Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Dionne Warwick
Episode Date: September 28, 2024This week, we're live in Kansas City with guest Dionne Warwick and panelists Paula Poundstone, Shantira Jackson, and Josh GondelmanLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoice...sNPR Privacy Policy
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it's all of the above, and I think nobody is comfortable for quite a while.
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back to school. Listen to the Life Kit Podcast from NPR. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is, wait, wait, don't tell me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis Kelsey.
I love it.
And here is your host at the Kansas City Music Hall, Kansas City, Missouri, Peter Seigald.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you, everybody.
We are delighted to be finally back in Kansas City, where later on we are going to be talking
to the legendary singer Dionne Warwick right here on this stage.
I know, it's amazing, but first I have to say this is a homecoming for Bill Curtis.
He grew up just over the border in Kansas.
So Bill, what is it like to be almost back home? I remember growing up on the prairie, dreaming of someday coming back with my dream job,
reciting most of a limerick. You're already home when you play our games,
because you can just call in. The number is 1-888-WAITWAIT. That's 1- eight eight nine two four eight nine two four let's welcome our first listener
contestant hi you're on wait wait don't tell me hi this is Jen from Havertown
Pennsylvania Havertown Pennsylvania what do you do there I am a web editor for a
very large financial institution very large eh do they pay you in very large bills? It works for me.
Okay, whatever.
Well, welcome to the show, Jen.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First up, a writer and stand-up comedian whose sub-stack newsletter full of pep talks is
called That's Marvelous and arrives every Monday.
It's Josh Gondelman.
Hello.
Oh my gosh.
Thank you.
Hi, Josh.
Next, she's a writer on Netflix's Big Mouth. Season 7 is out now.
It's Shantira Jackson.
Hi, Shantira.
Hello.
And a comedian you can see in Alexandria, Virginia,
at the Birchmere on November 22nd and 23rd.
It's Paula Poundstone.
Paula, you got it.
Oh, that's very sweet of you.
Thank you.
And the next one is a writer on Netflix's Big Mouth. on November 22nd and 23rd, it's Paula Poundstone. Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula.
Paula, Paula, Paula. Paula, Paula from our show on your voicemail. Are you ready to go?
I'm ready to go.
Let's do it then.
Your first quote is from someone moments after learning
he had been indicted on federal charges.
I am not surprised.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
That was Eric Adams, the not surprised mayor of what city?
New York.
New York City.
Mr. Adams was elected mayor in 2021 on the strength of his career as a police captain,
promising to make crime in New York a personal priority, and he did it.
Adams was indicted on five charges of fraud, bribery, and soliciting illegal foreign campaign
donations from the government of Turkey.
At his arraignment on Friday, he entered the plea, only in New York, kids, only in New
York.
As a New Yorker, my predominant reaction was, this is funny.
As someone who grew up in and around Boston, my predominant reaction was, this is wicked funny.
He's the first New York mayor ever to be indicted in office.
It's really exciting.
Rudy Giuliani's so disappointed he couldn't get there quicker.
He got more than $100,000 worth of bribes
in the form of free flights and upgrades on Turkish airlines. His lawyer said he only agreed to accept the bribes in the form of free flights and upgrades on Turkish airlines.
His lawyer said he only agreed to accept the bribes after he realized he was never going
to get the 12 qualifying segments by the end of the year he needed for a better status.
Okay, the thing about getting an upgrade on an airline is unless you're very familiar
with which aircraft you're using, which I
never am, like sometimes I'll look at my ticket and I go, oh look, it's first class.
And then it turns out I'm on a puddle jumper.
Yeah.
Right?
And first class is just a, you know, a slightly bigger chair.
Right.
But it's not, you know, and then I just feel like, wow, then I shouldn't have taken that
bribe. That's an additional count in the indictments.
Didn't even get the lie flat seeds.
All right, Jen, your next quote is from a New York Times story about a new dining trend.
Americans are not likely to break up with endless pasta bowls and half pound burgers overnight.
So what will finally be getting smaller at American restaurants?
Portion size.
Portion size, that's right!
After decades of increasing portion sizes, Americans have been forced to admit that in
the end there's only so wide a mouth can open.
More and more restaurants are finally trending toward smaller portions, robbing people of
that wonderful familiar after dinner, can we take an ambulance home feeling?
You know where they should do the smaller portion size?
Where?
It's in the all you can eat buffets.
Right.
From now on they'll be all you should eat.
No, they should just give them like each time somebody comes back up to the buffet, just
give them a teeny little bit and then they have to keep returning and eventually.
