Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant
Episode Date: November 4, 2023Dr. Rae-Wynn Grant is a bear expert and one of the new hosts of Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom. She joins panelists Adam Burke, Maeve Higgins, and Tom Papa to talk bear attacks, gummy bears, and the s...trange joy of being squeezed by a boa constrictor.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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The economy can sometimes feel like a big, scary wilderness filled with jargon and unreadable charts.
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz,
filling in for Bill Curtis. I'm NPR newscaster and Peter's new BFF, Lakshmi Singh. And here's your host at the Studebaker Theatre at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, my BFF, Peter Sagal. Thank you, Lakshmi.
Just gonna say, Bill never says that about me. We have a fabulous show for you today. Later on,
that about me. We have a fabulous show for you today. Later on, we're going to be talking to Dr.
Rae Wynn Grant, a large carnivore expert. She's an expert on large carnivores. She's not.
Large carnivore is an expert. And a host of the new Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom. And finally,
we will get an answer to that age-old question, what exactly does a bear do in the woods?
First, we want to find out what you've been researching. Give us a call to play our games.
The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924. Now, let's welcome our first listener contestant. Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, this is Johnny Billet. I'm
calling from Abilene, Texas. Abilene, Texas. I've heard of Abilene, Kansas.
Where is Abilene, Texas?
Abilene, Texas is south of Abilene, Kansas.
All right.
Well, there you go.
It's just Abilene straight down to South America.
What do you do there?
I am a route sales driver.
A route sales driver.
What are you selling?
Mostly ice cream and frozen foods.
Oh, wait a minute.
Everybody here is all of a sudden hoping you'll stop by.
Well, Johnny, let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First, a comedian whose second album, Weaponized Empathy,
will be released on a special thing records later this year.
It's Adam Burke.
Hi, Johnny.
Hi, Johnny.
special thing records later this year. It's Adam Burke. Hi, Johnny.
Next, a comedian who hosts Butterboy Comedy every Monday night in Brooklyn, New York. It's Maeve Higgins. Hi. And the comedian and host of the Breaking Bread with Tom Papa podcast, it is,
of course, Tom Papa. Johnny. So, Johnny, welcome to the show. You're going to play
the first ever to play Who's Lakshmi This Time. Lakshmi Singh filling in for 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 for your voicemail. Are you ready to do it?
Let's do it.
All right.
Your first quote is from President Biden.
When the hell did I say that?
I realize that could have come up in a bunch of different contexts.
But he was actually reacting to a video that he saw of himself,
a fake video made using what technology?
AI.
Yes, AI.
President Biden this week signed a new executive order trying to react to the AI explosion.
It will require tech companies to notify the public when their AI products go rogue, right? So it's like,
oh look, it's a text alert from Apple. My phone is now self-aware and it hates me.
Now, this is funny that one of the things that inspired President Biden to take this action,
according to an actual White House statement, was that he got totally freaked out about AI
after seeing the new Mission Impossible movie, which features as its villain this evil AI,
right? That's true. So he came up with this executive order to try to prevent that,
and he announced that going forward, he is going to do all his own stunts.
Thank God he didn't watch Jurassic Park.
Does he only get his policy ideas from
Tom Cruise movies? Apparently so.
Is this why he said he was going to build a highway to the danger
zone? He did, yes.
What is the video
that he saw that made him go,
when the hell did I say that?
That's actually a good question.
Was it him just not making any mistakes?
Exactly, yes.
No, it was a fake video.
It was a deep fake video is the term,
created by AI of Biden and his dog saying something,
as he pointed out, he had never actually said.
You could tell it was a fake,
because in the video, the dog is not biting anything.
All right, here, Johnny, is your next quote.
Tell me this guy's not wearing heels.
That was from a TikTok, one of many,
that was posting evidence
that what presidential candidate may not be as
tall as he says he is? That would be Ron DeSantis. That would be Ron DeSantis, yes.
So for weeks now, people have been posting video and photo evidence that they say proves that Ron
DeSantis is wearing lifts inside his cowboy boots to make him
appear taller. The allegations began at the last Republican debate where instead
of shaking hands at the end Mr. DeSantis went over to Nikki Haley, raised his arms
and yelled, upy, upy.
But that's the thing, like women are allowed to wear heels in America,
but they're not allowed to be president.
That's right.
It's fair.
He's wearing special shoes to make himself look taller.
Are politicians getting all their ideas from Tom Cruise right now?
Apparently, yes.
So keep in mind, again, this is what's important here.
