Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Danny Brown
Episode Date: March 2, 2024Danny Brown helped redefine Detroit's rap scene with XXX, then moved to Austin in 2021 to do it all again. He joins panelists Alzo Slade, Karen Chee, and Peter Grosz to talk playing pickleball, rappin...g Dr. Seuss, and accidentally offending Adele. Want to tell us what you REALLY think about Wait Wait? We'd love to hear it (and then lose sleep thinking about it)! Take our anonymous survey at: https://npr.org/waitwaitsurveyLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago,
this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me,
the NPR News Quiz.
Now that Bill's here, it's Austin City, no limits.
And here is your host at the Bass Concert Hall in Austin, Texas, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill. Thanks, everyone.
You're right. If you're anticipating a great show,
we've got one for you. Later on, we're going to be talking to rapper and brand new Austin resident, Danny Brown. But first, it's just true. This town has changed. Austin used to be breakfast
tacos and singer-songwriters. Now it's autonomous vehicles and vaping tech bros.
I guess way back when,
when you were all saying,
keep Austin weird,
you should have been more specific.
But it's your turn to call us
and be weird in any way you like.
The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924. You can check out also our
pinned post on Instagram at waitwaitnpr. Now let's welcome our first listener contestant. Hi,
you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, this is Harris in Washington, D.C. Hey, Harris,
how are things in Washington? They are good. It's spring. The cherry blossoms are coming in a
couple of weeks, which is too early, but here we are. And I'm thrilled y'all are in Austin.
My wife is from Austin.
Is she?
Oh, really?
Yeah.
How could she ever bring herself to leave?
Well, she fell in love and moved.
But her parents lived in Austin in the 70s when it was truly weird.
Oh, I know.
I got to, yeah.
Are they still around? Do they complain
about how it's changed?
Oh no, they've moved to D.C.
Which is totally
normal.
Well, Harris, let me introduce you to our panel today.
First, he's an Emmy and Peabody Award
winning journalist and comedian. It's
Alzo Slade.
Hey, what's up, Harris? How you doing?
How are you?
Next, he's a comedian and television writer. It's Karenzo Slade. Hey, what's up, Harris? How you doing? How are you? Thank you. Next, she's a comedian and television writer.
It's Karen Chee.
Hi, how are you?
Welcome to Texas.
Thank you.
And an actor and writer who can be seen at the Bell House on March 16th in the Variety
Show Don't Tell Seth, an evening with the Seth Meyers writers.
It's Peter Gross.
Hi.
Hey, Peter.
So, Harris, welcome Gross. Hi. So,
Harris, welcome to our show. You, of course, are going to play Who's Bill this time. Bill Curtis is going to read you
three quotations from this week's news. If you
can correctly identify or explain two of them, you'll
win our prize. Any voice from our show you might
choose on your voicemail. Are you ready
to go? Let's go.
Your first quote is somebody leaving a
comment on an article in the New York
Times.
Why can't they make a spaceship shaped like a weeble so it wobbles but it doesn't fall down?
Good thinking.
That commenter was talking about a spaceship that landed where and then immediately toppled over.
The moon.
The moon, yes.
Odysseus is its name. It is the first American spaceship to land on the moon since 1972.
It completed its journey of hundreds of thousands of miles and immediately fell over on its side.
I mean, that's a very long journey.
I'd fall over and rest as well.
Yeah, I know.
But also, there's less gravity on the moon, so is it like...
Like a really, really slow fall?
He's still falling.
It's so weird.
They spent tens of millions of dollars on its propulsion systems,
more tens of millions on its navigation systems,
and apparently there was nothing left over for a kickstand.
So I heard it was powered by solar panels and it wasn't getting any sun.
Right, that's it.
Yeah.
The problem is because...
They should have sent it to the sun.
Oh, stop it.
It would be bouncing.
It'd be back already.
The problem is that it's going to be powered supposedly by solar panels, but because it fell over, the solar panels are not pointing up.
So therefore, its batteries immediately
started dying. And it did manage
to take some pictures of the
lunar surface around it and send them back, which shows
that it is truly a millennial
spaceship. Its battery
was dying, so the last thing it did
was it posted some pics online.
Wait, the name of it is
Odysseus? So it's not going to come back? No, it's gone. Which is like, the name of it is Odysseus?
So it's not going to come back?
No, it's gone.
Which is like the first person ever to famously go and come back.
Who had a completely flawless, incident-free journey that you can name it for?
Is there a minotaur on the boat that just toppled it over?
They might as well have called it My Dad. It turns out
It turns out, I mean, as we now know
it is really hard to land
on the moon successfully
so that's why the head of NASA
explained that's why we faked it the first time.
Alright.
Your
next quote is from Sports Illustrated,
and it's talking about some new uniforms.
They don't leave much to the imagination.
So players in what sport are showing off a lot more
than just their athletic skills this spring?
Baseball.
Yes, baseball.
skills this spring?
Baseball. Yes, baseball.
All the players
in spring training right
now are complaining that their new
uniform pants are practically
transparent, which is a
thrill for the fans to finally see what
the players have been scratching all these
years.
