Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Bernie Taupin
Episode Date: October 28, 2023This week, Bernie Taupin joins guest host Peter Grosz and panelists Alonzo Bodden, Zainab Johnson, and Paula Poundstone to talk about his new memoir ScattershotLearn more about sponsor message choices...: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Up First achieves the rare one-two punches of being short and thorough,
national and international, fact-based and personable.
Every morning, we take the three biggest stories of the day and explain why they matter.
And we do it all in less than 15 minutes.
So you can start your day a little more in the know than when you went to sleep.
Listen now to the Up First podcast from NPR.
Listen now to the Up First podcast from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
Carve out my insides and put a candle in me.
I'm a bill-o'-lantern.
Bill Curtis. And here is your host, filling in for Peter Sagal at the Studebaker
Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois. It's Peter Gross.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you, everybody. Thank you so much. It is a pleasure to be here.
I am Peter Gross. I'm Peter Sagal's understudy. And not just in the show, but in life.
Whenever Peter is busy, I step up and I fill in at piano recitals, soccer games, jury duty.
And I'm hosting the show this week because he's too scared to leave his house until after Halloween.
Later on, legendary rock and roll lyricist and writing partner of Elton John, Bernie Taupin is going to be here.
But don't... It is exciting.
We're all very excited.
But please, don't go breaking our heart.
Give us a call and play our games.
The number is 1-888-
WaitWait. That's 1-888-
924-8924.
Hi there. You're on WaitWait. Don't tell me.
Hi there. My name's Mark
and I'm calling from
Astoria, Queens in New York City. Oh, great. A lot of love for Astoria. What's going on in Astoria,
Mark? What do you do there? Well, I actually travel a lot for work. I am the director of
bar operations for one of the largest privately owned restaurant companies in the United States.
Oh, wow. Bar operations. So you're bar hopping across the country. That is your job.
Absolutely. That's a fun job.
Great. Mark, let's introduce you to our
panel. First, she is a comedian
whose new special, Hijabs
Off, is now streaming on Prime
Video. It's Zainab Johnson.
Hey!
Next, a comedian you can see
November 9th through the 11th
at Helium Comedy Club in Philadelphia.
It's Alonzo Bowden.
Hey, Mark.
Hey, Alonzo.
And finally, she will be in Alexandria, Virginia
at the Birchmere on November 17th and 18th,
and you can hear her every week on her podcast,
Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone.
Guess who it is?
It's Paula Poundstone. Thank who it is? It's Paula Poundstone.
Great. Alright, welcome to the show,
Mark. You're going to play Who's Bill
this time. If you can...
That's Paula sneezing.
If you can identify which
panelist sneezed,
you'll win $1,000.
We never do this.
You're going to play Who's Bill this time.
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 will win our prize.
Any voice from our show, you choose on your voicemail.
But that is probably going to be Bill or Paula, because that's how it works.
Are you ready, Mark? Yes. Great. Mark, your first quote is from Senator Susan Collins,
talking about her colleague, Mike Johnson. I don't know him, but I'm going to Google him.
All right, Mark, Mike Johnson got what big job this week, despite nobody knowing who he was?
Speaker of the House. That is right.
Speaker of the House.
Newspapers
across the country were publishing headlines
like, who is Mike Johnson? But
there was no article underneath. They were just literally
asking the question, who is Mike
Johnson? I actually
thought it was my cousin, so I called him
and was like, hey, I didn't know you were
there.
All of the awful people that we knew couldn't get the job, so they were like, we need an awful person no one's heard of. I know. And they found Mike Johnson. He did come out of nowhere, but now
we know him a little bit. So here's what we know about him. He's an extreme far-right Republican
who tried to overturn the election, and he thinks climate change is a hoax.
So I think most people in America went immediately from having no idea who he was
to wishing that they had no idea who he was.
He also was a creationist.
Did you know that?
Why not?
Let's throw that in there.
With that museum.
He had to do with that museum in Kentucky where right? Where people ride dinosaurs and all of that.
Yeah, why not throw that in?
Yeah.
It is a little crazy because when you think about it,
the Speaker of the House, no matter who it is,
is third in line for the presidency.
But, you know, it's a little scary.
We usually got some filler people.
It feels like in between the line of succession
because it goes President, Vice President, and then Speaker of the House.
But it probably really should go President and then agricultural secretary, then vice president, then every
elementary school student who passed the presidential fitness test, and then Mike Johnson.
I like it. Yeah, that's a good plan.
Once again, George Santos will just step up and say, no, I was already president.
Yeah, exactly.
All right, Mark, here's your next quote.
Put away that Barbie costume.
That was Variety, the magazine, publication Variety,
commenting on new guidance from the actors' union SAG-AFTRA telling striking actors not to dress up as movie characters for what?
Halloween.
That's right, Halloween.
Very good.
SAG-AFTRA, the
Actors Union, doesn't want actors promoting
movies in any way whatsoever.