He's already wearing cowboy boots, which, as all men know,
is like the, you know, high heels for manly men, right?
You can get away with that.
But the accusation is that he's actually putting lifts inside the cowboy boots
to make himself appear even taller,
which is like putting a hat on a hat and then standing
on both hats to make people think you're tall. I saw in the interview, they asked him how tall
he was. And I knew at that moment that he was lying because I am 5'10 and like a little bit.
And whenever people ask me how tall I am, I say 5'11.
And when they asked him how tall he was, he said 5'11.
I knew he was lying.
We do need to have a national measuring of men because it's only men who lie about it.
Like I've talked to people.
I'm 5'9 and I'm fine with it.
But I've talked to people my height, looked them in the eye, and they've told me they were 6'0".
I was like, all right,
we're all going to the DMV, and we're getting it settled
once and for all.
What's the height requirement to host this show?
Thankfully,
thankfully, there is none.
There's a height maximum,
so you're out.
5'11".
All right, here, Johnny, is your last quote.
Your order might take longer to get delivered.
Are you sure you want to continue?
Now, that is a new notification that users of DoorDash are now getting
if they choose not to do what?
Not to tip.
Exactly right.
So DoorDash, very popular food delivery service, is now telling people that if they do not
tip the driver in advance, delivery is going to take a lot longer, right?
It goes on, you know, hey, you ordered some really nice burritos.
It'd be a shame if something happened to them
Is this news though? It seems like
this is the way that it, I always think if I
put, you know, they always give you the 15
the 20, I always hit the 20
thinking they'll see it and come
and not eat my french fries
Right, well what's interesting, yeah
we've always been understanding that if you
tip a little bit, especially where you can tip in advance, you get a little bit of service.
But this is definitely a leap forward because they are making that explicit.
Right.
If you choose not to tip, the driver will just send you, instead of your food,
a grainy photo of your food with today's newspaper.
Lakshmi, how did Johnny do in our quiz?
Did really well. Got all three.
You did with confidence, sir.
Got all three. Johnny, thank confidence, sir. Got all three.
Johnny, thank you so much for playing.
Thank you.
Take care.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Maeve, airline passengers' behavior has become more and more outrageous over the last few years.
We all know that.
But this week, the Internet was horrified by a TikTok of one woman who did what
throughout her entire nine-hour flight?
Was she knitting?
No.
That would be so cool.
Was she not, like, sleeping on the ground?
No, she wasn't sleeping.
Was she yelling?
She wasn't yelling.
She sounds, like, like so nice actually.
Are you just going to go through all the verbs?
You can go through all the verbs and I will tell you every time that she wasn't doing
that.
Because she was a noun?
Can I have a hint?
I have given you a pretty big one.
Remember I said that no matter what verb you came up with,
She had died.
She had not died.
She was alive, but she just did...
Nothing.
Nothing.
That's the answer.
How dare she?
I know.
Oh, my God.
A woman named Sophie Cook posted a video of her mother
on a flight from Chicago to Budapest,
sitting quietly, staring at nothing.
Wow.
Not reading, not listening, just sitting.
Wow.
And TikTok had the caption,
my mom raw dogs every flight.
No matter how long.
No iPad, no headphones, no book.
Wow.
And millions of people reacted to this in horrified fascination
because no one now alive can remember being alone with their thoughts for that long.
Especially in a plane where your thoughts tend to be things like,
should I watch 27 Dresses again?
Or the first three episodes of Amazing Hotel.
Are we absolutely sure she didn't do like a
hero dose of magic mushrooms before she
got on?
It's just her seeing the fabric of the universe.
It's possible. Oh, that in-flight movie
was awesome.
You ever been on a flight and you're
watching a movie that they
provided and then
it turns into a very
suggestive scene and there's some boobs flapping
around and stuff's going on and then i always feel like suddenly responsible you've taken off your
top suddenly you like you just like get so relaxed watching the movie you take your top off you're
like oh this is so great i always feel responsible for the movie that's being shown.
People look over your shoulder.
Like, I didn't direct this.
You know, I didn't bring it myself.
United gave me this.
Yeah, but you did swipe through
until you saw the content warning contains nudity.
I did press pause and take my top off.
Fly away.
Fly away
with me, love.
Won't you find your wings?
Now come, let's fly away.
