Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Happy Independence Day!
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The Bear is still one of the most interesting and stressful shows on TV. And yes, chef,
we're recapping the new season. What do we make of Carmy, Sid, and the rest of the kitchen
staff? What do we think of all the celebrity cameos? And how does this all compare to the
first two seasons? We've got thoughts on thoughts. So listen now to the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR.
From NPR and ODBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm the man whose voice is bigger than John Hancock's signature. Bill Curtis, and here is your host at the Studebaker Theatre in downtown Chicago, Illinois,
Peter Segal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thank you, everybody.
Thank you all so much.
We are taking this week off to celebrate Independence Day, not the holiday, the movie. Every year we here all gather with
family and friends and listen to Bill show us how President Whitmore's speech
from that movie should be done. We will not go quietly into the night. We will
not vanish without a fight. We're going to survive.
Today we celebrate our Independence Day.
I mean, the aliens would have surrendered without a fight.
So while Bill's doing his vocal warmups, we're reaching into the archive for fireworks
from our past interviews.
In 2018, we were joined by the actor H. John Benjamin.
And if you don't know who he is,
you will as soon as you hear his voice.
As the voice of both the animated super spy Archer
and of Bob of Bob's Burgers,
I asked him which character was most like him.
Yeah, I mean, I think it sort of does follow
the current of my life.
I started as Archer and now I'm a little more Bob.
You're a little more Bob.
Yeah.
And I'm just going to say this, they sound exactly alike.
I mean, I don't think you're hearing the subtle differences.
All right.
Could you demonstrate?
Do a quote from Archer and then do a quote from Bob.
We'll be the judge.
All right, go for it.
All right, here we go.
Ready?
Yes.
I would like a strawberry milkshake and an apple pie.
Wow.
Who was that?
Who was that?
Was that Archer or was that Bob?
Well, you could guess.
No, that was unquestionably Archer.
I heard it.
Yeah, I heard it.
That was. That was Archer. I heard it. Yeah, I heard it. That was?
That was Archer.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now do Bob.
Now do Bob.
Same thing.
I want a strawberry milkshake and an apple pie.
OK, ready.
Here's Bob.
I would like a, oh god.
I don't know.
No, I'm like, I don't know if I should.
Yeah, all right. I'll have a strawberry milkshake if I should. Yeah, all right.
I'll have a strawberry milkshake, I think.
And, oh, you know what?
And an apple pie.
Oh, yeah.
There you go.
Yeah, that's good.
I see that.
Yeah.
Do you get recognized in public?
Many people, of course, don't know what you look like, I guess, but they absolutely know
what you sound like. Does that ever happen to you? Yeah? You're ordering a pizza and people go, wait a minute.
Sometimes that does happen very infrequently. But I, at my local Starbucks, I don't know
if everybody's familiar with Archer, but there's a running gag where he calls out to one of
his coworkers, his name is Lana, who is his girlfriend.
And my Starbucks barista was named Lana.
So the running gag in Archer is I go, I am always calling out, Lana, Lana, Lana.
And for years I did that to my Starbucks brief.
And was she amused?
She was just like totally flummoxed by why I was yelling.
And then I would say like about a year and a half ago I went in and she was like, I watched
your show.
You've been doing that for two years.
So John, you've written a book.
It's called Failure is an Option.
And it is a memoir of all the times you have failed.
There are a lot.
Well, I had to leave out a ton of stories.
Yeah, that's what I was going to say.
I don't remember if I actually told a story about failing at it, but one of the things
you're not any good at is music, which did not prevent you from releasing a jazz album recently.
Wow.
Which is called, I think it's called Well I Should Have Learned to Play the Piano, is
that what it's called?
That is exactly what it's called, yeah.
Can you explain how this came to be or maybe why this came to be? It was a sort of it was
just an idea I had a concept I had and I hired a bunch of professional jazz
musicians who and then met them at a recording studio who then proceeded to
find out that I can't play piano. Right.
So you just sat at the piano.
I sat at the piano, and when they kind of nodded over to me,
I just hit some keys a lot.