So like just one tater tot?
Exactly.
Right.
Yeah.
And that would either, you know, they'd either feel too embarrassed to go up again
or they would, you know, or they would just become exhausted or honestly work it off.
That's true.
Did you say that the restaurants were doing it for public health reasons because—
In part.
Oh, bull.
Absolutely not.
Is the price going down?
Well, that is, that is in fact the hope.
That's my question because I feel like this is shrinkflation.
It's like, no, no, this is for fact the hope. That's my question because I feel like this is shrinkflation.
It's like no, no, this is for your health, but it's still $29.99.
What do you want?
It's not $30.
No, $29.99.
It's actually, I want a two for 20 from Chili's and I bet you now it's one for 20.
I know what they're doing.
Yeah, it's a smaller portion section Terry.
It's good for 20. I know what they're doing. Yeah, it's a smaller portion section, Terry. It's good for you.
This is actually kind of terrible because enormous portions are like the signature of
American cuisine, right? Who even are we, right, if we don't do this? We're the only
country that gives you a prize if you can eat the whole thing.
I like the idea that because it'll be smaller, right, we won't even need a whole cheesecake factory. We'll have kind of a bespoke cheesecake workshop. Exactly. All right, Jen,
here is your last quote. Earth will be hosting a new guest. That was NPR talking about something
that will be orbiting Earth for two months. Scientists are calling it a second what? Moon.
Yes, a second moon.
On Sunday, an asteroid will enter Earth's orbit and will stay for a little while.
We will have a, quote, mini moon for two months, although to be clear,
the technical scientific term is Earth's new side piece.
It's a small moon, but it's going to lead to a lot of changes.
For example, Styrofoam ball sails will spike as elementary school kids everywhere have
to update their solar system models.
Yuri, look, are you in or are you out?
We went through this with Pluto.
I can't deal with another heartbreak, I guess.
I can't do this again. Right. I want to know why the moon chose these two months to come.
It's very stressful right now. They should come maybe next February.
It's possible that it's actually a probe sent by aliens who are planning a visit,
but just want to check on the election results. I mean, so yes, it isn't really going to be a moon but you know who's really excited?
Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Once again, he's going to have an opportunity to engage in his favorite pastime, correcting
people who are happy.
Bill, how did Jen do on our quiz?
Jen got them all right.
Perfect score.
Congratulations.
There you go, Jen.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for playing.
Thank you very much.
It was an honor.
Bye-bye.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Josh, many people suffer from migraines.
That's true, but according to Wired magazine, there is a new remarkably effective treatment that
people can do at home. You just use a what?
Oh, I don't, you use your laptop and you close it.
That could work. Can you give me a hint?
If somebody finds it in your bed stand, you can just say it's for your migraines.
Something that you already have in your home?
Something that some people already have in their home.
Smooth.
Edibles?
You said laptop. You were wrong, but it is an electric device.
A personal massager?
Yes, a vibrator.
Thank you for being discreet.
This is NPR, as you say at the end of the show.
Research shows nasal vibration can considerably reduce pain from migraines,
which is not only great for migraine sufferers,
it's great for everyone else who wants to look the cashier in the eye when you buy one.
It's for my nose headaches.
That's... Okay.
So you said you might already have one in your home.
I'm going to say if you're using it in your nose,
what you're going to want is a second vibrator.
You know it's going to become a popular cure when you hear people saying, please, tonight,
I have a headache. 17, this is amazing, in the study, 17 out of 18 people felt relief
after using the vibrator, although some of them might have been faking it to get you to stop trying so hard.
And if you don't want to spring for like a new, you know, nose vibrator, just jam your
electric toothbrush up there.
Well, I was thinking there, so it goes inside the nose or it just goes over the nose?
Yes, it goes inside the nose.
This little special vibrator goes up your nose and it vibrates the sinuses and through it the migraine.
That just goes to show how bad migraines are.
That someone would even come up with that idea, do you know what I mean?
I do.
It's like someone's trying to hit the reset button on their brain.
It's going to change the new edition of Operation.
Coming up, what winners have that losers don't.
In our beloved listener game, call 1-888-WAITWAIT to play.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait Wait Don't Tell Me from NPR. in every sip. Find your next favorite beer wherever fine beverages are sold. With new
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From NPR and WDBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis we are
playing this week with Josh Gondelman, Paula Poundstone and Shantira Jackson.
And here again is your host at the Kansas City Music Hall in Kansas City,
Missouri, Peter Sagal.