Coming up,
the one app you should definitely
avoid. It's our Bluff the Listener game called
1-888-WAIT-WAIT-TO-PLAY.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
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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. 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.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Lakshmi Singh. We're playing this week with Tom Popup, Adam Burke, and Maeve Higgins.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you so much. So right now it's time for the Wait,
Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff the Listener Game. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to play our game in the air. How
are you? Wait, wait, don't tell me. This is Marlon Glickman. Hey Marlon, how are you? I'm doing fine,
thanks. Where are you calling from? Well, right now I'm in Union, West Virginia, helping my daughter with her goats and chickens.
You're helping your daughter with her goats and chickens?
Yes.
Okay.
Just a little farm.
So your daughter decided to go into farming?
Exactly.
Right.
And I'm making some assumptions about your character here, just based on your
accent, but when she told you that's what she wanted to do, what was your reaction?
Really? That's what I expected.
It's nice to have you with us, Marlon. You're going to play our game in which you must try
to tell truth from fiction. Lakshmi, what is your topic? Get off the apps. No matter what, there's an app for that. There's even an
app that gives you a tiny electric shock if you say the phrase, there's an app for that,
in 2023. But this week, we read about someone who got into big trouble because they used an app.
Our panelists are going to tell you about this. Pick the one
who is telling the truth. You'll win the weight waiter of your choice on your voicemail. You ready
to play? I'm ready. All right. First, let's hear from Adam Burke. At first, Marcus Jennings was
thrilled to participate in the beta test of a new communications app called Sure Mom. The idea is the app creates a realistic AI audio version of you,
explained the app's creator, Caitlin Elspeth,
and then when your mom or dad calls,
it will respond in vaguely affirmative terms
throughout the course of the conversation
so that you don't have to.
Jennings adds,
say your mother calls you to complain about her book club.
The app will wait for the appropriate moment and say things like, I know, right?
Or classic Shirley.
While Jennings' initial experience with the app was positive, he noticed that after a
couple of weeks, his parents were contacting him with even greater frequency than usual.
I started getting messages from mom about what a great emotional chat we had
and how she was looking forward to our thrifting trip, he says. And then dad was thanking me for
promising to help him finish the deck. Elizabeth says that it's clear the app needs work, saying
the goal is to have it be generally agreeable without actually committing to anything.
We're going to test it on telemarketers next. A man uses an app to respond to his parents for him
and finds out his parents like the app more than they like him.
Your next story of an app oopsie comes from Maeve Higgins.
Are you a sweet little Azerbaijani man on vacation in Portugal
who suddenly gets an overwhelming urge for a pomegranate juice?
I certainly am, and I'm not the only one. Last week in Lisbon, an Azerbaijani man used a language
translation app and wrote down what it told him was Portuguese for pomegranate juice. He handed
the note to the waitress, who flipped out when she read, I have a bomb. You see, in his language, the word bomb and pomegranate are similar,
and the app messed it up.
So, instead of getting a juice,
he got arrested by heavily armed policemen
who thoroughly searched his luggage and his hotel room
before releasing him.
Ah, technology.
That sweet little man never did get his pomegranate juice,
and neither did I.
A tourist in Portugal tries to order pomegranate juice using his translation app and ends up getting arrested.
Your last story of something inappropriate comes from Tom Papa.
A popular sleep app that lulls listeners to sleep to the voice of Matthew
McConaughey is so effective that one user has started to dream that she's in a real-life
relationship with the actor. After using the app for only two weeks, Laura Knowles of Clifton,
New Jersey, woke up to find that she had bought a $500 plane ticket to Austin, Texas, because she thought that
Mr. McConaughey wanted to spend a romantic day horseback riding with her on his ranch.
Then came the night her husband, Kevin, found her sleepwalking with a can of his Barbasol
shaving cream. She had apparently used the shaving cream to sculpt a bust of Mr. McConaughey.
She had apparently used the shaving cream to sculpt a bust of Mr. McConaughey.
Sure, it looked like him, said Knowles,
but my wife had no memory of either sculpting it or kissing it right on the lips.
The final straw was when police found Ms. Knowles asleep behind the wheel of a stolen Lincoln Continental,
repeatedly mumbling, All right, all right,
all right.
All right.
Apps are normally very convenient, fun, and time-saving, but this week we heard a story
about one that was none of those things.
Was it either from Adam Burke, an AI app that pretends to be you to fool your parents,
that ended up being better to your parents than the user was,
from Maeve Higgins, a man who tried to use an app to translate his order for pomegranate juice
and ended up getting thrown to the ground and arrested at gunpoint,
or from Tom Papa, a Matthew McConaughey late-night meditation app
that changed a woman into a sleepwalking Matthew
McConaughey stalker. Which of these is the real story of an app we found in the news?