I mean, but let's be clear.
The uniforms before, they were so snug that you could just,
they didn't leave much to the imagination anyway.
Yeah.
So now it's snug and you can sort of see a little bit.
Now, Alzo, we can see if they were faking it.
So they're very transparent.
You can see their underwear are off and their shirts tucked into their pants,
through the pants.
And the players also complain that the clothing just feels very flimsy.
Major League Baseball is really regretting their apparel contract with Saran Wrap.
People are complaining, but I'm going to tune in.
Now, here's the thing.
Why are you going to tune in?
Why exactly are you going to tune in?
Listen, my eyes are working great, and I just want to do some looking.
Respectfully.
Respectful looking.
Yeah, some respectful looking.
Really, if these players try to slide in these plants,
they're going to fly off like Chippendales pants.
And that's exactly what Karen is looking forward to.
All right, Harris, your last quote is from
Merriam-Webster.
It is permissible in English for it
to be what you end a sentence
with. That
was Merriam-Webster dictionary
giving us the okay after
all these years to go ahead
and end sentences
with what?
A preposition? Yes, Harris, a preposition.
Listen.
Our audience of NPR fans is cheering and whooping,
yelling, free at last, free at last.
Dictionary publisher and constant attention whore,
Merriam-Webster,
stirred up a little controversy this week
by stating it was okay to end a sentence with a preposition.
Really, Merriam-Webster?
On what are you guys?
I'm calling my mother right after the show.
Right.
Because I would be like,
Mom, where's the remote control at after that preposition?
She would say after that preposition.
Every time, bro.
Every time.
Sometimes I feel like with Merriam-Webster,
don't they put out neologisms,
new words at the end of the year?
I feel like they give up, because they'll be like,
they'll just be like, I don't know, I guess slay
is a real word in this context. So many people
use it so much that they're like, you just do
whatever you want. We'll be over here.
We're trying to keep English settled. And this feels like them just being like, you're they're like, you just do whatever you want. We'll be over here. We're trying to keep English settled.
And this feels like them just being like,
you're doing it anyway, so just keep
doing it. Well, they say that this was
a false rule. This was an attempt by snobby people
to try to make the language be more like Latin
or something, but now it's fine. And the real question
is, will they finally release
all those people serving time in
federal prison for this?
I think I might take them to court on this.
I feel like their thing is words, right?
This is outside of their jurisdiction.
This is sentences.
Mary Webster, go home.
This is above your pay grade.
That's a fair point.
So who should be in charge of sentences?
I think me.
I think I should.
Aren't you going to be too busy ogling men's genitals in their baseball uniforms? This, of course, is as exciting as it was for people like Alzo and other people
who like to end their sentences with prepositions.
It was a terrible blow to those people who love to write in to correct our grammar. And you know if you're one of those people
to who I was speaking.
Let him know, Peter.
Somebody listening to this
show in their car just drove off
the road in anger,
slammed into a tree,
and the cop was like, what happened? Peter Sagal said
who instead of whom.
Bill, how did Harris do in our quiz?
With three correct answers, Harris now has the responsibility to reform Washington, D.C.
Thank you so much for playing, Harris.
Take care.
Thanks, John.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
for playing, Harris. Take care. Thanks, y'all. Bye-bye.
Okay, panel, time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Alzo, the style these days, the aesthetic is minimalism. You know, the clean,
white, uncluttered look that's taught by Marie Kondo and others. Well, this week, the Washington Post suggested that in order to have a clean, ordered home,
we need to teach this aesthetic
to whom?
To your kids. Yes.
Specifically, your very small
children. How small?
Really small.
Because we're all dealing with the fact that...
Wait, is this like Alabama small?
Like an embryo?
Is this like Alabama small?
Like an embryo?
Yeah.
I'm just imagining some Alabama parent holding Marie Kondo's book,
The Joy of Tidying Up,
to a petri dish.
It's like, here, honey.
Read this.
You're a person.
Read this.
Throw out that Adam.
No, it's like,
it says if you want your house,
and any parent of small children like myself right now knows this,
if you want your house not to be filled with all these toy detritus and plastic stuff,
you teach your kid minimalism.
After all, what is a baby but a minimalist child?
But, Alzo, you have a three-month-old?
Yeah, I already told him.
None of this belongs, homie.
month old? Yeah, I already told them.
None of this belongs.
Our midwives told us that babies just used to sleep
in the dresser drawer.
And I'm like, why do
we have this expensive bassinet then?
Just don't get a
bassinet built by whoever put that thing on the
moon.
I want to help you turn your truck around. on the moon because it was just like typical.
I want to help you turn your trouble around
Baby, baby
Turn your little problem
upside down
Upside down
Coming up,
our panelists go for broke
in our Bluff the Listener game
called 1-triple-8
Wait, Wait to Play.
We'll be back in a minute
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Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
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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 Peter Gross, Alzo Slade, and Karen Shee.
And here again is your host at the Bass Concert Hall in Austin, Texas, Peter.
Thank you.
Thank you, Bill.
Thanks, everybody.
So, have you ever listened to this show and said to yourself, you know, I have some notes?