Thank you Bill. Right now it's time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Bluff the listener game.
Call 1-888-WAITWAIT to play the game on the air.
You can check out the pinned post at our Instagram page, at Wait, Wait, NPR.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Joanna from Columbia, South Carolina.
Hey, how are things in Columbia?
They are great.
All right then.
What do you do there? I'm an
educator by day and at night. I'm a drag king under the name Marty McGuy.
Whoa! Marty. Marty McGuy is such a good drag name for a drag performer in South
Carolina because I feel like afterwards you say a lot of this might be too much for you but your kids are going to love it.
It's usually a lot of young performers that have never seen the movie and like oh that
old movie?
So you know, but occasionally someone gets it.
Just so you know, if you went back in time as far as Marty McFly went back in time in
the movie, you could see the premiere of the movie.
But that's not here nor there.
Joanna, we have invited you here to play the game
in which you must tell truth from fiction.
What's the topic, Bill?
The secret of my success.
Winners all have secrets for their success.
I will let you in on mine.
Did you know there are companies
that let you make your own Ivy League diplomas?
This week we heard about a surprising secret to success Did you know there are companies that let you make your own Ivy League diplomas?
This week we heard about a surprising secret to success in the sports world.
Our panelists are going to tell you about it.
Pick the real story and you'll win the weight weighter of your choice in your voicemail.
Are you ready to play?
Yes.
All right.
First, let's hear from Shantira Jackson.
Neil Dowden has been scooping ice cream in his family's local ice cream shop in Savannah,
Georgia, since he was tall enough to see over the counter. Neil Dowden has been scooping ice cream in his family's local ice cream shop in Savannah, Georgia
since he was tall enough to see over the counter and at 5'2 and 110 pounds he's still not much taller.
Six months ago on a dare, Neil entered a local arm wrestling competition and took out his opponents in six seconds due,
observers say, to his incredibly muscular right arm, which after a decade of scooping, weighs as much as the rest of his body combined.
He then advanced to regionals and won there too.
Last week, he made it all the way to the Buffalo Wild Wings
World Arm Wrestling League Championship, where he was crowned
national champion, winning the coveted Golden Wild Wing Championship trophy.
He then dropped it on the floor, smashing it,
after making the mistake of trying to pick it up
with his left arm.
A ice cream scooper finds that was excellent training.
To win the national championship in arm wrestling,
your next story of an athletic edge
comes from Josh Gombelman.
When the Boston Celtics clinched the 2024 NBA Finals, all of America rejoiced as one.
Even outside the Bay State, basketball fans were curious about how this team executed
such a dominant run to the title.
And now we have an answer.
In a recent conversation with Boston-based Interview Magazine, are you serious right
now, kid?
The famously intense Celtics head coach Joe Mazzullo responded to the buzz around his
team with, well, a different kind of buzz.
Bees are our greatest teacher.
They represent chaos and harmony all at once, whispered Mazzullo while making unflinching
eye contact with his interviewer. He's not kidding, added Celtics star Jason Tatum.
At first I thought one bee had gotten into the gym, but then there were more
and more all over the court. Plus coach Missoula was wearing one of those bee
keeper outfits with the mask and everything, which is rarely how he dresses for
practice. Winning the title hasn't dulled Missoula's unorthodox style.
When asked about his plans for this season, he answered succinctly and without hesitation,
three words, not not spiders.
Bees.
Live, buzzing bees, the secret to the Boston Celtics success.
Your last story of jocks getting a jump
comes from Paula Poundstone.
The Buffalo Bills have started their season
with three straight wins,
and Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen
credits the team's passion for playing Catan
as part of the reason why.
It's a board game, they play it a lot.
Why?
To quote one player, there's less to do in Buffalo.
Supremacy in Catan, a civilization building game, requires strategy, teamwork, and adaptation.
It is played with three to four players and is low impact. Very low impact. In fact, unless
the players engage in pushing and shoving over seating arrangements, there's no impact at all.
This is not the first instance of large men who are known for engaging in brutal activities,
also spending time in more peaceful sedentary pursuits.
Former football player Rosie Greer enjoyed embroidery,
and there's no evidence that crochet wasn't a popular
Viking hobby.
Not the NFL team, the actual Vikings.
All right.
One of these was the secret to some athlete or team's success somewhere.