So you can't be Captain America. You can't be
Batman. You can't even be Lydia Tarr.
I mean, if there's an audience
where Lydia Tarr goes, it's gonna
land. Who is Lydia Tarr?
She's the historical figure that the movie Tarr was based on.
Wow.
All 600 people who saw it are in this room right now.
You know, usually it's not until like the third or fourth segment that something happens
and I have no idea what you're talking about.
All right.
But Peter, you just jumped right into it.
Who knows what the hell he's...
So the Screen Actors Guild is instead recommending that actors dress up as quote,
generalized characters. So instead of these specific characters.
So for example, they're saying things like don't dress up as Pennywise,
just be sort of a generic scary clown.
Or like, don't dress your kids as Mario and Luigi.
Dress them like generic Italian plumbers
who double in size when they eat mushrooms.
You know, that kind of a thing.
Like, I'm not a, I'm not the godfather.
I'm a godfather who wants you
to, I want to make you a proposal you
can't decline. You know, not the specific
stuff from the actual film.
Is that a huge thing with actors dressing
like characters for Halloween?
Seems to me that that wouldn't...
Maybe they're kids, but it's like...
What's his name? Chris Hemsworth.
You play Thor.
I don't think he's going to be Thor on Halloween.
I think he'd put a little more effort into it than...
But what if he always wanted to be Groot?
Or like a different character?
He always wanted to be...
Paula, do you know who Groot is?
No, but I got the idea.
It's from one of those stupid Marvel movies.
All right.
All right, Mark, here's your last quote.
By January, the students will know how to write letters to Grandma.
That was NPR's own Steve Inskeep
reporting on a new requirement in California schools.
Students now have to learn what?
Handwriting? Yes, but a
certain kind of handwriting. Maybe
sort of an antiquated style of handwriting that a
grandmother... Cursive.
Cursive, that's right!
Very good.
Good work, Mark. California
is now requiring elementary school students to learn
cursive. The argument to kids is basically, without cursive, how are you going to sign
the back of a check to which the kids say, the back of a what now? State officials have a good
reason for this change because historical documents like ancestry records and things
like that are frequently written in cursive.
And they don't want that history lost because no one can read it.
They want it lost because no one cares.
But can you guys write cursive?
Did you ever sign?
What do you mean, can I write cursive? Yes.
Well, I don't know how old you are, Paula,
but do you write cursive?
Peter, I am so old, I can dip my pen in the ink well
all right well then Zainab now that I've gotten two answers what about you what's your relationship
to cursive I can definitely read cursive but I write print mostly okay so but it's like a
bilingual household where you're like I I speak, I understand Spanish,
but I don't actually speak Spanish.
It's like sometimes my letters go into cursive a little bit, like if they connect, like I'm
too lazy to pull the pen or pencil off the paper.
Well, because that's exhausting.
Part of that, yeah.
I sometimes go back and forth in the same thing that I'm writing, and they say that's
indicative of deep psychological problems.
What is? So you go from print to cursive, from print to cursive? thing that I'm writing and they say that's indicative of deep psychological problems.
So you go from print to cursive, from print to cursive.
I'll be writing the same thing and I'll just switch.
I'll be in cursive and then I'll print
and they say that I have problems.
And I was like, yeah, I knew that.
Yeah, that's not the only clue.
I'm good with that.
Alright, Bill.
How did Mark do? Mark knows everything. Got them all right. that. Yeah. All right, Bill. How did Mark do?
Mark knows everything.
Got them all right.
Yes.
Wow.
Good work.
Good work, Mark.
Thanks so much.
Thank you so much.
Thanks for playing.
Bye-bye.
Thanks.
Bye-bye.
Right now, panel, time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Zaynab, dating is harder than ever.
Recently, a woman's date walked out on her after she ordered and ate what?
Something garlic or fishy?
Fishy is close.
It was in large quantities.
Snow crab legs?
They were at the Red Lobster on crab leg night.
No, it's actually kind of the opposite of that. It's a little, it's a, you know what?
It's crazier than 48 snow crab legs.
I'll give you a hint.
It's possible that in doing so, she got 48 pearls.
48 oysters?
48 oysters.
She ordered and ate 48 oysters.
Wow.
This guy walked out? He walked out and ate 48 oysters. Wow. This guy walked out?
He walked out, and it was crazy.
She was shocked when her date ditched her after she slurped down 48 oysters.
And this is true.
This is a real part of the story.
She messaged him, what the heck?
And he answered, I asked you out for drinks.
It's crazy that the guy stayed as long as he did, because 48 oysters is a lot of oysters.
But so is seven.
There's a reason why they give it to you in sixes.
Because after that, they're like, are you sure that you want?
Because one more is kind of crazy.
And she had seven times that amount.
But I don't get it.
So he asked her out for drinks.
So what was it he was upset about?
Is he paying the bill? Is that what he was upset about? He left before the bill came. He left before the bill came, so she out for drinks. So what was it he was upset about? Is he paying the bill?