I'm going to say the second story. You're going to say Maeve's story that is about the translation?
The audience agrees. Perhaps they just use the apps in their phones to check.
So that's your choice.
Maeve's story.
Well, we spoke to someone familiar with the real story.
We have Poma for pomegranate and Granada for grenade.
They are not similar at all.
That was Juliano Saccomani,
who teaches Portuguese and Spanish at the University of Chicago,
marveling at the mistake that this app made in getting this poor guy arrested.
Congratulations, Marlon.
You got it right.
Maeve was telling the truth.
Thank you, Maeve.
Thank you.
Well done, and good luck with those chickens.
Thank you. And now the game where we ask experts on one subject about another subject.
That's not a joke. It's just what it is. We call it Not My Job.
When Ray Wingrant was growing up,
her parents only allowed her to watch educational
TV and nature shows, and their nefarious plan worked. She has become the nation's leading
expert on large carnivores, lions and tigers and bears, and is one of the hosts of the new version
of Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom on NBC. Dr. Raye Wynn Grant, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
I'm happy to be here. This is awesome. So my first question for you is, is that, that story is true,
right? Your parents wouldn't let you watch fun TV and just made you watch the educational shows?
Yeah, that's right. For several years, we didn't even have a TV. And then my dad was missing his NBA game so much in the early 90s that they
caved and got one. So it was limited to just educational. And lucky me, nature shows are
educational. So I dove right in and haven't looked back. So what were some of your favorites? Do you
remember? So believe it or not, I used to love watching Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom, especially
at my grandparents' house.
And then PBS Nature has always done great with nature and wildlife documentaries.
I had an idea when I was a kid for a nature show
that you might like.
You can have it now if you want.
It's called Bear With Me.
You just do normal things,
but there's a bear with you the whole time.
You like it?
Brilliant. So you majored in environmental science. That covers a lot of ground. What drew you to large carnivores and bears? You know, when I finally
had my choice of what I wanted to kind of narrow in on and focus on, I, you know, I don't want to
sound like a broken record, but I just kind of kept going back to, well, what did I used to see on the nature shows? What was the most
exciting? And it was tigers, believe it or not. I used to say, I want to study tigers in Asia.
Then in my PhD program, I transitioned to bears across North America. And I'm, you know, I'm open
to non-carnivore animals, but so far the carnivores have served me well,
and I still have not studied tigers. Did you hear that, everybody? She's herbivore curious.
So, but you are perhaps one of the nation's foremost expert on bears.
You have young children, right? I do. I have two girls. Right. And when they're watching
their own, like, cartoons, like Winnie the Pooh, do you constantly harsh
their mellow and go, like, no, a real bear would not wear a shirt and no pants.
That's gross.
Oh, I'm so obnoxious.
Are you really?
Oh, I am.
Oh, yeah.
They can't stand me when there's bear stuff on.
The way that our culture has kind of, you know, anthropomorphized
bears, you always see a bear family, right? There's always a papa bear in the picture.
That's not real. That is not real. Dad is out of there as soon as the mating's over.
You're harsh your kids mellow about cartoons on your downtime. So what is your day like? What is the life like of a leading
expert on bears and now mountain lions? Well, I have to say I spend a lot of time in the field.
So my office is usually the wilderness somewhere, and I'm either by myself, which, you know, don't
try it at home, or with a small team of graduate students or other researchers collecting data on these animals.
So have you ever, I imagine you must have in your long career, gotten into some dangerous
situations with some wild animal? Yeah, a few too many. Yeah, that's correct. There was this one
time I got chased by a bear and I was by myself and I was in the middle of the wilderness in
western Nevada, in the mountains of western Nevada, part of my
work is to attach GPS collars to bears. And in order to put a GPS collar on a wild black bear,
you have to first trap it, sedate it, and then give it a checkup, see if it's healthy enough to
have the collar, and then attach it. And one day, I was, you know, it was 100 plus degrees and I was grumpy and I decided I'm not bringing my backpack.
I'm not bringing my bear spray.
I'm just going to leave it all down by my ATV.
And I hiked up to the trap.
It was empty like it always was.
And I pulled out the can of tuna fish to rebait the trap.
Got up, turned around.
And who's looking straight at me but this huge like 600-pound male black bear staring at me.
And he started chasing me.
And what you're not supposed to ever do is run.
Right.