Oh, well, now's your chance.
You can fill out a short survey at npr.org slash waitwaitsurvey.
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Go over there, fill it out.
It's anonymous anonymous and thank you
right now though it is time for the wait wait don't tell me bluff the listener game call
one triple eight wait wait to play our game on the air you can check out the pinned post on our
instagram page that's at wait wait npr hi you're on wait wait don't tell me hello hi who's this
this is sammy carroll hey calling from lafayette, Colorado. Oh, I love Colorado.
What do you do there in Lafayette?
Yeah, I'm a corporate trainer and a change management professional.
I'm sorry.
I hadn't heard that phrase.
A change management professional.
Yes.
And it is not, just to be clear, not just firing people.
No.
That's where my head went.
I was like, oh, Phil, I'm here to talk to you about a change.
Phil.
Okay, well, that's good.
I'm glad to hear it, Sammy.
Welcome to the show.
You're going to play our game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Sammy's topic?
Winning isn't everything.
You may think it's great to win, but even winners sometimes lose.
Or so I've been told. That's never happened to me.
This week we heard a story about the drawbacks of winning big.
Our panelists are going to tell you about somebody who won and lost.
Pick the one who's telling the truth. You'll win our prize, the weight-weighed of your choice in your voicemail.
Are you ready to go?
Yes.
Okay, first let's hear from Peter Gross.
your voicemail. Are you ready to go? Yes. Okay, first let's hear from Peter Gross. Joshua Gelman of Doylestown, Pennsylvania was thrilled when he won 35 million dollars in the state lottery and
even happier when he bought his parents, Ellen and Mickey, a house close to him and his family.
He was fine at first, his mom Ellen told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. That is until the
general started keeping us up all night. The general she's referring to is General Silas T. Cornwall,
a commander in the Continental Army who died in 1775
and whose ghost haunts the Gelman's new home.
Apparently, General Cornwall never got a chance to see any real fighting
in the Revolutionary War since he died of syphilis at the ripe old age of 41.
So he spends his nights angrily knocking over furniture and moaning,
George Washington was overrated. I could have won the war in half the time. Still as inconvenient as it is, the Gelmans
say they don't need to move. Joshie went through all the trouble to buy us this house. We don't
want to cause any trouble. To which Joshie replied, my parents would rather complain than be happy.
This is a
nightmare. Please kill me. How do you contract syphilis? A lottery winner takes his winnings,
buys a big house for his parents, but it turns out it's haunted. Your next story of when gone
wrong comes from Alzo Slade. In Brooklyn, New York, intellectually sophisticated
dinner parties are all the rage.
You know the scene. People
passing Yogi T quotes off as their
own over a charcuterie board that
looks like a lunchable for adults.
Leading this trend
is an exclusive invite-only dinner
party called the Algonquin Rectangle.
Their membership supposedly
includes the who's who of New York intelligentsia.
Ben Bogle of Long Island was set on becoming a member,
so he strategized how to show people that he was smart.
First, he read the front page of the New York Times
and listened to NPR so much
that he boasts of an impressive tote bag collection.
Then he practiced his vocabulary in solo Scrabble games.
You want to know what words have a cue, but know you in them?
Ask Ben Vogel.
After all this work, he finally won a seat at the Algonquin Rectangle,
where members just loved him at first.
Turns out the folks at the Algonquin table were tired of hearing,
well, actually, too many times.
Ben Vogel was so obnoxious, he got booted from the
rectangle. So let this be a cautionary tale for all of you listening to NPR. You may be Ben.
The guy wins his way to an exclusive intellectual gathering and then annoys the hell out of
everyone by mansplaining to them. Your last tale of someone who flew too close to the sun
comes from Karen Chee.
You ever do something fun
only to find it has consequences?
Like you're scrolling Instagram
and you miss your subway stop
or drink too many milkshakes and get a stomach ache.
Or, for instance,
win your town's Christmas tree-throwing competition
only to then lose your $800,000 personal injury claim?
It's true. Camilla Grabska, a woman from County Clare in Ireland, won her town's Christmas tree
throwing competition soon after telling doctors that she was too weak to lift a bag of groceries.
For context, Grabska was rear-ended in a car accident in 2017 and sued her insurance company for damages for 760,000 euros
or 800,000 dollars. Here's some advice. If you're going for insurance fraud, don't get an incredibly
incriminating photo of you catapulting a tree across a field in the local newspaper. When asked
in court why she would go through the trouble of throwing Christmas trees when she was in such pain,
Grabska replied, I was trying to live a normal life.
All right.
So, these are your choices.
One of these people won but lost.
Was it from Peter Gross, a lottery winner who spent some of his money on a new house for his parents,
but his parents say the house is haunted, but they still won't leave.
From Alzo, an aspiring intellectual
who got himself an entree
into the Algonquin rectangle in Brooklyn
only to annoy the hell out of everyone.
Or from Karen Shea, a woman who lost
her massive disability claim
because she decided to enter and win
a Christmas tree throwing competition.
Which of these is the real story of a winner and a loser?
Well, actually, it's Karen.