Is that what he was upset about?
He left before the bill came.
He left before the bill came, so she paid for it.
But I think the upsetting part was, you know, watching someone eat 48 oysters.
You know how bad a first date is when it becomes a news story?
I think it was on her dating profile, though.
It was the guy's fault, because
right in her profile it said, fun fact about
me, I can eat 50 slugs.
Don't rush, baby.
Take your time.
Slow it down and sip some wine.
Relax a little as we find
time. I'm rest assured you're looking
mighty fine, no doubt.
Coming up, we just can't stop speaking.
It's the 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.
Planet Money helps you understand the economy.
We find the people at the center of the story.
Garbage in New York, that was like a controlled substance.
We show you how money influences everything.
Tell me what you like by telling me how you spend your money.
And we dig until we get answers.
I had a bad feeling you were going to bring that up.
Planet Money finds out.
All you have to do is listen.
The Planet Money Podcast from NPR.
Hi, I'm Jen White from 1A, the home of good conversation.
But what makes it great are the ideas and insights you bring to the show every day.
It seems only fair that when you make room for us, we make room for you.
Listen to the 1A podcast from WAMU and NPR.
The economy can sometimes feel like a big, scary wilderness filled with jargon and unreadable charts.
The Planet Money podcast is here to help.
We love spreadsheets.
Yeah, let us be your guide to the global economy.
We brought snacks.
Is that trail mix?
It's actually gorp.
That's Planet Money 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, Zainab Johnson, and Alonzo Bowden.
And here again is your host, filling in for Peter Sagal at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Gross.
Thank you, Bill.
Thanks, Bill.
Thank you, Bill. Well, right now it is time for a game that was invented by Abraham Lincoln way back in 1861.
Just kidding.
That's a lie.
And there's more where that came from in our Bluff the Listener game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT
to play our game on the air. Hi there, you're on
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, it's Peter
Glodner from Columbia, Missouri.
Hi Peter, how are you? I'm good.
Good, what do you do there in Columbia, Missouri?
I am the Chief People Officer
at Boone Health, a health
system here in Columbia. What does it
mean to be a Chief People Officer?
It's kind of a fancy name to run human resources.
Ah, great.
Peter, can I ask you a question?
Yes.
Did you come up with that name?
It's totally fine if you do.
I did not.
I did not, but it was attractive to me for the job.
Okay, good.
Well, listen, congratulations.
We've never had a CPO on the air, so it's
nice to have you.
You're going to play our game in which you must try to tell
truth from fiction. What is the topic, Bill?
Speakers, speakers,
speakers. Sorry,
Mike Johnson, you're not the only weird
speaker in the news. This week
we read about some more drama involving
speakers of all kinds. Our panelists are
going to tell you about it. If you pick the one who's telling the truth, you will win the wait-waiter of your choice
on your voicemail. You ready to play? Yes. Okay, first up, it's Alonzo Bowden. We have rap battles
in hip-hop, roast battles in comedy, and now speaker battles in New Zealand. The city of Porirua
in New Zealand is plagued by siren battles, a New Zealand subculture where cars decked out in huge speakers battle through the night to see whose setup is the loudest.
And they play the last music you'd expect, Celine Dion.
The siren battles take place in the middle of town at night and force residents to hear My Heart Will Go On at the highest
possible volume for hours at a time until hearts actually stop beating.
Why Celine Dion?
One siren group member explained that her music was perfect for the speakers because
it's clear without much bass and already annoying.
But the mayor, Anita Baker, is trying to clam down on the noise.
No word on whether Mayor Anita Baker would be okay
if it were the soulful music of singer Anita Baker.
I would be.
All right.
From Alonzo Bowden, a story about a New Zealand Celine Dion speaker battle
that's driving everybody crazy.
Your next story of some spilled speaker tea comes from Zainab Johnson.
According to USTvel.org, 55% of Americans don't use all their vacation time.
But Barbara Jo Roberts and her husband Ellery weren't about to waste time trying to change a statistic.
So they booked a 10-day trip to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
They hired a native speaker so they could see the town like locals. They found
Paulo on TripAdvisor and set out to explore. First stop, Lunch at Lilia's, or so they thought.
While entering the restaurant, an employee approaches Paulo and starts a heated conversation
in Portuguese. Paulo tells them they must leave, admitting, I caused a fight here two nights ago.
Forgiving and optimistic, they go to their next
spot, a local bar, but the bartender refuses to serve them because Paolo ghosted her after a night
of passion. Realizing their native speaker had some native drama, Barb and Ellery were denied
entry to four other businesses and chased by a mob of kids chanting,
you stole my candy.
In Portuguese, of course.
Not wanting a reality show vacation,
the couple fired Paolo and went back to the hotel
and over two cold Bud Lights planned their visit to Epcot next year.
From Zaynab Johnson,
a story about a native speaker guide that everybody,
all the locals hated. Your last story of a notable noisemaker comes from Paula Poundstone.