Well, I'm sure our audience is wondering
what that must have sounded like.
And we actually have a sample.
So this is H. John Benjamin's jazz record.
Well, I should have learned to play the piano.
Here we go.
["Jazz Racket"]
["Jazz Racket"]
["Jazz Racket"]
["Jazz Racket"]
["Jazz Racket"]
["Jazz Racket"]
["Jazz Racket"]
As you were doing this with these professional jazz musicians,
did their level of rage and indignation increase?
It was like a... I mean, it started that way and then it was like a simmer.
So, they kind of got into it.
Really?
We met in the middle, at some point.
Did you do any scatting? That would be horrible.
I did like some yelling out.
Come on, go!
Come on for the play!
Yeah! Here we go!
There we go.
Oh, you know what would have been great? It's stay with me.
Yeah, yeah. Come on guys, stay with me.
That's fucking...
Alright, follow me now, follow me.
Well, John Benjamin, it is a delight to talk to you, but we have asked you here today to play a game that this time we're calling Thwack Bullseye.
So, you play archer, super spy. So we thought we'd ask you about archery, super sport.
Answer two of these three questions about archery.
You'll win our prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who is John Benjamin playing for?
Rob Douglas of Ann Arbor, Michigan.
All right.
You ready for this, John?
I'm ready.
All right.
First question.
As it happens, archery is the national sport
of the nation of Bhutan.
But they do it under special Bhutan rules, which
includes what little quirk?
A, competitors are allowed to attempt to catch the opponent's arrow, in which case they automatically
win.
B, you are allowed to trash talk your opponent while she tries to shoot.
Or C, in the case of a tie, the competitors shoot at each other as a tie breaker.
I'm gonna go with A.
You're gonna go with A, that if you can reach out and snag the arrow out of the air, you'll
automatically win.
Yeah.
No, it's actually B, you're allowed to trash talk your opponent.
Oh, Bhutan.
Bhutan.
You're allowed to trash talk your opponent and you can even stand near the target and
wave around and try to distract them.
Oh, wow.
Although that strikes me as dangerous.
All right, next question.
Recently a father in Vietnam used his bow and arrow to bring fame to his family.
How?
A, he won Mr. Vietnam by ballroom dancing with a bow as his partner during the talent
competition.
B, he tied his son's loose tooth to an arrow and shot it into the air.
Or C, his Halloween costume design went viral when he dressed his older daughter as
a fully functional bow and she could fling his younger daughter who was dressed as an
arrow.
Well, C is insane.
B is radically dangerous.
Does that all go with A?
You're going to go with A that he won the Mr. Vietnam competition by ballroom dancing
with a bow as his partner.
Oh, so you're definitely cluing me in that it's not A.
I am.
All right, I'll go with B.
You're right, it was B. He tied.
His son's tooth.
The arrow, shot the arrow in the air.
So here's your last question, John.
Sometimes archery can be used for practical purposes as in which of these incidents.
A, retired Olympic archer Darrell Pace is hired by Macy's
to help deflate parade balloons
after the Thanksgiving Day parade by shooting them.
B, a man in Washington State used a bow and arrow
to shoot a bag of marijuana into a jail
for some friends there.
Or C, a woman in Montana was last seen shooting down
a bag of chips from the top shelf at a grocery store.
I think I'll go with B.
You're right, it was B.
Oh, there it goes.
The guy was caught after he shot the pot into the jail
with an arrow.
He said he was just trying to shoot a squirrel, about which
the sheriff said he had no explanation as to why squirrel
hunting requires attaching marijuana to an arrow.
Bill, how did John Benjamin do on our quiz?
Well, he ruined his record that two out of three is a win.
Yes.
Oh, no.
John Benjamin, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
Thank you, John.
Take care. Now, a few weeks ago, we went to Seattle where just before we were scheduled to do our show,
I came down with COVID.
Emergency guest host Tom Papa flew in to man the ship.
And here's a question that didn't make the final broadcast.
Shantira, researchers in Australia have found an ant colony that responds to danger by having
the entire colony do what?