So you are sort of tipping a little hat there to Alzo,
but you are in fact choosing Karen's story.
Well, to bring you the real story, we spoke to someone who is familiar with an important aspect of it.
So we get a large tree and a small tree, and some people will throw it overhead like a javelin.
That was Mike DeCosta.
He is the service manager at Moore Miles Automotive and the organizer of what, as far as we know,
is the only American Christmas tree toss,
explaining how you go about doing that,
which this woman did, as Karen said.
Congratulations, you got it right.
We need a point for Karen.
You've won our prize.
The voice of your choice on your voicemail.
Well done.
Thank you.
Oh, Christmas tree. Oh, Christmas tree.
Oh, Christmas tree.
Of all the trees, most lovely.
Oh, Christmas tree.
Oh, Christmas tree.
Of all the trees, most lovely. And now the game we call Not My Job.
Danny Brown grew up in Detroit,
and his first studio rap album in 2010
helped redefine the Detroit hip-hop scene.
MTV called him one of the rap's most unique figures,
so it makes sense he moved to one of America's most unique cities,
Austin, Texas.
Danny Brown, welcome to Wait What You Can't Tell Me.
cities, Austin, Texas, Danny Brown, welcome to Wait A Day John Tellman.
So let's start with MTV.
They called you one of the most unique rappers in hip hop.
Do you know what they meant?
I have no idea what they meant, but I guess because I looked a little different than the average rapper.
So like your hair's dyed, you got some...
I mean, yeah, but I had wilder hair back then and and I had missing tooth, and it just was a little grimy.
Yeah.
It was a little grimy back then.
You do something that I don't think a lot of the people in your field do,
is that you use different voices when you rap, right?
Yeah, I try to use different voices.
Just whatever emotion I'm feeling or the emotion of the song,
I try to let that convey through the voice.
Do you have, like, names for your voices that you use?
Like, these are verses that this guy's going to do?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes.
Do you know any of those names offhand?
One is just called Adderall.
Where did you get that name?
It's fascinating.
That's fascinating.
So we were reading about you.
You grew up in Detroit.
And you said that you were rhyming almost as soon as you could talk, right? You're right? Yeah. Yeah. So we were reading about you. You grew up in Detroit, and you said that you were rhyming almost as soon as you could talk, right?
Mm-hmm.
You're right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
My mom used to read Dr. Seuss books to me all the time, so she said when I first started talking, I just talked in rhymes.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah, he was killing them on the playground, green eggs and ham.
You feel me?
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Do you remember any of those rhymes that you were doing?
I mean, that was like, it's 80s, so it was, you know, those old, my name is D, I'm in a place to be.
You know, those real cool old D-ish, Curtis Blow-ish rhymes back then.
You also won a lot of rap battles in high school, right?
Yeah, yeah.
I lost a lot, too.
Did you really?
Yeah.
I mean, I'm the professional rapper now, so I guess I won in a hand.
Yeah, I guess so.
I was going to ask who you lost to.
Let him know.
What kind of contract does that guy have?
Is there like a secret weapon to winning
rap battles? Because I couldn't on a bet.
I mean,
it was always like, I was kind of quiet
in school, to be honest. So it would always
just be like, you know, I would instantly become
popular after I rapped, kind of thing. Really? So yeah, so every time some kid would rap, I just be like you know i would instantly become popular after i
rapped kind of thing really so yeah so every time like some kid will rap i'll be like oh it's my
time to shine that was the adderall voice right there so uh you had this huge album about 10 years
ago uh when you were about 30 called xxx or 30 right yeah and you have a new album uh when you were about 30 called XXX or 30, right? Yeah. And you have a new album when you're about 40 called Quaranta, Italian.
Quaranta.
Quaranta, excuse me.
You got to roll the R.
Quaranta, quaranta.
See, he battling you already.
You didn't even know it.
So, your album, 30 when you were 30 and Italian for 40 when you're 40.
Has Adele ever called to say, you're stealing my bit? No, I actually met Adele once she's really nice yeah at Wembley Stadium yeah she was
really nice I think I made a crude joke and she got up out of there after that but really but
most part she was pretty cool she was nice yeah and it was when you all first met yeah yeah it's
like first thing I didn't know it was Adele, though. You didn't know?
Wait a minute.
I came because I was actually opening for Eminem.
And she just was there to see Eminem, obviously.
And she, you know, I just had the empty dressing room that she can hang at.
And she was chilling.
I just thought it was just a cool white lady back there.
So had you known it was Adele, you wouldn't have made the joke?
No, I would have been on my best behavior.
You know what, though?
I have not met her in person, but her voice is like very soaring and kind of pretty.
And then when she talks, she talks like a chimney sweep.
It does, it's true.
It's a very big difference.
But what I love is, as you say, you're in this dressing room,
and you say to yourself, oh, there's this white lady here.
I don't know who she is.
Thus, I will say something incredibly filthy.
Yeah.
I was drinking a lot back then.
Yeah.
I'll blame the alcohol.
Yeah.
Is alcohol a name of one of the other voices?
Adderall, there's alcohol.