And after all of my training, years and years of training, I mean, and living with lions and the works,
what did I do but run straight down that mountain
while the bear was chasing me?
And the only reason I've lived to tell about it
is because the bear decided not to kill me
and instead go eat the tuna fish.
Wow.
That's pretty terrifying.
So you should...
Yeah, and also stupid.
I mean, I could have had my bear spray.
I could have been way more protected than I was,
but, you know, I was a fool once.
So let me make the mistake so you don't have to.
All right.
I'm going to ask you this because you've spent a lot of time, as you said, with lions and bears.
And you've had close calls.
If you had to get eaten by an animal, if that was your fate, which animal would be coolest to be eaten by?
Oh, my God.
your fate, which animal would be coolest to be eaten by? Oh my God. You know, I might actually betray my own expertise here and say, you know, like an anaconda or like a giant boa constrictor,
something that just, you know, squeezes you to death and kind of gets all the oxygen out of your
lungs. So you pass out before you're eaten. Right. I think that would be better. It would feel like a hug for a while.
Yeah, just like a big bone-crushing hug
and then you lose consciousness and then
you get swallowed whole.
Well,
Dr. Ray Wingrand, it is a
joy to talk to you. We could talk to you about bears
all day, but we have asked
you to play a game that we're
calling... I like my bears
tiny, squishy, and raspberry
flavored. So you're an expert on the furry kind of bear, but what do you know about the gummy
variety? We're going to ask you three questions about those sweet little gummy candies. Answer
two correctly, you'll win a prize for one of our listeners, the voice of any member of our crew
that they might choose on their voicemail. Lakshmi, who is Dr. Wingrant
playing for? Stephen Holtz of Alberta, Canada. And there are bears up there, I'm told. There sure are.
He might be a bear. He's called in. He knew you were playing. He's a fan. All right, here's your
first question. Haribo, the company that invented gummy bears, has made a lot of different gummy shapes over the years,
but the most unusual one came out as a special edition in 2006.
What was it?
A, a gummy anatomically correct heart,
B, a gummy pistol,
or C, a gummy human butt with ears?
I choose A.
Okay, no, it was actually C.
A gummy human butt with ears.
In German, if you want to call someone,
well, we would say a butthead, right?
You say, oh, they're an arse with ears.
So Haribo immortalized that insult in gelatin.
All right, here's your next question.
These days, there's a danger of people mistaking, of course, one kind of gummies with another,
which is how a fifth grader near Detroit accidentally brought some pot gummies to his class last year. And if that weren't bad enough, just a week before, what had happened at the same
school? Was it A, a teacher said to the class,
hey, do any of you have parents
that like to hide candies from you in their bedrooms?
Could you go look?
B, a kindergartner brought in margaritas for snack time.
Or C, a teacher ruined an after work happy hour
by bringing in only non-alcoholic beer. Oh boy.
Well, I mean, knowing what I know about this school, I'm gonna go with B, the margarita
kindergarten snack cut. That's exactly what happened. To be fair to the kid who brought
the bottle of pre-mixed margaritas, fourth grade can be pretty stressful.
That was well done. That was well done. You saw that immediately. Let's see if you can get this
last one. Sometimes a gummy bear is normally just the sweetest, most harmless snack. They can get
you into trouble. As in which of these? A, a teenager shoplifted a ghost pepper-flavored gummy bear,
and he was caught when he ate it in the store
and immediately collapsed to the ground in agony.
B, a man using gummy bears as impromptu earplugs at Coachella
was swarmed by bees.
Or C, two siblings exploring the woods in Germany
used gummy bears to make a trail back to their home,
only to be eaten by the bear who followed their delicious trail.
Oh, these are good, but I can only imagine that the ghost pepper gummy bear collapse
is the real answer. And once again, doctor, you're right. That's what happened.
And once again, Doctor, you're right.
That's what happened.
This particular gummy bear is called the Lil Nitro Gummy Bear.
It's rated at 9 million Scoville units.
And the kid tried it and immediately ended up curled up on the floor.
Lakshmi, how did Dr. Wynn-Grant do in our quiz?
She got two out of three, and that's good enough for the win.
Congratulations, you won.
Dr. Ray Wynne-Grant is the co-host of the new Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom on NBC.
Thank you so much for joining us on our show.
What a pleasure to have you.
Thank you.
Thank you. These days, it can feel like the news is fighting for your attention wherever you turn,
but staying informed shouldn't be a battle.
Everything you need to navigate the stories that matter to you is at your fingertips. The NPR app cuts through the noise, bringing you local, national, and global coverage.