Was it from Shantira Jackson, the country's newest arm wrestling champion, got his asymmetric
strength from scooping ice cream for a long time. From Josh Gondelman, the secret
to the Celtics run to the NBA championship was bees, live bees,
introduced at their practice. Or from Paula Poundstone, the reason the Buffalo
Bills are off to a 3-0 start is because the team bonds by playing the board
game Catan.
Which of these is the real story of athletic success we found in the news?
Well, I'm going to have to go with Paula's story because my drag family will work out
performing.
We also play a lot of board games and it does bring us together.
So I'm going to go with Paula's story.
All right.
Well, we actually have to bring you the real answer one of these athletes who's
benefited so much. We love Catan. The land of Catan is slowly expanded. We actually have two of them on boards. It's the competitive juice of flying.
That was Buffalo Bill's tight end Dawson Knox talking about his team's intense
Catan rivalry in the locker room. Congratulations, Joanna, you got it right!
Thank you. You earned a point for Paula. You've won our prize. The voice of your choice and your
voicemail. Congratulations! Thank you so much. Bye-bye.
And now the game we call Not My Job. Dionne Warwick is a legend of American music, a winner
of six Grammys, a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. You can find her name on both
the Apollo Theater and the Hollywood Walks of Fame. She is performing this weekend here
in Kansas City. We are thrilled she could spend some time with us.
Dionne Warwick, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you.
So your first of many hits, Don't Make Me Over, was released in 1962.
It was.
It's 62 years later and you are still performing.
Are you still enjoying it?
Are you having fun?
Oh yeah.
I mean, it's something I've always tell people.
I never wanted to work.
To work?
Ever.
No.
And when this ever becomes a job, that's when I take my ballet slippers and do my pirouette and say bye.
Do you have any idea what you'd do instead? Oh yeah. Sure, like what?
Yeah, well I have already, I have an interior design company. There you go. Oh, wow. Yeah, so if you need something done.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was wondering what those paint stains were, but now I know.
That's great.
I wonder, you have had such an extraordinary career.
We can't even go into it.
Is there a moment that stands out for you in your career
where you simply like, I cannot
believe that a nice young woman from Orange, New Jersey is doing this?
Was it, for example, performing for the Queen of England?
Was it getting a lifetime achievement Grammy?
Is there anything that stands out?
Yeah.
Okay. There's, I actually stopped Sidney Parton.
I did, I really did.
I don't think anybody can blame you for that.
I think I speak for America when I say do tell. I was coming out of a recording session and
we were walking down Broadway and all of a sudden I realized I was walking behind
Sidney Poitier and I said oh my god and you, you've seen it in film. I did it.
You walk behind somebody you don't want them to know
that you're walking behind them.
And then they stop and you stop and you.
So he like spins around.
He's like, someone's following me.
And you did the thing where you looked away.
Oh no, I just happened to be standing here
two feet behind you.
No, he stopped at a red light.
That's when he turned around and said, young lady, are you talking to me?
You've been following me.
Is there a reason?
And of course I said, I have a complete loss of words.
Really?
And finally I got up the nerve to ask him,
will you sign this piece of paper for me?
He said, of course I will.
And he did.
And I still have that piece of paper.
Oh nice.
No.
Did it?
All right.
Forgive me, but did it not occur to you at that moment to say, I'm Dionne Warwick.
Perhaps you know me from my many gold records.
I don't think he would have cared.
Really?
No.
It is amazing that that is the story you chose to tell from your remarkable career, and I
kind of love it.
Before we get to our little game with you, I did want to ask you about something else.
In addition to everything else you've done, you have now been called the queen of Twitter.
You adopted Twitter, and you are very good at it.
I'm sure you, I have no doubt having met you now that you do it yourself. Here are some of your best tweets.
We have them here.
Here's one from 2021.
I just heard about Leonardo DiCaprio's 25 year rule,
his loss, you don't know what you're missing. And it's true.
It is true.
Which brings up another topic.
I found out you were married once.
That ended in the mid-70s.
You never married again.
What is it like to be out of everybody's league? I am having the best time.
I just got to add one more tweet before we move on.
This is from 2022 from Ms. Dionne Warwick, the legend. I will be dating Pete Davidson next.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Oh, why not?
He's dating everybody else.
I know.
Ha ha ha ha.
Dionne Warwick, it is such an honor to talk to you and we have asked you here to play
a game we're calling, Oh, So That's What Friends Are For.
That's What Friends Are For, obviously one of your greatest signature hits, but as great
a song as it is, it doesn't cover all the things friends are for.
So we're going to ask you three questions about other things that friends do.
If you get two right, you'll win a prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone
they might choose for their voicemail.