Speaking of which,
if you don't know about your struggles
with addiction and substances and drink and stuff,
you can find out about it because
Quaranta, let me get that right,
it has a lot of verses
about your struggles and some regrets.
I mean, it's like a,
forgive me, it's like an older guy's rap album, right?
Yeah, it was a midlife crisis.
Speaking of
midlife crisis,
we understand
that you, among your many enthusiasms
these days, you're into pickleball.
Yeah, I actually just started playing.
Really?
Yeah.
I actually went to an old folks home.
That's not fair, bro.
No, they was whooping my, they was killing me.
So what inspired you to go play pickleball?
I mean, it started out as a joke for me to go.
It was a sketch for me to go play pickleball with all these old people.
And, you know, I guess I was supposed to win, but it didn't work out like that.
I was like, man, they're really moving fast out there.
So I fell in love with it.
So I'm playing.
Are you planning to get good, go back to the old?
Yeah, man, I'm trying to get my revenge.
I feel like those old folks, they pride themselves on baiting young people into the sport.
They did.
They was like, oh.
Did they hustle?
You were like, oh, yeah, my knees are shot, man.
No, they was in great shape.
I was like, man, it really was inspiring.
I was like, I want to be like that when I get your age.
They're like, you're not going to live to be my age.
When you do your 70 album,
that can be all about the pickleball.
Have you, in fact, put pickleball into a rap yet?
No, but it's coming.
Yeah.
It's coming.
In a weird way, the pickleball rap is coming for all of us,
if you know what I mean.
Yeah.
Well, Danny Brown, it is a pleasure to have you.
We have, in fact, asked you here to play a game we're calling...
Danny Brown meet Dan Brown.
So we are going to ask you, Danny Brown, three questions about Dan Brown,
the author of The Da Vinci Code and many other bestsellers.
Okay, if you get two out of three right, you will win our prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who is Danny Brown playing for? Heather Clark of Austin, Texas. Yeah. All right.
Hometown, man. Hometown. Ready to do this? Yeah, I guess. Yeah, I'm telling you, man. I'm sorry,
Heather. No, it's all right. Ignorance is absolutely a blessing in this game. You think
you know something, that's where you go into trouble. Here we go. So, Dan Brown is now one of the best-selling authors of all time, but before
that, he tried to make it in the music business as a singer-songwriter. He only sold a few thousand
copies of his album, probably because it contained songs like which of these? A, Cypher, a song whose lyrics were a string of letters the listener had to decode.
B, a song about pancakes called Flap My Jacks.
Or C, an ode to phone sex called 976 Love.
I'm going to go with C because that just seems cooler.
You're right.
It's an underrated song.
I was about to say, for people who don't remember 976 numbers,
it was like a crude analog OnlyFans.
All right.
That was very good.
You got that.
You see, instinct, man.
That's where you go with.
After he became famous, Brown's life did change
in some surprising ways, like
which of these? A, when he forgot his ID
at the airport, he got through security
by showing them his author photo
on a copy of the Da Vinci Code.
B, he got so much
Fandale, he started using it as free bedding
in his horse barn.
Or C, he was gifted a lifetime
supply of communion wafers from the Catholic
church. I'm going to go with A. You're right again. This was around, he says he drove to Boston
Airport from his home in New Hampshire. He's like, oh my God, I'm in line. I don't have my license.
What am I going to do? The person in front of him, as everybody was doing at that time, had a copy of
the Da Vinci code. And he said, can I borrow that? And he picked it up and said, that's me. And it was.
So, he got on the plane. All right, one more question. You're doing exceptionally well here.
There have been tributes to Dan Brown and his work everywhere, as in which of these? A,
in 2004, Crayola crayons unveiled the color Dan Brown.
and four, Crayola crayons unveiled the color Dan Brown.
B, in 2006, a judge worked a Dan Brown-style puzzle into his ruling when Dan Brown was sued for plagiarism.
Or C, in honor of his 2013 book Inferno,
Brown University went by the name Dan Brown University
for an entire semester.
Oh, I guess I'll go with C.
You're going to go with C, that Brown University called itself Dan Brown University.
No, it was actually the judge.
The judge, you see, if you knew Dan Brown, he's always like hiding codes in his books.
It's all about cracking the codes.
And the judge did rule, however, that Mr. Brown was not found guilty of plagiarism.
So Bill, how did Danny Brown do in the quiz about Dan Brown?
Well, he won with two out of three.
That's our winner.
Danny Brown is a rapper and host of the Danny Brown Show.
His new album, Cuaranta, is out now.
Danny Brown, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you guys for having me.
Give it up for Austinite, Danny Brown, thank you so much for joining us. Thank you guys for having me. Give it up for Austinite Danny Brown.
In just a minute, Bill has some upsetting news for lovers of dried fruit in our listener limerick challenge.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
on the air. We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
Hi, it's Terry Gross, the host of Fresh Air. We bring you in-depth, long-form interviews with actors, directors, musicians, authors, journalists, and more. Listen to our Peabody Award-winning
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Download it in your app store today.
Getting bogged down by how much new music there is out there?
There's a lot.
