased away anyone who came near. B. Mets pitcher Max Scherzer went out onto the mound
to warm up and wouldn't get off to let the ceremony happen. Or C. The ambassador was so
excited to see the big globe and towers from the end of Men in Black in the park across the street that he was an hour late to the game.
See, both of those are viable options.
B?
You're right. It's B.
Apparently, Max Scherzer has a routine and sticks to it no matter what country he insults
here's your last question not all first pitches go as planned Red Sox superfan Jordan Leandra
fired the ball from the mound but unfortunately it didn't reach the catcher's mitt. What did he hit? A, his own foot
breaking five bones. B, the groin of a photographer standing 10 feet behind home plate.
C, the face of the Red Sox manager who was standing in the dugout.
Dang, I should know this.
I'm going to say B.
You're going to say B. You're right.
The drawing of a photographer standing 10 feet behind home plate.
Couldn't have thrown it any better if he tried.
Bill, how did Pooja do on our quiz?
Three home runs. Wow.
Congratulations, you did very well. How did Pooja do on our quiz? Three home runs! Wow! Congratulations!
It's really nice to meet you.
Pooja Patel is the editor-in-chief
of Pitchfork and Pitchfork
Music Festival is taking place this
weekend, July 15th through the 17th
in Chicago.
Visit pitchforkmusicfestival.com
for tickets. Pooja Patel,
thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you. It was so fun.
So nice to meet you.
In just a minute, Bill enjoys a futuristic
twist on a summertime treat
in our Listener Limerick Challenge.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT
to join us on air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis. We are playing this week
with Emmy Blotnick, Paula Poundstone,
and Adam Burke.
And here again is your host
at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago,
Illinois, in for Peter Sagal.
It's Tom Papa.
Thanks, Billy.
In just a minute, Bill
reads limericks.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
But right now, panel, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Adam, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania
have developed a new way to clean your teeth.
What do they want to put in your mouth?
Oh, gross.
Like a tiny window cleaner?
Like that?
Is it like a little Roomba?
Close.
Do you want a hint?
Yeah, I'd love a hint.
R2-oral-B2.
Tiny robot. Yes, I'd love a hint. R2-oral-B2. Tiny robots.
Yes, a swarm of tiny robots.
Imagine a bunch of tiny microscopic robots crawling all over your teeth.
No, you're not stuck in a horrifying nightmare.
You're using toothbrushing microbots.
The Penn researchers say they do
a far better job than basic
brushing and flossing because
they use nanoparticles to kill
pathogens and because
you're lying about flossing and everybody
knows it.
Yeah, we will do anything to not floss.
Are you kidding me?
Everywhere you look on the street,
there's those damn plastic floss things.
People are apparently socially flossing everywhere they go.
Let's go for a walk and floss together.
It seems like people are doing their inside bathroom things on the outside.
It does seem like that.
I see that all the time.
Nail clippers?
Nail clipping.
That's terrible.
I saw a guy clipping his nails at the gate at the
airport. And then when it was time to board, he just put them in a little pile and got on the
plane. Wait, did he leave the pile? Yes. It was like, I'll rake the leaves, but I'm not bagging
them up. That's nothing. I heard about a guy got a prostate exam at a baseball game.
That's nothing. I heard about a guy who got a prostate exam at a baseball game.
Well, Adam, that's not true.
Emmy, the no-poo movement is growing on social media.
It's a group of people who have sworn off what?
It's either shampoo or lactose. I'm going to lean shampoo, though.
You're right.
Using shampoo.
More and more people have quit shampoo.
And not just because they're all trying to look like a 1990s Ethan Hawke.
Some are trying to stop using plastic.
Those people clearly haven't heard of my new business,
Tom Papa's big glass cup of loose shampoo.
No pooers have come up with some very creative substitutes.
This is true.
One woman lets two egg yolks sit in her hair
until, quote, it looks gross.
A California woman uses cocoa powder.
A Scottish woman uses only hot water.
Put all of these together,
and you can get a drink known as the hairy old-fashioned.
Or you can wake up with cake head.
Yeah, it's a flourless chocolate cake.
I'm pretty sure.
Paula, as the worldwide economy contracts,
Japan is dealing with an additional problem.
According to a new survey,
half of all Japanese companies
have one old male employee
who does what?
Careful.
One old male employee?
Do you have any hints for me?
I do, Paula.
Whatever you're thinking of,
now imagine them not doing it.