The shoppers and employees at Whole Foods Market on West Taylor Street in San Jose got a surprise
when former employee, 25-year-old Jason Wendell, illegally commandeered the store's speaker system when he took over the microphone in the security office.
I was standing in the produce section when I heard a voice over the speaker say,
Shoppers, you're in luck.
Today only, Whole Foods is offering a carton of fresh strawberries for just a week's pay.
Shopper Tom Johnson was delighted.
I heard this voice booming. Hey, shopper Tom Johnson was delighted.
I heard this voice booming.
Could the women with the rolled up yoga mats blocking the chip aisle please step aside and allow the shoppers with less self-discipline access to the chips?
And I'm thinking, finally, somebody is speaking for me.
I heard they arrested the guy, said shopper Janet Ross, and I'm glad.
I spent an hour looking for an edible, gluten-free seaweed blanket,
and it turns out he was just being an ass.
They don't come gluten-free.
There we have it.
Okay.
Peter.
Okay.
Peter.
You have got from Alonzo a story about speakers blasting Celine Dion.
From Zaynab, a story about an annoying native speaker.
And from Paula Poundstone, a grocery store speaker takeover.
Which one of those is the real story?
I'm going to go with the one with Celine, number one. The Celine Dion, Alonzo Bowden story about Celine Dion speaker battles.
Okay, so to find the correct answer, we heard from somebody who reported on the real story.
They call themselves the Siren Kings, and they blast Celine Dion at 2 o'clock in the morning in the parking lot.
You got it. That was Teresa Brain, a breaking news reporter at the New York Daily News who reported on the original story.
Congratulations, Peter. You got it right. Good job.
Thank you, Peter.
You have earned a point for Alonzo and you've won our prize, the voice of your choice on your voicemail.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Congratulations, Peter.
And now the game where I get a little nervous to talk to a cultural icon,
and I try not to make bad words out of mouth and sound me stupid.
Well, great, so much for that.
Bernie Taupin first started writing lyrics for Elton John when they were both teenagers,
and they've collaborated on over 30 albums since
then. He's also written for Alice Cooper, Heart, and Jefferson Starship. He collaborated on movie
soundtracks and Broadway musicals. He's been nominated for Grammys. He won an Oscar and he's
even won a Peter, which is the award I personally bestow upon people who I think are kind of amazing.
Bernie Taupin, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
You're kind of amazing.
Bernie Taupin, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you.
I'm sure you've done this a lot, but let's start by talking a little bit about your beginnings.
You grew up in kind of like a, I guess, a country sort of area in England.
Is that right?
Sort of outside of the city.
Absolutely, yeah.
It was rural Lincolnshire. I guess the equivalent
here would be somewhere like Idaho. Yeah. Very flat and lots of potatoes. So you, but you moved,
you felt like you kind of had to move out of the city, or you had to move into the city rather,
to sort of kick-start a music career. So how old were you when you did that? 17, 1967. But, you know, the thing was that where I was raised, the
opportunities were limited. So you were either going to go work in a factory or sit on a tractor
for the rest of your life. And neither one really appealed to me. And so you moved to the city and
there's a story which you can either tell or not but they uh famously both you and elton john who was not elton john at the time he was reginald dwight is that right that's correct
answered uh an ad from so it was a music publisher that they were looking for lyricists they were
looking for musicians so you guys you basically got paired up in a sense yeah well the short i
mean the short story is that it was an American record company. They wanted songwriters, artists, A&R department, the whole deal.
Right.
And both Elton and I individually answered that ad and ultimately it was sort of paired together.
That's the short story.
That's a perfectly good story.
You don't want to hear the long one.
No, that's fine.
So now I want to dig into this because everyone knows Elton John as the face of the two of you.
You know, we've all heard your name over the years.
But he clearly was not a lyricist.
But how bad of a lyricist do you think Elton John is?
Like, without you, would his song...
I mean, let's get down to...
He's not here.
Yeah, keep in mind, we're not having him on this show. He out. We can talk about him. I mean, let's get down to, he's not here. Yeah, keep in mind, we're not having him on this show. He out.
We can talk about him.
Without you, would he
be writing? Some of the
things that he attempted to do
when we first met, he
did throw an oar in the water
and I can give you a
kind of example of
one of the first lyrics he ever wrote
was, I go to the witch's house,
I go whenever I can, me and Molly Dickinson in my delivery van.
You know what? Without you, there would be a bartender at a bar somewhere, at a pub somewhere
in England named Reginald Dwight being like, I go to Molly's house.
Yeah, and without him, I'd
be on that tractor.
Yeah, I guess so.
It's a beautiful thing.
But it's kind of amazing that you've worked together
now for over 50 years. Am I right
about that? Oh yeah, like 55.
And it's crazy.
I mean, the longevity of that partnership is something, but also the fact that you still get along. What is the secret, do you
think, to the two of you staying friends and working together so well for so long? Well, I think
one of the notions that people don't really realize is that we don't spend a tremendous amount of time around
each other. Oh, that's perfect.