Bill, who is Dionne Warwick playing for?
Theresa Durkin of Kansas City, Missouri.
All right.
Are you ready for this?
Alrighty.
First question, friends are great for helping you move and you probably should call your
friends rather than a certain real moving company, A, shattered glass movers in Seattle,
Washington, B, hernia movers in Milwaukee, or C, two guys and no truck movers in Atlanta, Georgia?
One of those is real.
Well, I don't like the sound of shattered glass at all.
I have too many valuable pieces.
Of course.
Okay, so they're out.
Hernia?
Yeah, with some of the stuff that I have to move, they would get a hernia.
You're right, hernia movers. They're real.
Hernia movers has been helping. She does. Hernia movers has been helping people move
around Milwaukee since 1975. Here's your next question.
Another thing that friends are good for is, of course, rides to the airport.
But it was likely a very bad friend who forgot what that was left at the Dublin airport.
Was it A, a tombstone with the inscription, you will always be remembered, never forgotten. Be their friend's car, which
they left in long-term parking for so long that it cost $100,000 to get it out, or see
their friend who has been living at the airport now for 14 years. I think living there.
You think that somebody went to the airport to get their friend, forgot to pick him up,
and he's just been there for 14 years.
The audience...
All right, you don't think I'm right, that's all right.
But having spent a little time with you, I absolutely respect your confidence here.
It's what I should have expected, but it is actually A, the tombstone.
All right, here's your last question.
The final thing, friends, are four, is being a wingman, that is, helping you meet dates
when you're out together.
Well, one such wingman posted his story on Reddit.
He said his friend got divorced, was really broken up about it, so he took the divorced
friend out to a bar to meet some ladies.
And then what happened?
A, the bartender recognized his friend and called the police to have him arrested for
robbing the place two weeks earlier.
B, the wingman introduced the friend to an attractive woman there who turned out to be
the friend's ex.
Or C, the friend kept trying the line on the ladies, he's my wingman, but when you and
I get married, he'll be our ringman.
Oh, I know, yes.
Making that face.
You can immediately throw out three, I think.
I think it was his ex, that he...
You think it's that one?
Yeah.
You're right.
That's what happened.
There we go.
He says he was chatting up this woman in the bar.
He said, hey, have you met my friend John over here?
Yes, she has.
Wow.
Bill, how did the Elm Warwick do on our quiz? Oh, you know, she got two right. Bill, how did Dionne Warwick do on our quiz?
Oh, you know, she got two right.
I forget the third.
But that's a winner in our game.
There you are.
Add that to the list.
Dionne Warwick is a six-time Grammy winner.
She's touring around the globe this year.
You can find dates at officialdeonwarwick.com.
Dionne Warwick, thank you so much for gracing us
with your presence.
Great, great, great.
Give it up for a living legend, everybody.
["The Living Legend"]
In just a minute, Bill has a warning
about an adorable but deadly menace in our listener
limerick challenge.
Call 1-888-WAITWAIT to join us in the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait Wait Don't Tell Me from NPR.
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Curtis we are playing this week with Paula Poundstone, Josh Gundlman and Chantira Jackson.
Here again is your host at the Kansas City Music Hall in Kansas City, Missouri.
Peter Segold.
Thank you, Bill. Thanks, everybody.
In just a minute, Bill remembers the 21st night of September
in our listener limerick challenge game.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-WAITWAIT.
That's 1-888-9248-924. Right now, panel,
some more questions for you from the week's news. Paula, there was a trend during the
pandemic where friends bought homes together to save money. Now, years later, according
to the Wall Street Journal, those people are facing what problem?
Selling their homes.
Well, not exactly.
Eviction, breaking up.
Breaking up with whom?
Well, they're, they're, they're breaking up with, they're not, they're not sharing the home anymore.
Why?
They don't get along anymore.
Exactly right.
It seems like a great idea, right?
You can't afford that lake house getaway on your own, but if you buy it with your friends, you can all afford it.
Plus, you have to hang out together more, and there's no way Steve's banjo practice
will get annoying, and you will absolutely get used to the smell of Monica's hamster.
Well, now, many of those people are trying to buy their friends out or get their friends
to buy them out before the house gets
impossible to sell because of the murders that will happen there. I think I
would be one of those people who was hoping to be bought out because if we
did this together you knew I didn't have any money. I can't buy you out. I can barely buy my way in.
Shantira, this week the World Emoji Awards, which is real, announced next year's most
anticipated emoji. What is it?