Oh.
Who won't work.
That's right.
They do nothing.
A consulting firm interviewed employees at 300 different companies asking if their office
had an old guy who does nothing all day.
And about half of those surveyed said, yes, we do.
To which all Americans responded,
how do I get a Japanese work
visa?
We won't have equality
until there's an old woman who doesn't do
anything.
All the old women are busy
doing their job, plus the old man's job.
Coming up, it's lightning fill-in-the-blank.
But first, it's the game where you have to listen for the rhymes.
If you like to play on air, call or leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924. Also,
come join us at our new home in Chicago, the Studebaker Theater. It's just like listening
on your headphones at the gym, except clapping and laughing won't get you kicked out. Tickets
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Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, this is Jacob from Chicago. Hi, Jacob from Chicago.
Hello. What do you do here in Chicago, Jacob? I work in HR for a cannabis company. Oh,
HR for a cannabis company. Wow. You've got to be pretty liberal to be HR at a cannabis company.
What kind of complaints do you get? Just that people are not high enough.
Oh. Yeah, this dude's trying to work.
Bumming me out. Well, welcome to the show, Jacob. 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 on two limericks,
you're a winner.
Here's your first limerick.
To my last scoop, a harsh blow was dealt.
A heartbreak we all have once felt.
I don't want to rush, but the heat makes a mush. I need ice cream that
simply won't melt. Melt it is. Melt it is. That's right. There's a new ice cream in China that
doesn't melt at all, even under extreme heat. It's terrible news for people who love having to
constantly lick around the ice cream cone to catch drips, but great news for people who love having to constantly lick around the ice cream cone to catch drips.
But great news for people who love chemicals.
I love that this is our best idea for combating global warming.
Well, you know, the icebergs are going to melt, but your cone won't.
All right, Jacob, here's your next limerick.
Our whiskey is mixed up in a lab.
That crustaceans, we're taking a stab.
We're distilling the shell and the pinchers as well.
We are making our whiskey with...
Crab?
Yes.
Wow, that sounds great.
Good for you.
With crab?
Yes.
Wow, that sounds great. With crab.
A distillery in New Hampshire has a solution to invasive crabs.
Drink them.
They're making crab-flavored whiskey,
a fun new twist on getting drunk and getting crabs.
I think I've had that crab whiskey,
because last night I got so drunk I walked sideways.
I think I've had that crab whiskey because last night I got so drunk I walked sideways.
I didn't know they had invasive crabs in New Hampshire.
Yeah, they have invasive crabs.
So many of New Hampshire-ites have been heard to say,
who let you in here?
Get out of here, crab.
What you doing in my drink, little fella?
All right, bottoms up.
Here's your last limerick.
At a cookout, we men grab more buns,
while women will gladly have none.
When out in the light, we would like a quick bite.
We get hungry when we're in the sun. Yes, great job, sun.
Great job. Sun's out, fork's out. According to a new study, sunlight makes men hungrier,
but to be fair, so does moonlight, fluorescent light, and just breathing air.
I don't think sun actually makes me hungrier.
It makes you thirstier.
Yeah, I'm never like poolside, like, who wants meatloaf?
There's nothing like some poolside mashed potatoes.
Bill, how did Jacob do?
Three in a row.
Jacob, you did great.
Great job, Jacob.
Thank you so much, Jacob.
It was nice having you here.
I'm so hungry.
I want your steak and I want your fries.
I want gravy on top, red beans and rice.
Cold, small turnip greens and a jambalaya.
Hot sauce on it till you feel the fire.
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 is worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Adam has one, Emmy has four, Paula has two.
Yeah, that sounds about right.
All right, Adam, you're in third place, so you're up first.
The clock will start when I begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
During his trip to the Middle East,
President Biden said the U.S. was committed to its relationship with blank.
Israel.
Right.
On Tuesday, the White House urged Americans to get vaccine boosters to combat the new blank variant.
Omicron.
Right.
Coronavirus variant.
This week, a judge in Virginia rejected Amber Heard's request for a new trial in the defamation suit filed by blank.
Johnny Depp.
Right.
filed by blank?
Johnny Depp.
Right.
Citing long lines and flight cancellations,
London's blank airport asked airlines to stop selling tickets until September.
Heathrow.
Right.
On Wednesday, surgeons in New York
successfully transplanted blank hearts
in two brain-dead patients.
Pig.
Right.