We did very much so in the early
days, but everything
that we do, we're completely
opposite. And
you know what they say, opposites attract.
So I think that's the magic
to our
continued sort of marriage,
you know, which it's kind of like a marriage. It's
certainly the longest one I've ever had. Yeah. I was going to say, I think more than 50% of
marriages would stay together if they were like, we shouldn't hang out with each other. What do
you think about that? I think that's a very good idea. And yeah, I mean, as I say, we're not sort
of, we don't live in each other's pockets we talk
on the phone and in this day
and age of zoom you know it's like
having a friend in the room so
you know how that works
wouldn't it be great if
Elton just popped his head
in the door behind you
and said Bernie
I'm going out
no that might be my daughter
telling me the stakes are burning.
Are there songs that you wrote years ago,
lyrics, that if you were magically allowed
to go back and change things,
anything that you're like, ooh, that's embarrassed.
Actually, Elton wrote that one.
I don't know if you know that.
Those are his words.
Not like major regrets, but any little things that you look back and think.
No, you always, yeah, I mean, that's like changing history a bit.
There's nothing that stands out, though.
Nothing as the lyrics of the poetry of it you're happy with.
That's good.
That's great.
You wouldn't change to like Thursday night's all right for fighting.
You might, not me.
No, you've got to keep all your fighting on one night.
Otherwise, it bleeds into the whole week.
Yeah, Saturday always seemed to be the...
That's the fight night.
...decentral night for a punch-up.
You don't seem like you're fighting now, but you are still working.
on jobs. You don't seem like you're fighting now, but you
are still working.
Is it true that
you and Elton are working
recently? Is it this week?
Are you working on new material right now?
Yeah, we're in the process
of working on new material. There are things
definitely in the pipeline. That's great.
That's incredible to still be
going at it like this.
And let me tell you, it's still fun, believe me.
When it's not fun, then that's when we'll hang it up.
That's great. Well, I hope it's always fun all the time
so we all get to benefit from it. It's incredible.
Thank you.
Well, listen, Bertie Taupin, it's been a pleasure talking to you,
but we've asked you here to play a game that we are calling...
Bernie Taupin, how about some Bernie toppings?
That's right.
We're going to ask you about spicy condiments.
You know, they are toppings.
They burn.
They are Bernie Taupin.
I'm sure you've done a lot of press for this book,
this biography of yours that has come out.
I hope that you have not been asked about Bernie Taupin on any other shows.
If you answer two out of three questions that we are going to ask you correctly,
you're going to win our prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who is Bernie Taupin playing for?
Tracy Helke of West Hartford, Connecticut.
Great.
Okay.
Here is your first question.
Hot sauce fans love sharing their war stories,
like the man who bragged about eating a finger full of incredibly spicy sauce
with the only effect being that a bit of sweat came upon his brow
and a single tear fell from his eye.
One problem, though.
What was that problem?
He wiped away the tear with the finger that he had the hot sauce on, putting it directly in his eye.
Or B, he lost his sense of taste for a week.
Or C, that single tear was bright red and smelled like habanero.
I'm going with the first one.
You're going to go with A, that he wiped away the tear with a finger in hot sauce?
That's right.
Very good.
I've done the same thing.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
These are all questions about you, things you've done with hot sauce.
Okay.
Here's your next question.
Last June, a semi-truck accident spilled 100 gallons of Tabasco sauce on a highway near El Paso, Texas, blocking traffic
for hours in an incident that transportation officials called what? A, one spicy meatball,
B, a red-hot traffic nightmare, or C, a level three hazmat incident?
B. B, a red-hot traffic nightmare. No, the answer was C, a level three hazmat incident.
They actually sent crews in full hazmat gear to mop up after a hot sauce spill.
It's pretty intense.
Okay, here's your last question.
While spicy condiments are great on food, they can also be helpful in other ways, as
proven by which of these?
A, a man in Chicago who was able to stop a goose attack by covering himself in sriracha.
B,
a police officer in Texas who tracked
down the person who robbed a buffalo
wild wings by analyzing some buffalo
sauce-covered fingerprints. Or
C, a Japanese company who made a fire
alarm for the death that instead
of beeping, releases a wasabi
mist into the air.
Hmm. I don't know.
I'm going to go with B again.
Okay. Huh.
I wonder. I wonder if that's
the best one to go with.
Oh, C. You know what's so funny is a bunch of people
in the audience are screaming the letter C.
Yeah. Let's do C then.
Let's do C. That's right.
Good job, Bernie and audience.
Boy, one thing that...
Thank you, crowd.
Yes.
Thank you, crowd.
Normally, it's the crowd that's cheering for you and your stuff,
but in this case, you're cheering for the crowd.
The answer was C, the wasabi mist was so pungent
that it could even wake someone up from a deep sleep.
Wow.