Little tacos.
Oh, they got that. They got that already. Big tacos. Oh, they got that. They got that already.
Big tacos.
Oh, awesome.
It's yet another face. We have faces for happiness.
We have faces to express sadness.
The image will be one of those faces, obviously we're familiar with,
and it will have like dark circles under its eyes.
Oh, depression.
under its eyes. Oh, depression. Are we talking about what happens to my face or just everybody? Everybody's face. Dark circles, sleep deprived. Yes, exhausted. The exhausted emoji is coming.
Yeah, we need that. Right, it looks like all the other faces but it's frowning and it's got bags under its eyes. That's also depression. It is. You can use it for that,
there are no rules. Basically, it looks like your face after a long Zoom meeting and as we all now
know, during the entire Zoom meeting. I can't believe it took us this long to get to Exhausted.
Exhausted is one of my top five emotions. Right. And we have like, it'll be like frowning and blushing for like when someone, when you
send someone a nude picture and they don't respond fast enough. Or like smiling with
one tear for like when you're watching someone get married on TV and you don't want the people
you're with to see that you're weeping while you watch them.
You might be interested in what other emojis are being introduced next year, so get ready.
You're going to get the leafless tree indicating, you know, fall, winter.
Depression. That's also a depression.
Yeah, that one. Yeah.
A fingerprint indicating a clue or, to Shantira, depression.
Yes.
And a purple splatter indicating you just killed Grimace.
Well, then that's when they're looking for the fingerprint.
Exactly.
They're like, testing for clues.
Yeah, it's like purple splatter, fingerprint, you know, smiley face.
I got away with murdering Grimace.
Bags under the eyes.
I haven't slept for days.
I feel so guilty that I murdered Grimace.
Coming up, it's lightning fell 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 to leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
You can always click the Contact Us link on our website, waitwait.npr.org.
You can catch us most weeks back at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago
or come see us in Detroit at the Fox Theater
on November 14th.
You can also check out the How to Do Everything podcast
where this week, Mike and Ian teach you a hiccup cure
that once saved my life.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hey, my name's Ryan and I'm from Atlanta, Georgia.
Hey, how are things in Atlanta these days?
Trying to stay above water at the moment.
Yeah, I know.
It's getting a little rainy there.
Well, I hope you avoid the worst of it.
What do you do there?
I'm a CPA.
I work as an accounting manager for an insurance company.
Okay, I'm gonna ask you this.
I grew up with the cliche,
the stereotype that accountants are boring.
Can you disabuse me of that notion right now?
I'm not, but the rest are.
That's good. Throw those other CPAs under the BUS.
Exactly.
Ryan, welcome to the show. Bill Curtis is going to read you three news-related limericks,
of course with the last word or phrase missing from each.
If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly
on just two of the limericks, you will be a winner.
Ready to go?
Let's do it.
Here's your first limerick.
Celebrations hit men in the worst way.
We cannot let loose and let mirth play.
We love hate the tension and gifts cause real tension. We
men can get weird on our birthday. Birthday, yes, a investigation by GQ
magazine into how men feel about celebrating their birthdays finds that
they feel super weird about it to which their girlfriends reply I've already said I'd plan it for you.
You just have to give me the emails.
According to this article, many men
feel there's a cultural stigma about asking others
to celebrate their birthdays.
One man said, quote, I feel like there's
something in the male straight culture where
after your early 20s, making a big deal of your birthday
is a bit cringe
Unquote or if the entire Chili's waitstaff just put a sparkler in your brownie sundae and are coming over to sing a lot cringe
I'm right there with that. I don't like celebrating my only celebrating your birthday
I don't and I don't like to open presents. I have
Three packages on my desk right now. Two were gifts last Christmas.
And another one was a gift from, I don't know,
three, four years ago.
I think I'm obligated to ask you, why not?
I just can't open them.
I just can't.
I can't.
Give them to me
If you want to send Paula present direct it to me
Give me stuff. I don't want I want it
Thank you for that. Thank you. I got you
All right, Ryan. Here is your next limerick by thoughts sometimes sometimes feel like a threat blitz. But with video games, I'll reset this.
To avert mental shocks, I will turn and stack blocks.
My doctor says I should play Tetris.
Tetris, yes, researchers in Sweden
may have found a mental health miracle.
Patients who focused on a traumatic memory
and then played Tetris for just 20 minutes, had their number of intrusive thoughts drop by 86%.
Wow.