Go to the queen and say, help us.
Would you like a hint?
I would love more than one.
I'd love to give you one.
They all draw little Xs over their eyes.
They don't move and they hang their tongues out.
Oh, they pretend to be dead?
Yes, they play dead.
Researchers discovered the ant colony in Australia on Kangaroo Island.
Checks out.
The researchers stumbled on what appeared to be a whole colony of dead ants, but then one
of them moved.
Terry!
Stupid Terry!
Australia's animals are different.
They're the size of bees.
How did they know?
Well, it is Kangaroo Island, so I'm going to just guess they're the size of kangaroos.
Yeah, that sounds right.
I chased a kangaroo once over a hill in Australia.
I went on a little jog one morning and there was a mama kangaroo and her joey and I saw
them and they kind of looked at me and they hopped over this hill and I went jogging after
them over this beautiful hill and then I got to the other side and there was about 400
kangaroos and I sprinted in the opposite direction because it was terrifying. One was like sharpening a knife
on its hand. Luke, that's not annoying.
When we come back, the unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, who survived 10 years in a bunker, and director Ryan Johnson, who survived dealing with Star Wars fans.
That's when we come back with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, from NPR. See you all. cushioned midsole and durability, but with an elevated design that suits any setting.
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Hey there, this is Félix Contreras.
And I'm Ana Maria Sayre from the All Latino Podcast. This week, we offer you a peek behind the curtain into the creative process for one
of Latin music's most prolific composers and producers.
Ana and I visited with Edgar Barrera in his home studio while he broke down track by track
some of his greatest hits.
You may not know his name, but you know his work.
On the next Alt Latino podcast from NPR.
Was it just me or did brands seem a little quieter for Pride last month than they usually
are?
Actually, brands generally aren't jumping at the chance to advertise to marginalized
communities or weigh in on politics like they used to.
This week, we look at why brands got woke then unwoke.
Why was that so unusual?
And what could it say about you?
Listen on It's Been A Minute from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago this is Wait Wait Don't Tell Me the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis and here is your host at the Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts Building
in downtown Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
So thank you, everybody.
We are, in fact, taking the week off to celebrate the greatest movie ever made, Independence
Day, which reveals that even though the aliens
may have super weapons and giant spaceships, they will still use Apple laptops.
But even they refuse to subscribe to Apple music.
So while we dress as our favorite characters for the screening we're going to have, we're
bringing back some great segments from past shows.
Ellie Kemper was the star of The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,
which was one of the best sitcoms of the last decade.
When she joined us in 2018,
Peter asked her about an earlier experience
auditioning for Saturday Night Live.
Listen, out of the gate here,
I reveal that my heart is pounding.
I'm an anxious, nervous person,
and I'm going to 30 Rockefeller Center
to meet Lorne Michaels. Of course I call him Michael Lawrence. I mean, his last name sounds
like a first name. Not my fault.
So you have this new book, It's Cold Swirl Days, and the first thing you say in the book
is that you say you have to write a book because you're starring in a TV show and that's what
TV stars do.
Yes. It's just a matter of course.
It's a matter of course.
I wanted to make it clear that I was trying to write a very good book.
I hope you like it.
It is true.
It is all the great books like Moby Dick begins.
Call me Ishmael.
I'm sorry, but I was contracted to do this.
Exactly.
He was great on Bugs and Buddies.
He was terrific.
He was great.
Ishmael was the best.
Tell us why you decided to call your memoir Squirrel Days.
One of the central essays of the book is about my ultimately unsuccessful attempt to befriend
a squirrel in my backyard, which we all have been there. I mean, I definitely had a lot
of... No, I'm just gonna stop and say, I want you
to finish the story. We have not all been there.
Oh, no. Let's find it. So what happened with you? So you're
a young girl. You're in St. Louis, right?
I'm in St. Louis, or I was in St. Louis. I had just seen Dances with Wolves. I was a
huge fan of the Secret Garden and I thought, that's who I want to be. So I went out and
I tried to become one with nature, sort of, like really get close to this plump squirrel
who I nicknamed Natalie. And I realized that girls don't care.