No paywalls, no profits, no nonsense.
Download the NPR app in your app store
today, or you can go to npr.org slash app. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait,
Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Lakshmi Singh.
We're playing this week with Maeve Higgins,
Tom Papa, and Adam Burke.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater
in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Lakshmi.
Thank you so much.
Doing a great job, by the way. Thank you so much. Doing a great job, by the way.
Thank you so much.
In just a minute, fresh from Nantucket,
three hot new rhymes in our listener limerick challenge.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
Oh, you just got it. Okay, great.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Right now, panel, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Tom, it's hard to run a business unless you show up at the top of search results on Google, right?
We all know this.
So many restaurants and other businesses are now putting what phrase right in their name?
Best ever.
Four star.
Five star.
Those are all good ideas, but this is much more attuned to how Google searches, especially
in like Google Maps, tend to work.
Near me.
Exactly right.
Really?
Near me.
Wow.
When you want Thai food, say, most people Google Thai restaurant near me, right?
Or you type Thai restaurant and it fills in near me.
Right. near me, right? Or you type Thai restaurant and it fills in near me. So in New York right now,
a restaurant was just renamed
Thai restaurant near me.
There are the Google
hits. There is, I have seen it,
a barber shop near me
in Illinois.
And businesses are
now getting even more sophisticated when it
comes to hacking Google searches. There is
a coffee shop in San Francisco
called When Is Mother's Day Coffee?
Should I worry, strange, rash bakery.
Near me.
That one might get some clientele,
but would probably drive off a fair number of other people, right?
Cowards.
Yeah.
Although to be, you know, I actually, I mean, you know, just because they do this doesn't mean they're bad at their business, right?
I mean, I have been very happy with the service at Celebrity Feet Picks Notary Public.
Maeve, more and more young people are using a test to decide which romantic partners are worth their time.
All right?
This is how you do it.
You're on a first date, maybe, maybe a second one.
And all you do is you see how your date reacts when you point at what?
Hmm.
Oh, if they can say the name of the stars.
If you're like, honey, what's that?
You just point at a star.
Yeah, like you point, and then if they can tell you the different cosmos.
That's Cassiopeia.
Any celestial beings, that's the test.
It's the Big Dipper.
I'll give you a hint.
You can help the test along by pointing and saying something like,
oh, is that a blue jay?
Oh, like a tree?
You might point at something and say, is that a blue jay?
What are you most likely pointing at?
A bird.
A bird, yes.
Thank you very much.
A bird. It is called the bird test. You point out a bird. Oh, look, there's a bird or whatever. And if your partner
stops what they're doing to appreciate that bird with you, your chances increase of staying
together. If your partner then stops to eat that bird, the chances increase that your partner is a bobcat.
That is actually a really good test
to see what kind of a large carnivore you're on a date with.
Exactly, exactly.
I'm just working like New York.
Oh, what's that? A pigeon?
Another pigeon.
A dead pigeon, yeah.
Oh, that one's dying.
Yeah.
There's also something you can do on a date,
which is you go to, like, an animal home,
and you can take the dogs out for a walk.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you can do that.
You can do that.
Or you could go to an animal home
and you could identify why different animals
haven't been adopted.
If he's like, look at that underbite.
Yuck.
Then you've got to keep her.
I'm just suggesting
different date ideas.
I understand.
Yeah.
I like the dog walking one
because you might just be
dating a dog walker.
You might just be
helping him at his job.
An unemployed comedian.
Yeah, exactly.
We'll be together
like birds of a feather
cause some things
are meant to be.
One way or another
you know we'll be
there together
cause I know
he loves me.
Coming up,
it's lightning fill
in the blank,
but first it's the game
where you have to
listen for the rhyme.
If you'd like to play
on air,
call or leave a message
at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
You can catch us most weeks right here at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, or come see us on
the road. We will be at Carnegie Hall in New York City on December 14th and 15th, and the Wait,
Wait stand-up tour has shows coming up in Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and more. Tickets
and more information at nprpresents.org.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, my name is Angie Hain, and I'm calling from Fairfield, Connecticut.
Fairfield, Connecticut. What do you do there in Fairfield?
Well, I just started a new job this week.
I am the Director of Faith Formations at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport,
at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport,
which means I'm helping children and teens formulate their faiths as they go through life.
Okay.
I thought that it was like cool arrangements
of Unitarians on a field.
Like faith formations.
But I'm not very smart.
Angie, thanks for calling.