It's true, if 20 minutes of Tetris helps your well-being that much, just imagine what 14 hours
of playing Candy Crush on the toilet can do for you. This is true.
When I was a little kid, we had just gotten a Nintendo and my dad would stay up really
late playing Tetris and I could hear the music through my bedroom door and I would fall asleep
to the Tetris music and I would have these dreams every night that I was falling and
spinning and spinning and falling.
So your trauma is Tetris.
It's Tetris, yeah.
So maybe you should play some Tetris.
All right, Ryan, here is your last limerick.
By the river I was a slow trotter till I passed by that theme in the water.
Don't trust the sweet eyes of those furry wet guys.
My friends, I've been mauled by an otter.
Wow.
Yes, otter.
Yes, otter! Over the past month, there have been increasing reports of otters attacking humans,
seemingly without provocation.
They've been talking to the whales.
Exactly.
The orcas are like, guys, you can get it. They're soft inside. It's scary to get ambushed by a wild animal, but did you know that otters will hold hands
while they're mauling you?
It's so cute!
Otters may look friendly, right, but they actually have very sharp teeth and claws,
and fun fact, their fur is so thick and dense, it's the perfect hiding spot for a knife. I feel like any cute animal must have some method of attack, right, whether it's claws
or poison.
Because they look, like, to us they look cute, to a bigger animal they look, I bet they look
delicious.
Right.
So they've got to be able to, they've got to like be able to scrap when the time comes
to it.
If you were really messed up by an otter, what would you tell people?
Nothing. That's so embarrassing.
That's so embarrassing.
Orca-like. Yeah, that's cool.
They're doing a remake of West Side Story and one of the gangs is named the Otters.
They just slap the tails?
Yeah.
Alright. Bill, how did Ryan do in our quiz?
I don't know how he did it, but he was perfect.
Wow.
Congratulations, Ryan.
Thank you guys.
Thank you.
On this week's episode of Wild Card, actor Jeff Bezos is back with a new episode of Wild
Card. On this week's episode of Wild Card, actor Jeff Goldblum sings his way through our conversation.
One, two, three.
One is the loneliest number.
Two, oh just the two of us.
We can make it three.
Oh, we three, we're not alone.
I'm Rachel Martin. Join us for NPR's Wild Card Podcast, the game where cards control
the conversation.
When it comes to your health, Shortwave is a science show you can count on. We bring
you clear information rooted in the best research to keep you and your loved ones safe and well.
Listen to the Shortwave Podcast from NPR.
I'm Danielle Kurtzleben. I cover the presidential campaign for NPR. So I go to rallies, a lot of
them. I want to hear what the candidates say, talk to voters, and find out what ideas are resonating.
And I put it all in my reporting to help you make sense of this election. It's why being there is important.
To help support this work, sign up for NPR+.
Go to plus.npr.org.
Now it's time for our final game.
Lightning fill in the blank.
Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill in the blank
questions as they can.
Each correct answer is worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Josh and Shantira each have two.
Paula was hot tonight.
She's got three.
All right.
So, Josh and Shantira, you're tied, Shantira.
I'm going to arbitrarily choose you to go first.
So, the clock will start when I begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
On Thursday, Hurricane Helene made landfall in blank.
Florida?
Right.
Months after being disbarred in New York, former Trump attorney blank was disbarred
in D.C.
Julianne.
Yes.
This week, President Zelensky visited the White House to ask for continued aid for the
war in blank.
Ukraine?
Right.
On Monday, the FDA approved an at-home blank vaccine.
Pallu?
Yes.
While preparing for a house sale, an appraiser opened a dusty file cabinet and found blank
inside.
Chicken nuggets.
One of the first ever copies of the U.S. Constitution.
Same thing.
On Monday, three astronauts successfully returned from the blank.
Space station?
Yes.
Of the astronauts that did return to Earth, blank of them were the ones stranded
there by Boeing.
Two?
No, none of them.
They're still up there.
A 14-year-old boy in the UK was spared prosecution this week because blank.
He tweeted, please don't.
No, he was spared criminal prosecution because his parents were already really mad at him.
The boy was one of over 1,200 people arrested in a series of riots in England this summer,
but prosecutors decided, quote, the wrath visited on that child by his parents was enough,
unquote.
You know, it's one thing to get arrested.
It's rougher when your mom says to the police, wait, you're not going to tase him?
Give me that.
Bill, how did Shantira do in our quiz?
Five right, ten more points, total of twelve, put Shantira in the lead.
All right.
Josh, my friend.
All right.