She had no interest in becoming my friend.
And I did realize that nature is, you know,
ultimately indifferent to us.
And it was a hard lesson to learn early on.
Ellie, maybe this girl was just indifferent to you.
Really?
No, you know what?
Do you think it was me?
No.
It could be.
You know what I think?
I think Natalie was its last It could be. It could be. You know what? I think Natalie was its last name.
Yeah.
That's when I went wrong.
Natalie Lawrence.
Do you think that now that you're famous with squirrels, like, yeah, we were friends.
What's interesting about, is this true?
We were trying to piece this together.
Were you in fact a debutante back in St. Louis? I am mortified that we were trying to piece this together? Were you in fact a debutante back in St. Louis?
I am mortified that you were trying to piece anything together.
I'm living a nightmare right now.
Yes, I was a debutante.
You should know that if you don't want people to ask you embarrassing questions about your
past, you should probably not write a memoir.
You're not joking.
Yeah.
So I was a squirrel-loving debutante and that's the group.
What is a debutante?
Yeah, explain please, exactly, for those who don't know.
There are people who talk to squirrels, they're yarrers and stuff.
I don't know if debutante society is bigger in, as I said, I'm from St. Louis, so it's
the Midwest, but I feel like it's bigger in the South and it's essentially a, oh gosh,
how is there a way to make this sound palatable?
It's where young women are introduced to society.
Oh, it's horrible. And aren't there special balls at which this
is done? And you wear white dresses.
Yeah. And wear white dresses and white gloves,
yeah. I'm only 18 when it happened, or 19. So yeah, no, the whole thing is it's a spectacle.
Maybe some people in the audience were Debbie Thompson. No, I don't think so.
No. So you play Kimmy on Kimmy Schmidt, The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, a show created by Tina Fey
on Netflix, and it seems as if that role was written for you.
Is that correct?
I think that it was, or I know that it was, which is a huge compliment.
I mean, because, yeah, I think it was like, I'm sure there were many people that they
were considering writing a show for, and then I think this idea like, I'm sure there were many people that they were considering writing
a show for and then I think this idea was their favorite idea.
So that went-
If people don't know, Kimmy Schmidt is a character who had a terrible upbringing.
She was held in a bunker for many, many years.
And then the show is all about how she deals with real life as she emerges into it as an
adult.
And she is absolutely, I guess, unbreakable.
She never gets upset.
She never gets frustrated. she never gets frustrated,
she's always incredibly cheerful
no matter what happens to her.
And that, is that you?
Is that the kind of person you are?
Well, some say that the debutante ball was my bunker.
No, I think that there's,
I think that there's like the,
there's a little bit of me in that character,
but I, this will sound so corny,
but I have
drawn such strength from Kimmy.
She is fierce, she refuses to let outside circumstances dictate her own actions, and
I really think, I have like a fraction of that maybe on a good day.
So I really do think she's, she's been through this unimaginable ordeal, and she still chooses
to think the best in people, which I think is remarkable.
I do want to reference, because we had him on the show last week, that the big reveal,
spoiler, at the end of the first season that the evil man who kept you in prison was played
by Jon Hamm.
Yes.
Which is hilarious.
And we found out he was actually your high school drama teacher?
I know.
Is that crazy?
Is that crazy?
He was.
He's ten years older than I am, and he, I'm younger, no big deal, and he graduated college,
and he came back to our high school John Burroughs school to teach
for a year and he taught me the improv section of my theater class which is it's
nuts. Did you call him Mr. Ham on set? No she called him Ham Mr.
She would just get so nervous. Every time I'm flustered, it just gets, the name flips.
Well, Ellie Kemper, we are delighted to talk to you. We've invited you here to play a game
we're calling Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.
Meet the Unbreakable Jimmy Schmitz.
Answer two questions about the distinguished actor, Jimmy Schmitz.
And you'll win a prize from one of our listeners, the voice of their choice, from anyone on
the show.
Bill, who was Ellie Kemper playing for?