Yeah, it's pretty intense.
Okay, Bill, how did Bernie Taupin do in our quiz?
He will rock you.
Two out of three.
You've won, Bernie.
Thanks for the help.
Yeah.
Bernie Taupin is an Oscar-winning lyricist and songwriter.
His new fantastic memoir, Scattershot, is out now.
Thank you so much for joining us. This was a real
experience and an honor.
I really appreciate it. Thank you. Good luck
with the book and all your music
and everything. Thank you so much.
Thanks, guys. Take care.
In just a minute, Bill
reveals his inner beauty in our
Listener Limerick Challenge. Call 1-888-
WAITWAIT to join us on the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
We're playing this week with Z-Nab Johnson, Alonzo Bowden, and
Paula Boundstone. And here
again is your host, filling in for Peter
Sagal at the Studebaker
Theater in Chicago, Illinois.
Peter Gross.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you so much.
Thank you, audience.
In just a minute,
Bill reads his favorite
book, Mary Shelley's Frankenrein, in our listener limerick challenge.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
But right now, panel, it's time for some more questions to you about this week's news.
Paula, NASA recently completed a super complicated mission to collect samples from an asteroid
floating through space. They got the samples back to Earth in this high-tech canister,
and there's only one problem, though. What is that problem?
They can't get the canister open?
That's exactly right. They cannot get the canister open.
Has there ever been a more accurate stereotype than science nerds who can't open a jar?
But before you ask, yes, they ran it under hot water and they banged it on the side with a heavy spoon.
They tried everything.
This has really brought together various factions of the scientific community who have all come together to say, give it here.
I got it.
Let me try it.
Come on.
My oldest daughter can open a jar.
No matter what?
Yeah.
She's amazing.
You know, I did struggle, and then I go, honey, come here.
And she could open.
It's just a, I don't know.
It's genetic.
It's a thing that some people have.
It's a gift that some people were just born into the world with.
It's one of the smaller gifts, but it is a gift.
Not if you're trying to get To the meteor samples
Or the cookies
In your case
Did they ever think of tools?
In terms of opening it up?
I think what happened was
They got it
It's like fine particulate matter
And when they were bringing it back from space
A bunch of that matter got of got in the outside.
So it's like, it's just like really, you know, caked with dust.
Did they wipe the rim before they put the...
Let me, let me just...
That's so important.
Hi, NASA, give me two seconds.
It does make for a good joke, though.
How many scientists does it take to open a jar?
Yeah.
However, there are...
Apparently, all of them.
Yeah.
The number that are in NASA plus one.
Plus the person who comes in.
Plus Paul is kid.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Alonzo, scientists may have found a new way to treat diabetes.
They might be able to replace insulin injections with what?
Whatever's in that jar they can't open.
It's so frustrating.
If they find that, give me something.
Give me something to work with.
Okay.
We will, we will.
Singing?
They're going to sing?
They're going to sing.
They're going to sing.
That's right.
Specifically, the Queen song, We Will Rock You.
Okay.
How bad is your health insurance?
When you are suffering
from type 2 diabetes
and they're like, look, we're going to sing
We Will Rock You.
That's the best we could do.
Let me just go grab
Queen's Greatest Hits out of my car.
Our healthcare system needs work.
The Canadians are laughing at that one there.
This is what it is, though. So it's a new technology
that's being tested that would allow scientists to stimulate a cell in the body to release insulin by playing
the song, We Will Rock You. Unfortunately, though, if it doesn't work, another one bites the dust.
So I get that. So they're going to sing. But is it really that song?
It is that song.
Why is it that song?
So here's what happens.
So it's this whole system.
It's kind of like the clapper, but it's more complicated and with much higher stakes.
So basically researchers engineered a cell that releases insulin,
and in response to music, and they played a bunch of different songs,
and they played We Will Rock You, and it worked the best.
So it's really cool but if you
get this treatment and then you go to a hockey game you might instantly go to into insulin shock
just be in a very calm place where things aren't happening huh they couldn't have played every song
no i don't think i don't think that's how it happened i think like somebody was playing it
in the background and then another scientist
was looking through
a microscope
and then he turned it down
and he was like,
wait a minute.
Turn it back up.
The cells are moving.
Inside the cells
are like,
squish.
Insulin.
Insulin.
I think all this
is very plausible.
Hey, it's Peter Sagal.
Check out our latest bonus episode available now.
It's another edition of the Wait, Wait, Wayback Machine,
the game where we ask a listener questions that appeared on our show 20 years ago.
Now, I know who it is.
No, you're supposed to wait for Chad.
Oh, Chad, I'm sorry.
I'll just sit here and be quiet.
Well, I will tell you,
I don't know who it is,
so I may be needing your assistance.
You could be a contestant
in a future bonus episode
by signing up for
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Plus.
And now, if you've already done that,
thank you so much.
If you haven't,
what are you waiting for?
You get bonus content, sponsor-free listening,
and you get to support NPR and the work that we do.