Josh, you're up next.
Please fill in the blank.
On Thursday, Israel rejected a U.S.-backed ceasefire deal with blank.
Lebanon.
Right, on Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill
guaranteeing Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
the same level of blank protection as a sitting president.
Secret Service.
Right, this week, Thailand officially ratified a law
legalizing same-sex blank.
Marriage.
Right, on Wednesday, a bankruptcy judge
approved the auction of Infowars,
the website owned by blank. Alex Jones. Right, this week, a bankruptcy judge approved the auction of Infowars, the website owned
by Blank.
Alex Jones.
Right.
This week, United Airlines offered a woman a $50 travel voucher after she complained
that her feet were freezing during her flight because of Blank.
The window was open.
Almost.
A hole in the floor of the plane.
On Tuesday, the CDC warned that a new new blank variant is now on the rise.
COVID?
Right.
Saying that it can't afford their upkeep,
a zoo in Finland announced it would return
their two blanks to China.
Pandas.
Right.
This week a woman in Canada is disputing
an $8,000 bill from Avis contesting the company's claim
that she blanked during her three day car rental.
Smoked in the car?
No, that she drove that car 30,000 miles.
For the rental companies claimed to be true that she drove 30,000 miles, the woman would
have had to drive 400 miles per hour 24 hours a day for those three straight days.
That said, $8,000 to drive across the entire world in a rental car seems pretty cheap.
Bill, how did Josh do in our quiz? He's coming up hard six right twelve more points fourteen puts him I
to
alright and
How many then does
Paula Poundstone need to win six to win fall here you go Paul a lot of pressure though
This is for the game fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, Congress approved a spending plan
to temporarily avert A blank.
Government shutdown.
Right, on Monday, Governor Newsom signed a law
banning blank at California grocery stores.
Plastic.
Yeah, plastic bags.
Right, this week, striking airplane mechanics
rejected a final contract offer from blank.
I don't know, Boeing?
Yes, on Monday, NFL Hall of Famer Brett Favre revealed he had been diagnosed with blank. mechanics rejected a final contract offer from blank? Uh, I don't know, Boeing? Yes.
On Monday, NFL Hall of Famer Brett Favre revealed
he had been diagnosed with blank.
Parkinson's.
Right.
According to a study, one-third of adults suffer
from a blank deficiency.
Iron.
Right.
On Thursday, the A's played their final game
at the Coliseum in blank.
Oakland.
Right.
According to the New York Post, new footage suggests
that what we have long thought was the Loch Ness Monster is in blank. Oakland. Right. According to the New York Post, new footage suggests that what we have long thought
was the Loch Ness Monster is actually blank.
Garden host.
No, two Loch Ness Monsters.
Oh wow.
According again to the New York Post,
new footage clearly shows two sea monsters
occupying Scotland's Loch Ness at the same time.
If that were not shocking enough,
the Post also has a new investigative report
showing that Bigfoot is actually just three small foots standing
on each other's shoulders.
Bill, did Paula Poundstone do well enough to win?
Six right, 12 more points, total of 15 gives her the win.
Oh, Paula.
There it happened.
It slipped right through. Coming up, our panelists will predict what will we discover when we land on the mini
moon.
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 Gotica writes our LEMREX, our public address announcer is Paul Friedman, our tour
manager is Shayna Donald. BJ Liederman composed our theme, our program is produced
by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King. Special thanks to Monica Hickey and
Blythe Robertson. Peter Gwynn is president of the Dionne Warwick fan club. 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 Chilag,
and the executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
is Mike Danforth.
Now panel, what will we find on the mini moon?
Shantira Jackson.
Lots of flags, because aliens have already done it.
Josh Gombelman.
Oh, you think we're going to land on this moon?
Wake up, Peter!
And Paula Poundstone. Alice Cramden. And 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 Shantira Jackson, Paula Poundstone, Josh Donovan. Thanks to the staff
and crew at the Kansas City Music Hall
and everyone at KCUR Kansas City.
Thanks to our fabulous audience here
who came out to see us in Kansas City.
Thanks to all of you for listening
wherever you might be as you hear me.
I'm Peter Sayle, we'll be back with you next week.
This is NPR.
The candidates for November are set.
I know Donald Trump's tight.
Between now and election day. We are not going back.
A campaign season unfolding faster.
Kamala Harris is not getting a promotion.
Than any in recent history.
Follow it all with new episodes every weekday on the NPR Politics Podcast.
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Listen now to the Alt Latino podcast from NPR.