Consider a daily dose of the All Songs Considered
podcast. It's the easiest way to get tuned into the music world. We spend hours combing through
the new music universe, from emerging bands to time-tested icons, to bring you your next
favorite artist. To get up on your music know-how, listen to All Songs Considered from NPR.
know-how, listen to all songs considered from NPR. From NPR and WBEC Chicago, this is Wait,
Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis. We are playing this week with also Slade, Peter Gross, and Karen Shee. And here again is your host, the Bass Concert Hall of Austin, Texas, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Just a minute, when life gives you limericks, Bill makes limerade in our Listener to Limerick Challenge.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Right now, panel, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Karen, the path to home ownership gets harder every day,
which is why the New York Times recommends that young people should buy their first home from whom?
From their parents?
Yes, from their parents.
That's the idea.
More and more people are buying their childhood homes from their parents.
It makes sense.
It comes pre-haunted with memories of your childhood traumas. Where are their parents supposed to live? Well, the parents continue to
live there. So here's the thing. Oh, this sounds like a terrible idea. Go on. Yeah. So the idea is,
first of all, you get a good price. They're not going to gouge you, right? The equity stays in
the family. Your parents still have a place to live. And it's great because if your mom asks you again when you're going to get married,
you can say, Mom, go to your room.
My house, my rules.
So you have to have parents who own a house.
You do.
You have to have parents that own a house.
You have to have parents who own a house, who you're okay living with,
and who are going to not gouge you.
This applies to like six people.
And all those people, I bet,
have enough money to buy their own house.
I'm just going to move back with my parents
and live for free.
That's true.
I have to buy the house
to live with my parents.
The other plan is just wait for them to die.
Get it for free.
You move into the house and then you place toys
on the stairs.
Then only you know where the toys are. move into the house, and then you place toys on the stairs. You know what would be...
Then only you know where the toys are.
Think of the thrill, though, of moving into your own parents' bedroom.
And your mom's like, why aren't you having kids?
You're like, I cannot perform in this room.
The activity that would allow me to have kids.
Especially because you're still standing in here and asking me questions.
Peter. Peter.
Yes.
Peter, a small town in West Virginia attracted hundreds to a candlelight vigil this week
as all the people assembled to mark the tragic loss of the last what in that state?
Democrat.
No.
The last,
was it like
an animal? No, it was not an animal.
Not a natural thing? No, not a natural
thing. Like a
movie store, like a video
rental store? It was a business, but
not that. Let's see. Can I have a hint?
Well,
apparently they lost all their business
when that Buffalo Wild Boobs opened in the next town over.
The last Hooters?
The last Hooters in West Virginia has closed.
I don't understand why I wasn't told about this sooner.
Well, Peter, we didn't know if you were ready to handle it, frankly.
I'm not. I'm going to freak out now in front of all these people.
I know.
That's okay.
It is with heavy chests that we report to you all
that the last remaining Hooters restaurant in West Virginia
not only has been closed, but the building was demolished.
West Virginians who want food served by scantily clad young women
will now have to travel out of state or just go to that one slutty Wendy's.
Wait, so there were
men and women
at this vigil? Apparently, yes. Apparently, there were
men and women, but the saddest thing
was the men, especially the ones
who were all standing around saying,
yeah, Becky said she was gonna call me.
She really
liked me.
Yeah, she did.
I asked her for something and she brought it.
Yeah.
I'm going to ask her to marry me.
Wait, so how does it Hooters not survive anywhere?
I don't understand.
Yeah, if Hooters can't survive in West Virginia, they're struggling.
Yeah.
Are we as a species not interested in buffalo wings anymore?
Apparently.
Coming up, it's lightning fill in the blank,
but first it's the game where you have to listen for the rhyme.
If you'd like to play on air, call and leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Or check out the pinned post on our Instagram page.
You can catch us most weeks back at the Studebaker Theater in downtown Chicago.
And, of course, come see us on the road.
We'll be in Pittsburgh on April 11th and at Wolf Trap outside of Washington, D.C. on August 1st.
And the Wait, Wait stand-up tour has dates all over the East Coast in April. For tickets and information on all
of our live shows, go to nprpresents.org.
Hi, you are on
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Kelsey Roeder calling from San Francisco.
Hey, how are things in San Fran?
Oh, things in San Fran
are great, and we don't call it that.
I know.
I did it to annoy you.
Thank you. But since I didn't know you, I didn't want to go all the way to Frisco because you'd hang up. Well, Kelsey, welcome to the show. Bill Curtis is going
to read for 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, and two of the limericks will be
a big winner. You ready to play? I'm so ready. Okay, here is your first limerick. On dried cherries and apples, I'm grazing.
They taste chewy and sweet and amazing.
And I know where they grow, but these wrinkled ones, though.
Tell me, where do you harvest a...
Raisin.
A raisin, that's right. According to London's Daily Mirror, modern day society is full of adults who have no idea where raisins come from.
Other than, of course, their natural assumption from mommy and daddy raisins.
The Mirror cites Twitter as evidence featuring lots of tweets confessing his ignorance like this one. Bill?