So you'll feel all warm and fuzzy inside,
which is always nice in the fall, right?
Go to plus.npr.org.
Coming up, it's lightning fill-in-the-blank.
But slow your roll, we aren't quite there yet.
First, it's the game where you have to listen for the rhyme.
If you'd like to play on air, call or leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924.
You can catch us most weeks at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, or you can come see us on
the road. We will be in New York City at Carnegie Hall on December 14th and 15th. And check out the
Wait, Wait stand-up tour with shows coming to Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Chicago, and more. For more touring dates and for tickets to any live Wait
Wait show, go to nprpresents.org. Hi there, you're on Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, I'm Rachel
Galanter from Durham, North Carolina. Hi, Rachel. Look at that. You're getting some applause for
Durham, North Carolina, the Research Triangle. What's going on in Durham? What do you do down there? I work at a non-profit called El Futuro that
provides mental health services to Latine people and works to expand access to culturally responsive
services across North Carolina and beyond. Wow, you deserve that round of applause. You're going
to get another one. You're doing good work, Rachel.
Well, thanks for coming here and doing something so stupid.
Bill Curtis, I mean, you've got to take a break from doing all the important work that you're doing.
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 going to be a winner.
Okay, are you ready? Yeah. Good. Here's your first limerick. Though some gray or brown fur
is on show, there's a bright neon rainbow below. In lairs and in caves, there could be all night
raves. Under blacklight, most mammals will glow. That's right, glow.
Very good.
Scientists have discovered that an overwhelming number of mammals are actually phosphorescent.
I guess they discovered this when someone went into a hotel room with blacklight and
the bed was covered in possums.
It's a strange discovery.
I mean, there's no way to know why evolutionarily there's some advantage of glowing animals under black light.
Because why would there be?
God was like, this will make animals better at finding mates at a nightclub.
It doesn't really make any sense.
Although it does really make me want to get a bunch of woodland creatures in a roller rink.
Just crank up the disco.
All right, here's your next limerick.
In my yard, grass and weeds are real deep.
And for mowers, the incline's too steep.
So I'm joining the craze, paying ovines to graze.
For my lawn care, I've hired some...
Sheep.
Sheep, very good.
Renting out a bunch of sheep is the adorable new way to tend to your lawn
without the fear of losing a foot.
Lamb herds are more environmentally conscious
and quieter than regular lawnmowers.
Instead of a blaring leaf blower,
now your Zoom meeting can be interrupted
by a bunch of bleating lambs.
There you go.
Just like that.
That's so much better than...
Here's your last limerick.
Changing bedding does not take much skill, no.
Sheets puff up with a soft downy billow.
And where I rest my head, there's a thump more like lead.
I still cling to my old yellow...
Pillow.
There you go.
Pillow.
Very good.
to my old yellow pillow.
There you go, pillow.
Very good.
Experts say that you should replace your pillow every two years,
but there's a growing community of people online
that are saying,
get your hands off of my precious germ cushion.
They are hanging onto their pillows
well after their expiration date,
despite the fact that the pillows
have long ago turned yellow
and not in a good way.
It's yellow from memories, right? Like an old photograph?
No, I got bad news for you.
That staining is caused by years of drool and other facial emissions.
What other facial emissions? I don't know.
But just know that none of them are good.
Could this all be because people just can't stand the MyPillow guy?
We're just going to hang on to these old pillows forever.
We have to inform people that there are other places to get pillows.
You don't have to go through Mike Lindell.
Okay, Bill, how did Rachel do?
Rachel will sleep well tonight.
She got them all right.
Nice job. Good work, Rachel. Congratulations, Rachel do? Rachel will sleep well tonight. She got them all right. Nice job.
Good work, Rachel.
Congratulations, Rachel.
Thanks for playing.
This was really fun.
I really appreciate the opportunity.
Thanks very much.
Good.
Thank you.
All right, keep up the good work down there in Durham.
Thank you. I know I still need you, baby, by my side.
Come be my pillow.
Come be my pillow tonight.
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, I have not been paying attention at all.
Can you please give us the score?
Well, I have.
Good.
Paula and Zainab each have two.
Alonzo has four.
Great.
Paula and Zainab are tied for second slash third.
So I'm going to pick Paula.
Paula, you're up first.
Fill in the blank. On Tuesday, the UN called for a temporary ceasefire so that humanitarian aid could reach blank.
Gaza.
Right.
Calling their social networks addictive and dangerous to kids.
Dozens of states filed suit against blank.
Instagram and Facebook, was it? Or Meta?
Meta, exactly. Right.
After a record-fast intensification,
Hurricane Blank touched down in Acapulco this week.
Otis.
Right.
Following positive results from early tests,
Pfizer's combination flu and blank vaccine will move to final stage trials.
Maybe.
COVID?
Yes.
Maybe right.
A woman who was hearing strange rustling sounds in her house for four days
finally figured out she had a blank.