Patrick Hoskin of Los Angeles, California.
All right, Ellie, here's your first question.
Jimmy Smits was in Steve Bochco's infamous failed musical cop show, Cop Rock.
But that's not his only musical role.
He also appeared in what?
A, if you could read his mind, the Gordon Lightfoot musical.
B, Exorcist, the musical.
Or C, Mother Goose, a rapping and a rhyming special.
C?
Yes.
Would I write?
You would?
Oh my God.
Next question about the unbreakable Jimmy Smits.
For a lot of young people, Jimmy Smits is most well known for playing Senator Bail Organa.
In the recent spate of Star Wars movies, how did he get the part?
A. George Lucas' original choice showed up for the interview hungover.
B. Smits just showed up in the set in costume and talked his way on.
Or C. The casting director owed him some money.
I'm very good at this game.
I think I've demonstrated that.
I'm going to go with my gut and say A.
You're right again.
That's what happened.
George Lucas wanted a British actor to play the role.
He showed up.
The guy came down all hungover.
George Lucas didn't like it.
Jimmy Smith got the part.
I love that story. All right. Your last bit of trivia about the unbreakable Jimmy Smiths.
How tall is Jimmy Smiths? Is he A, 5'8", B, 6'3", or C, 12 feet tall?
I think he's, I mean, he's 6'3". Yes, he is. Congratulations.
I think he's, I mean he's six foot three. Yes he is, he's six foot three.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Bill, how did Ellie Kemper do on our show?
Excellent, Ellie got him all right.
Congratulations.
Congratulations.
Ellie Kemper, in addition to being a delightful person,
has written a genuinely delightful book
called My Squirrel Days.
Ellie Kemper, thank you so much for joining us.
And wait, wait, don't tell me.
Thank you so much for having me. Thank you. Thank fun. Nice to meet you. Bye, Ellie. Bye,
guys. Thank you. Like me, Ryan Johnson grew up in the 70s as a huge Star Wars fan. But
unlike me, he then got to direct the Star Wars movie, The
Last Jedi, and we talked to him back in 2013 when that movie came out.
He started preparing early, making movies with his friends in high school.
Well they're mostly just, you know, your friends get together on a weekend and you're bored
and you've got a camera and you say, oh, why don't we try making a James Bond movie?
Why don't we try making a, they're mostly just doing
like weird little takes on different genres.
And they also usually, ironically,
involved blowing up old action figures.
Yeah, really?
Yeah, you know, because you're like,
what would this look like if we tied a firecracker
to this Jawa?
So you were blowing up Star Wars action figures?
Yeah, it would be amazing if you're like if you're sitting there blowing up a Jawa, a little Jawa, you
know, the creature from the first Star Wars movie.
OTD.
And a time traveler shows up and says, Ryan, you are not going to believe this.
So fast forwarding, you make a number of movies.
Your first movie, Brick, was hugely acclaimed, and you made some more films that were just
tremendously admired.
Tell me about how you got this job
What is it like to be hired to direct the next Star Wars movie?
This came entirely out of the blue. It was for something that was an incredibly surprising thing
It was presented to me in the most surprising way possible, which is Kathleen Kennedy who runs Lucasfilm
She called me into her office for what i thought was just a general
meeting i had no idea what i was stepping into and she basically shut the
door behind me
and asked me to stop this bomb asked me if i'd be interested in doing this
uh... and i had
literally no clue that i was you've in the running would ever be in the running
for something like this so it was um...
it and i don't i don't remember much about that meeting.
But they explained what it was about you that they said,
yes, you're the guy we've picked.
I had no idea and to be quite honest, I didn't push them on it.
Ryan, Adam fell for it. I've got to ask one question.
I love your movie.
One thing I really loved about the script is twice in the movie, one of the good guys and the bad guys,
Luke Skywalker and Kyra Loren float the idea
that maybe this whole Jedi thing is a terrible idea that
leads to a lot of death.
Aren't they right?
Hey.
They're not entirely wrong.
I've got one.