Welcome to our show.
What's going to happen right now is Lakshmi Singh
filling in for 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
in two of the limericks, you will be a winner.
You ready to go?
I'm ready.
Lakshmi, are you ready to go?
I am.
Let's do it then.
Here's your first limerick.
Gen Z goes for special effects and for storylines that are complex.
We think movies are dreamy if things don't get steamy.
We like stories that don't feature.
Stories that don't feature, I don't feature, I don't know sex?
Yes, sex, yes
Apparently, Gen Z
our young friends do not
like sex scenes
in their movies and TV shows. This is a trend
called no-mance
that of course is the opposite of yes-mance
I love that, that's such a friend called No-Mance. That, of course, is the opposite of Yes-Mance.
I love that. That's such a swing in the other, because it used to be so much the other way.
Right. You think you were like watching a show about like hospital doctors saving lives. Yeah.
But actually the whole time it's just a sex show. Yeah. Yeah. I know what you mean. It was called the good old days. Alright, Angie.
Here is your next limerick.
On this climb, I will not need
a respirator. I hang
out, and I'm saving my best
for later. There's a rail
for my hand, and I really
just stand. I won't hike.
I will just take the
escalator. Escalator, yes. Do you love to go for
vigorous hikes out in nature, but hate all that walking? Well, a series of mountain trails in a
region of China have added escalators to make it easier to see the views of all that gross exercise.
Previously, the hike to the top was fairly arduous, but now it's easier for older people and young children to get right where we want them, at the top of a sheer mountain cliff.
Listen, what if you're on this escalator and you're going up and there's a bear at the top of it?
How do you get the escalator back away slowly?
Yeah, just turn around and you run as fast as you can.
All right, here is your last limerick.
Don't tell me my anger is bad.
If you meditate, you have been had.
I am ultra aware when my rage starts to flare.
I can solve tricky tasks when I'm mad.
Yes, very good. A new study has found, somewhat surprisingly,
that people are better at solving difficult tasks when they are angry. This is why, before
lightning fell in the blank, Lakshmi is going to walk over there and kick you all in the shin.
So researchers, this is how they did it. They showed their subjects images that were designed to evoke different feelings in them.
And then after that, they had them do tasks like solving puzzles or playing a video game.
And the group that were shown images to make them angry did better than the groups that were shown images to make them feel happy, sad, aroused, or feel nothing at all.
him feel happy, sad, aroused, or feel nothing at all. And by the way, what were the images that were designed to make you feel nothing?
Oh, look, it's Elijah Wood at a Panera Bread.
I feel like I've seen that movie.
Yeah, the sex scene in it is really gratuitous.
Lakshmi, how did Angie do in our quiz?
Fabulous.
She got all three.
Wow.
Congratulations, Angie.
Well done.
Thank you.
All right.
Thank you very much.
Thanks so much for playing.
Bye-bye.
It is now 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 now worth two points.
Lakshmi, can you give us the scores?
We've got Adam with four,
Maeve with three. Close. Tom with one. The way she said it, that was cold. I'm so mad.
All right, Tom, Lakshmi says you are in third place. Sir, you're up first. Fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, the first group of evacuees leaving blank were allowed to enter Egypt.
Gaza.
Yes.
After seven years, prosecutors in Michigan ended the criminal investigation into blank's water crisis.
Flint.
Yes.
This week, the Mexican government announced aid to businesses damaged by Hurricane Blank.
Otis.
Yes.
On Thursday, the FBI raided the home of New York Mayor Blank's fundraising chief. Eric Adams. Yes. This week, a D.C. firefighter has been dismissed from his position. Otis.
Eric Adams.
Fell asleep.
Best known for his role as Chandler on Friends.
Actor Blank died this week at 54.
Matthew Perry. Best known for his explosive temper,
Hall of Fame college basketball coach Blank passed away at the age of 83.
Bobby Knight.
Yes.
According to a study of Britain's COVID response, former Prime Minister Boris Johnson considered telling citizens to blank to fight COVID.
Stop breathing.
No, to blow a hairdryer up their nose.
hair dryer up their nose. According to the report, Prime Minister Boris Johnson asked experts if it were possible to kill COVID by blowing a hair dryer up your nose, an idea he got from watching
a YouTube video. Fortunately, the experts quickly dismissed the idea and Johnson went back to his
original strategy for fighting COVID, throwing as many in-person parties as humanly possible.
Locks me, how did Tom Papa do in our quiz?
So he got six over 12 more points.