Am I the only dumb bitch that doesn't know
raisins were great? Wait, Bill gets to read his own tweets on the air? I know.
I personally found this fascinating news, but what was I eating at the pick-your-own-raisin farm?
At the Pick Your Own Raisin Farm.
Here is your next limerick.
Food inflation makes Kellogg's a winner.
We are more than a good day, beginner.
Grab a bowl, not a plate, because this meal is great.
We will eat frosted flakes for our... Dinner.
Dinner, yes!
In a new ad campaign
Kellogg's is telling us to eat cereal
for dinner they're even running a commercial
this is true with Tony the Tiger
where this mom
tells a chicken to take the night off
and the chicken is devastated that it
will not be eaten
eating
cereal for dinner
that's their new thing.
That's not new.
Well, if you've been broke before.
Well, that's the thing.
I mean, the meaning, you know, what that indicates, eating cereal for dinner,
depends a lot on who's doing it and what's the cereal, right?
So if you serve kids Rice Krispies for dinner, it says,
hey, we're doing something a little different tonight.
If you serve them Cookie Crisp for dinner, that says, isn't it fun to stay at dad's house?
It builds character.
It does.
But if Kellogg's really wants us to eat cereal for dinner, they should make cereal for dinner.
Like, mmm, Frosted Mini Meats.
That's hamburger helper.
All right.
Here, Kelsey, here, Kelsey, is your last limerick.
Though it doesn't go fast or real far, in tight spaces, this thing is a star.
Its major appeal, it can tuck in its wheels.
It's a really small, foldable...
Car.
Car, yes.
The electric car company City Transformer has unveiled a new foldable automobile.
They say it'll make parking in tight spaces a breeze.
Please just remember to remove kids and pets before you fold up the car.
How small is it, Ken?
It's a small car to begin with, and you kind of fold the wheels in to make it even smaller, right?
But then do you, like, walk away with it like George Jetson, or do you just leave it there?
I think you, like, prop it up against something like a large skateboard.
I'm not quite sure.
I don't think this foldable car thing is going to take off.
It's like when people, when those kind of, sorry if some of you all are in the audience,
but folks that fold up their little
scooters and carry them everywhere,
that's corny.
So it's going to be
even more corny when you're in line at Starbucks
with your card hanging off your shoulder.
I have, you know, I fold up my bicycle
and carry it everywhere, so there.
And you are very cool.
Thank you, Karen.
You know, Karen lingered on that seat for quite a while.
You are very cool.
Yeah.
Well, Bill, how did Kelsey do?
She's very good.
She won.
Congratulations, Kelsey.
Yay.
Yay. Thank you so much for playing.
Take care, Kelsey.
The news can feel incredibly overwhelming.
For a breath of much-needed fresh air,
head to NPR.org's culture section.
From the buzzy movies, tiny desks,
and artists that everyone seems to know about,
type in NPR.org for the latest and greatest
in the pop culture universe.
How can a story feel uniquely Latin American and universal?
You'll have to listen to Radio Ambulante, NPR's award-winning Spanish language podcast, to find out.
For over a decade, we've told stories of love and migration, youth and politics, the environment, food and families from everywhere Spanish is spoken.
Escucha ahora el podcast Radio Ambulante desde NPR.
In need of a good read or just want to keep up with the books everyone's talking about?
NPR's Book of the Day podcast gives you today's very best writing in a pocket-sized show.
Whether you're looking to engage with the big questions of our times or temporarily escape from them, we've got an author who'll speak to you.
Catch today's great books in 15 minutes or less on the Book of the Day podcast, only from NPR.
It's now time for our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank. Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which 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, inflation.
It's now worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Peter has two, Alzo has two, and whoa, Karen has four.
All right, very good, Karen.
Well, since Alzo and Peter are tied,
I will arbitrarily pick Alzo to go first.
The clock will start when they begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court said they will decide whether blank can be shielded from criminal prosecution.
Trump.
Yes.
On Tuesday, lawmakers in Alabama proposed bills to protect doctors in that state who provide blank treatments.
IVF.
Yes.
This week, a glamping site in the UK was told to close down after
neighbors complained of blank at all hours of the day. Party. Not quite. Bad campfire singing.
Yeah, shut it down. Shut it down. Shut it down. Following backlash, food giant blank walked back
plans to institute surge pricing for their food. Wendy's. Yes. On Wednesday, it was announced that Ryan Gosling would perform
the song I'm Just Ken at the 2024 Blank Awards. Oscar Awards? Yeah, Oscars. This week, a man in
Poland was arrested after neighbors caught him trying to sneak a stolen blank into his third
floor apartment. Squirrel. No, a stolen...
No, a stolen... No, a stolen
horse.
Come on.
Obviously, if you are
trying to hide a stolen horse
in your third-floor apartment, your neighbors are going to find
out. I mean, it was
bad enough already, but why did the guy
make the horse wear high
heels?
Bill, how did Alzo do in our quiz?
Four right, eight more points.
Total of ten for the lead.
All right.
So, Peter, you're up next, fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, Mitch McConnell announced
he'd be stepping down as blank in November.
The devil.
The devil.
stepping down as blank in November?