If we're going to do nerd questions, I'm going to do nerd questions.
You guys broke the seal and now we're going to be here all night.
But there's this rather infamous scene in The Last Jedi in which Luke, as he goes about
his day on his remote island, milks this creature.
And I just want to ask you, was that the answer to the 40-year-old question, where the heck
does Aunt Beru's blue milk come from?
Ooh.
Well, if you want to get technical, no.
Because it would be a different creature,
because that's an aquatic creature,
and there's not much water on tattooing.
Ooh.
And also, our milk is slightly green.
Oh.
Blue milk.
Wow.
We just want to.
I see.
Kaboom.
Yeah, damn it.
I thought I was entertaining the hell out of my friends
on Facebook with that theory.
OK, Ryan, before we go into the game,
I have to ask you about Kylo Ren's pants in the movie.
Are you familiar with the Kylo Ren challenge?
Oh, I am indeed.
Yes.
So there's a scene where the incredibly toned and buff and beautiful
Adam driver is short list
Yes, he he had been training at this point for doing intense fighting training for like six months
And so he just looked incredible and he's wearing these slightly high-waisted pants. It's a very distinct look
He looks rad.
And who was it who started it online?
Somebody famous started a meme where they basically went shirtless with kind of
high-waisted black pants and took a selfie.
And they call it the Kylo Ren Challenge.
Yeah.
Are you buff enough to wear these pants?
I have to ask you a question.
Were you not allowed to show Adam Driver's navel to the movie viewers of America? Because those are some pretty funny looking pants.
Do you have a navel rider? No.
No, I think those are just the pants and the costume, I think.
All right, take off the shirt. That's what you got.
Ryan Johnson.
Wait, you expect a galaxy far away to have lowriders?
I don't know.
I don't know.
But I was like, Kylo Ren is like a terrifying villain.
He kills people.
It doesn't mean he can't have a shine evil.
No, and it turns out he wears his pants like my grandfather.
They're pulled out.
It was a long time ago.
It was.
But it's really, it's like, and there's
Kylo Ren with his pants pulled up past his puppet.
Well, Rian Johnson, it is a joy to talk to you.
And as you could tell, some of us could do it all day.
But we have business to do.
We have asked you to play a game we're calling... Storage Wars.
You are now a Star Wars director,
so we thought we'd ask you about Storage Wars.
That's the reality show where people guess
what's in storage lockers.
Now we have made our own version of that game for you here.
So we're gonna ask you three questions about storage units
and you will win our prize for one of our listeners
if you get two of them right.
So Bill, who is Rian Johnson playing for?
Is there Anderson?
I'm from Salt Lake City, Utah.
All right.
Here we go.
You ready to play, Rian?
Let's do it.
All right.
First, Storage Wars challenge.
If you were like one woman in Alabama a few years ago,
you could make a cool $100,000 from a storage locker
if you just do what?
A, rent it out as a waterfront condominium to blind people.
B, get locked in it for 63 days and win a lawsuit.
Or C, discover it was sitting on a huge deposit of coal.
Oh, boy.
I would guess C?
You're going to go with C. No, it was actually B. Get
locked in it.
This woman, she says that she was locked in there for 63 days
and no one let her out.
So she won a settlement from the storage locker owner.
What did she eat or drink?
Happily for her, she was locked in there
with lots of canned goods and juice.
Wow.
The storage locker owner thinks this whole thing was a scam, but still had to pay up
$100,000.
All right.
Next question, if you get the next two, you still win.
A storage locker in Michigan was opened in 2009.
Now, if you had been on that storage locker and won it, would you have found, A, the world's
largest hairball coughed up by a Detroit cat in 1933,
B, four years of mail, a particular mailman did not feel like delivering,
or C, President Barack Obama's missing college transcripts?
Well, B made me laugh, so I'm going to go with B.
You're figuring this out!
That's the right one, yes.
It turns out that this letter carrier in the Detroit area just couldn't handle all the
letters that he was supposed to deliver every day, so he would just stuff them into this
storage locker he rented, and he did that for four years. Yes.