One of those shoebill birds was stuck in a cabinet.
Wrong.
A spider in her ear.
Ah!
Let that sink in.
On Wednesday, the Curiosity rover discovered new ancient riverbeds on blank.
Mars?
Yes, right.
On Tuesday, Richard Roundtree, best known for playing the title character in Blank, passed away at 81.
Shaft.
That's right.
This week, a man in Australia asked the internet for help,
saying that every time he bikes home from work, he is confronted by Blank.
Uh, sheep?
Nope.
A really angry magpie pecking at his head.
Alejandro Rios was shocked when he was biking home from work,
and a magpie dive-bombed him.
But he wrote the attack off as a one-time thing.
That was a month ago, and the bird has attacked him every single day since.
Wow. Really?
Rios says that it's been incredibly frustrating and almost enough to make him quit his job at the loose worm and bird seed factory.
Bill, how did Paula do?
Did very, very well.
She got six right, 12 more points.
Total of 14 puts her in the lead.
Good job, Paula.
Okay.
Zainab, you're up next.
Fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, United Auto Workers reached a tentative deal with blank to end their strike.
Ford?
That's right.
On Tuesday, Russia rehearsed a massive test
of their blank capabilities.
Missile?
I'm going to not give it to you.
Nuclear weapon capabilities.
This week, a judge in New York fined blank $10,000
for violating his gag order.
Donald Trump?
That's right.
This week, a student followed through with her plans
to attend the University of Miami
even after discovering
blank.
The spring break was canceled this year.
That she accidentally applied to the University of Miami, Ohio.
On Thursday, it was announced that Now and Then, the final song from the blanks, would
be released next week.
City Girls.
Close.
So close.
But not really.
The Beatles.
I didn't never know that.
On Friday, the Arizona Diamondbacks faced the Texas Rangers in the first game of the 2023 blank.
Don't even know what sport that is.
I wish I could give it to you, but it's World Series.
A man protesting the building of a new Catholic religious center in France was interrupted by blank.
I'm going to go with my hieroglyphics.
Owl, hand, and top hat.
He was interrupted by a nun tackling him.
Now, to be clear, let me just say, when we say that she tackled him,
what we really mean is that the nun ran at him at a full sprint,
hit him on his blind side, put her arms around him, and slammed his puny ass down to the ground.
And then, of course, she had to say five
Hail Marys for excessive celebration.
Bill, how did Zaynab
do? Too right. Four more points.
Total of six. She's number
two to Paula. Okay.
So that means
how many
does Alonzo need to win?
Five to tie. Six to win.
Okay.
Alonzo, this is for the game.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, Jenna Ellis became the latest Trump ally to plead guilty to blank interference.
Election.
Right.
This week, Representative Jamal Bowman pled guilty for setting off the blank in a congressional office building.
Fire alarms.
Right.
After meeting once a month for 28 years, a book club in California announced they'd finally managed to blank.
Finish the book.
I'll give it to you.
To read their first book.
It was Finnegan's Wake.
Oh, wow.
According to a new study, ADHD may triple blank risk in adults.
I don't know.
Dementia risk.
This week, a Spanish duke was told he must change the name of his newborn daughter after she was named blank.
Duchess.
He had to change her name because it is Sofia Fernanda Dolores Cayetana Teresa Angela de la Cruz
Micaela del Santissimo Sacramento del Perpetuo Socorro de la Santissima Trinidad y de todos los Santos. That is the comment.
How did I not know that?
I know, you're kicking yourself about that one.
How did I not know that one?
Come on.
But don't worry.
Wow.
Don't worry.
They just call her Midge.
Okay.
Bill, did Alonzo do well enough to win?
He got three right for six more points, a total of ten,
and that means Paula wins.
Paula Pazzo, the last week's winner.
Congratulations, Paula.
It's an honor. Thank you.
Coming up, our panelists predict what will be this year's surprising hit Halloween costume.
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 Godekal
writes our limericks. Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman. Our tour manager is Shana
Donald. Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre. BJ Lederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks this week to Blythe Robertson and Monica Hickey.
Our third string Peter is Peter Gwynn.
Our vibe curator is Emma Choi, technical direction.
Lorna White, our CFO, is Colin Miller.
Our production manager is Robert Newhouse.
Our senior producer is Ian Chilog.
The executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mike Duda Danforth.
Now, panel, what will be the hot costume this Halloween?
Paula Poundstone.
Okay, it's a killer whale with a yacht on its back with a Supreme Court justice on top of it.
Very good.
Zaynab Johnson.
Probably everybody's going to dress up as a different Fran Drescher nanny character.
And Alonzo Bowden.
The disgraced billionaire in the costume comes with its own lawyer.
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 Paula Poundstone, Zanab Johnson, Alonzo Bodie.
Thanks to all of you for being here.
Thanks to all of you out there for listening.
Thank you for having me.
I'm Peter Gross.
Peter Sagal will be back next week.
This is NPR.