So he's got a total of 13.
He is actually in the lead.
Wow.
There you go.
All right.
So Maeve, you were in second place.
So you're going to go next.
Fill in the blank.
On Thursday, FTX founder Sam Blankman-Fried
was convicted on all seven charges of fraud and conspiracy.
Yes.
What did you say?
I made a little joke.
I said Blankman-Fried.
Oh.
It doesn't really, yeah.
I don't get it.
Never mind.
I'm just going to give it to you.
Thank you.
For new climate data, Blank is accelerating faster than expected.
Polar bears.
Global warming.
On Tuesday, the Senate confirmed Jack Lew as ambassador to Blank.
Oh, Canada?
No, Israel.
This week, a police in Ohio asked for help tracking down two men who stole Blank.
A car, maybe?
No, they stole an entire 58-foot-long bridge.
This week, a real estate listing in California surprised homebuyers
because it was a six-bedroom, four-bathroom house with its own blank. Garden. No, meth lab.
The house was previously owned by a couple accused of running a meth lab out of the garage. It's
currently listed at $1.5 million. And while that seems a bit high for a property that the Santa
Clara Health Department has deemed, quote, actively contaminated,
the listing says it's just waiting for the perfect family to turn this meth lab into a meth home.
Lakshmi, how did Maeve do?
Be a feminist, remember?
We're all proud of you.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
One right for two more points.
You did great.
Two more points for a total of five.
Perfect.
Just sort of means that you're almost there,
but Tom's still in the lead.
Tom's still in the lead, but I'm second.
That was very empowering, I thought.
Right?
Did you think so?
Yeah.
Girl boss. Absolutely. I'm second. That was very empowering, I thought. Right? Girlboss.
Okay, how many, then, does Adam need to win?
Adam needs five to win.
Here we go, Adam.
You can do this.
I believe he can. Adam, this is for the game.
Fill in the blank.
On Monday, the UAW reached a tentative deal
with final holdout automaker blank to end their strike.
Ford?
No, GM.
On Tuesday, the White House announced President Biden would meet
with Chinese leader Blank next month.
Xi?
Yes, Xi Jinping.
This week, the Federal Reserve announced they would leave Blank's unchanged.
Interest rate?
Right.
On Wednesday, the second U.S. patient to receive a heart transplant
from a genetically modified Blank died.
Pig?
Yes.
This week, a Dutch cycling event
where bikers raced directly into strong headwinds
was cancelled due to blank.
Someone literally tilting at windmills.
No.
That'd be interesting.
Strong winds.
After he kissed a player without her consent,
FIFA banned blank's former soccer chief for three years.
Spain?
Right.
This week, a 19-year-old mixed martial arts fighter in Poland
lost her match against blank. Time. No, isn't that, we all will eventually. No, she lost her match against
her ex-boyfriend's mom. So experts predicted that MMA fighter Niccolo Alokan would easily win her
match against her ex-boyfriend's mom. So everybody was shocked when the mom knocked Alokan out with a flurry of punches.
It proved that sometimes passion can win over physical prowess,
and that both the ex-boyfriend and his mom are definitely handling the breakup in a mature and healthy way.
Lakshmi, did Adam do well enough to win?
Well, he got four for eight more points.
Got a total of 12, which means Tom is this week's champion.
Tom Papa.
He always wins.
Thank you, Lakshmi.
We had faith.
In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict,
now that we know about Ron DeSantis' shoe lifts,
what will be the next secret revealed about a presidential candidate? But first,
let me tell you. 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 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.
B.J. Lederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Grombos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks to Monica Hickey and Blythe Robertson.
Peter Gwynn is our little gummy bear.
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 Chilog.
And the executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Michael Danforth.
Now, panel, what secret will we learn about a presidential candidate next?
Adam Burke.
The next big secret is that Democratic representative and presidential candidate Dean Phillips is, in fact, running for president.
It's not supposed to be a secret, but what are you going to do?
Maeve Higgins.
Chris Christie is a virgin who can't drive.
All right.
And Tom Papa.
We find out that RFK Jr. is made of 100% vaccines.
And if any of that happens, we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much, Lakshmi
Singh, for doing such a great job
in the scorekeeper chair.
Thanks also to
Adam Burke, Maeve Higgins, and Tom Papa.
Thanks to our fabulous audience here
at the Studio Baker Theatre in downtown Chicago, Illinois.
And thanks to all of you for listening
at home. I'm Peter Sagal. We'll see you
next week.
This is NPR.