The devil.
No, it was the Senate.
Minority leader.
On Thursday, Vladimir Putin said the West risk nuclear conflict if they continue to intervene
in blank. Ukraine? Yes.
This week, the Smokehouse Creek fire became the second largest
wildfire in the history of blank.
Texas? Yes. This week, a teacher in New Mexico
was sued after parents alleged she had students blank
during her chemistry class.
Give sex ed to each other.
No.
Geez.
What?
No.
I don't know.
She was arrested.
It had to have been bad.
No.
Fight with real swords.
What?
Oh, yeah.
Chemistry teacher.
I got it.
Okay.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
On Thursday, health officials recommended that older adults get another blank vaccine shot.
COVID.
Yes, best known for his role in Curb Your Enthusiasm and a career on stage.
Comedian and actor blank passed away at the age of 76.
Richard Lewis.
Richard Lewis.
This week at McDonald's in Florida, with a broken ice cream machine improvised and gave a woman who ordered ice cream blank instead.
Curdled milk.
No, four coffee creamers in a cup filled with ice.
Woman drives up to the drive-thru, she says, I'd like a McFlurry, an ice cream,
and she was given instead a large cup of iced cream.
And if that weren't bad enough, while still sitting in the drive-thru,
a huge man got in her backseat and said, I'm Big Mac, where are we going?
Bill, how
did Peter do in our quiz? Six right,
12 more points. He has 14
to take over the lead.
Okay.
How many does Karen need to win?
Well, five to tie and six
to win. There we go. Karen, this is
for the game.
On Wednesday, U.S. lawmakers struck a temporary deal to avoid a blank.
Oh, a government shutdown.
Yes, on Thursday, experts warned that a blizzard could bring life-threatening conditions to blank.
The Northeast?
No, the other side.
California, this week, U.S. officials began looking into the possibility of airdropping aid into blank.
Palestine?
Close enough, Gaza.
into the possibility of airdropping aid into blank.
Palestine?
Close enough, Gaza.
On Wednesday, a consumer rights group in Europe accused social media giant Blank
of illegally collecting user data.
Meta.
Yes.
This week, a flight radar caught a pilot in Ohio
navigating an erratic flight path
all so he could just blank.
See his girlfriend.
No, draw an enormous penis in the sky.
According to a new report, blank prices have reached a 30-year high.
Eggs.
I'll give it closer.
Grocery prices in general.
Yeah, on Tuesday, Disney announced they would once again raise ticket prices at blank.
Disneyland.
Yes, well, Disney World.
Okay, I'll give that to you, too.
Thank you.
Following things like brains, ears, and even a heart,
researchers announced this week they have successfully grown a blank in a lab.
Ears, brains, and a heart.
Teeth?
No, testicles.
Oh.
Researchers have successfully grown a pair of human testicles.
What's even more surprising is they grew them directly in the back of a Dodge Ram pickup truck.
Science.
No, actually...
Everybody here in Austin
is like,
I've seen that guy.
I am that guy.
Actually, no,
they grew them
on a mouse, right?
This was done in hopes of better understanding reproductive organs and male infertility.
So far, they've limited this research to mice and, from what we've seen, Major League Baseball uniforms.
Bill, did Karen do well enough to win?
She did very well.
Close to a win.
She tied with Peter for a co-championship.
Yay!
win. She tied with Peter for a co-champion. I think we should settle this with Karen and Peter battle rapping each other. Coming up, our panelists will predict, now that they have told us we can
end a sentence with a preposition, what will Merriam-Webster give us permission to do next?
Hey, it's Peter again, asking you one more time to let us know what you think of this show by filling out an anonymous survey.
Think of it as the most polite form of heckling there is.
Also, there will be a place at the end you can provide extra comments,
and you can let us know what handsome celebrity you think I most look like.
And by the way, the answer is Stanley Tucci.
That's
npr.org slash waitwaitsurvey. Thanks. 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 Godeka, Rezar Lemerick. Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman. Our tour manager is
Shane O'Donnell. Thanks to the staff and crew at the Bass Concert Hall in Austin.
B.J. Liedemann composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks this week to Vinnie Thomas and Monica Hickey.
Our pants designer is Peter Gwynn.
Our vibe curator is Emma Choi.
Technical direction is from Lorna White.
Our CFO is Colin Miller.
Our production manager is Robert Newhouse. Our senior producer is Ian
Chalaghan. The executive producer of
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mike
Danforth. Now panel, what will
Merriam-Webster give us permission to do
next? Karen Chee. Oh, give
your friends a little kiss when they're feeling sad.
Alzo
Slade. Save people embarrassment
by accepting any spelling of the word there
And Peter Gross
It will now be allowable to ogle professional baseball players' crotches
And brag about it in front of thousands of people
Well, if any of that happens, panel, we're going to ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you, Bill Curtis.
Thanks also to Karen Chee, Peter Gross, Alzo Slade.
Special thanks to Wade Lee and everyone here at KUATN Austin.
Thanks to our fabulous audience here in Austin, Texas.
Thanks to you listening at home.
I'm Peter Sagal.
We'll see you next week.
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