On Thursday, disgraced actor and star of The Usual Suspects,
blank, pled not guilty to assault charges in the UK.
Kevin Spacey.
Right.
After being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom last week, Olympic legend Simone Biles was surprised when a flight attendant blanked on her flight home.
Did like a triple backflip right into the cockpit. Miss took her for a child and
offered her a coloring book. When the flight attendant tried to give the seven-time Olympic
medalist a coloring book for the flight, the gymnast handled it well saying, quote,
no, I'm good. I'm 25.
Phil, how did Adam do? Very well. Six right for 12 more points. He has a total of 13.
He is in the lead. Okay, Paula, you're up next. Phil in the blank. On Tuesday, Liz Cheney revealed that Donald Trump
had tried to contact a witness in the blank hearing.
January 6th.
Right.
On Monday, President Biden delivered a speech
following the passing of new blank safety legislation.
Gun.
Yes.
On Wednesday, officials in the EU warned that recent heat waves
had led to an outbreak of blanks across the continent. Yeah, I don't know,
floods? Right, wildfires.
On Tuesday,
Succession and Better Call Saul
led the nominations for the
2022 Blank Awards.
Emmys. Right.
This week, emergency workers in New York
were called to one of Gwyneth Paltrow's goop stores
after a fire broke out because blank.
They were using charcoal starter on their privates.
That's pretty close.
Because employees tried to make s'mores over candles doused in rubbing alcohol.
Luckily, the store had a fire extinguisher.
Unfortunately, the fire extinguisher was made out of vibes and amethyst.
Bill, how did Paula do?
Three right, six more points.
She's in the game, total of eight.
But Adam leads with 13.
And Bill, how many does
Emmy need to win? Five to win.
Okay, Emmy, this is for the game.
Are you ready? Yes.
Fill in the blank. As protests
in the capital intensified, the president
of blank fled the country on Tuesday.
Sri Lanka?
That's right. For the first time since
2002, the blank fell below a one-to-one exchange rate with the dollar.
The euro.
Right.
On Tuesday, Japan held a private funeral for former Prime Minister Blank.
Shinzo Abe.
Right.
Police in Texas say they nabbed a man smuggling meth when they noticed Blank.
He drove off the road?
They noticed him suspiciously
eating a cheeseburger.
What? On Thursday,
officials
warned that demand
for blanky pox
vaccines is still outpacing
supply. You want me to just say
monk? Blanky? Monkey?
Monkey? But it's okay.
Monkey pox. That's right. Blanky? Monkey? Monkey? But it's okay. Monkeypox. That's right.
Blankypox?
According to a new study, a quarter of Americans say their next blank purchase will be electric.
A car.
Yes, car purchase.
After decades of debate, scientists in Australia have determined that a fossilized egg discovered in the 1980s belongs to an extinct species called blank.
It was an egg that belongs to a T-Rex.
The giant demon duck of doom.
Researchers say the duck stood over seven feet tall
with taloned feet and sharp beaks,
and their primary food source
was old men on park benches who didn't bring enough bread.
Bill, did Emmy do well enough to win? Well, she did it five, and she got five. Cat5! And one! Total of 14.
In just a minute, we'll ask our panelists to predict what will the James Webb Telescope reveal in its next close-up.
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.
Philip Godica writes our limericks. Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shana Dolan. Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre.
B.J. Letterman composed our theme. Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Dornbus, Lillian King, and Nancy Seychow. Our production assistant is Sophie Hernandez
Simeonidis. Special thanks to Blythe Roberson. Peter Gwynn is our Gwynnian.
Technical direction, Lauren White. Our CFO is Colin Miller. Our production manager is Robert
Newhouse. Our senior producer is Ian Chilag. The executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mike Danforth.
Panel, what will we see next
from the James Webb Telescope?
Emmy Blotnick.
A little bit of spinach
in your teeth.
Adam Burke.
It will reveal the reason
we don't know exactly
how old the universe is
is because it's had work done.
Paula Poundstone.
There's a planet way
far off where you
can barely make out
a Walmart.
Well, if any of those
things happen, we're going to
ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you, Bill Curtis. Thanks
also to Emmy Blotnick, Adam Burke,
and Paula Poundstone, and thanks to all of you
for listening. I'm Tom Papa, and for Peter Sag Burke, and Paula Poundstone. And thanks to all of you for listening.
I'm Tom Papa, in for Peter Sagal, and we'll see you next week. This is NPR.