Last storage challenge.
In 2015, you could have bought a particular
storage locker in California for $80.
Just $80, and it ended up containing which of these?
A, a fully functioning meth lab.
B, $79 in pennies.
Or C, a woman who'd been trapped in there
for 63 days eating nothing.
But juice and canned food.
Oh, good.
I'm tempted by the irony of B, but I'm going to go with A.
You're right.
It was, in fact, a fully functioning meth lab.
Hot tip.
If you're going to run a meth lab in a rented storage locker, pay your rent.
Bill, how did Rian Johnson do on our quiz?
Well part of the force was with him.
You got two out of three and that means you're a winner, Rian.
Again, again he's a winner.
Rian Johnson is in force, the writer, director of The Last Jedi.
Rian, thank you so much for the movie and thank you for being with us on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much guys.
Bye bye.
When we come back, two people who couldn't have less in common except their middle initial.
It's Oscar winner Ruth E. Carter and Oscar nominee Richard E. Grant on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
Here at Shortwave Space Camp, we escape our everyday lives to explore the mysteries and
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We find weird, fun, interesting stories that explain how the cosmos is partying all around
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On this week's episode of Wild Card,
actor Ted Danson says it's possible
to embrace your regrets.
I wish I hadn't become a liar early in life,
but even your wounds, you kind of have fondness for if you've lived through it and made amends
and all of that stuff. I'm Rachel Martin. Join us for NPR's Wild Card Podcast, the
game where cards control the conversation. From NPR and WBEZ, Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
And here is your host at the Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts Building in downtown Chicago
and an eye, Peter Segal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thank you, everybody.
We're here getting ready for our annual showing of Independence Day, the movie which frankly
has a much better plot than the story behind The Holiday.
Did Benjamin Franklin ever punch an alien in the face?
I think not.
So while we prepare for the big climactic battle reenactment, we are going to bring
you some gems from our archives.
In 2019, costume designer Ruth E. Carter made Oscar history as the first
black woman to win an Oscar for costume design. And then she did it again in 2023.
Before we ask her about her Oscar for Black Panther, we had to ask her about her job.
Now, you're the first costume designer we've ever talked to. So I just wanted to go over
some basic stuff. So you're the costume designer for a film. Do you ever have to deal with actor egos?
Like you pick out the perfect costume for a particular character and like, I'm not going to wear that.
You know, I guess you deal with actor egos on a different level.
You know, sometimes they say, you know, I can't wear that color, you know, or...
But because we're discovering a character, we are both kind of contributing
to the conversation.
Right.
So you have to occasionally just say, yes, so maybe your character has a bigger butt.
Exactly.
Yes.
So let's get to the fun stuff, which is a movie like Black Panther.
Comic book movie, fictional, fantastical science fiction country.
You are like the most qualified person to ask about something that I've always
thought which is that a great problem for making comic book movies is that unlike in
comic books, people wearing superhero suits in real life essentially look dumb.
Yeah, because they don't realize it's their whole process to making that thing. You just
don't go to the store and get some spandex and sew it up.
No. So how do you make it so like the Black Panther
when he's in his superhero suit running around
doesn't look dumb?
Yeah, well, we do a muscle sculpt.
That helps.
What do you mean?
Well, we take a vacuform kind of mannequin version
of Chadwick Boseman's real body form.
And we add the clay to his muscles.
And we form a superhero kind of physique.
Are you telling me that that's the secret?
That's not all Chadwick Boseman under there?
It doesn't matter how much muscle milk you drink,
you're never going to be a superhero.
You've got to have some clay muscles.
So you're telling me that that amazing superhero suit is just like those padded things
that the kids have on Halloween, like the muscles are like built in?
Yeah, listen, don't do this at home, kids.
It's not exaggerated as you might think.
It's just more shoulders, you know?
It's not much.
Well, when you make my suit, I want more than a little help.
So you are now an Oscar-winning costume designer.
You've been a leading costume designer in many, many films
for many, many years.
Does that put some pressure on you to dress
when you go out in public?
Oh, no.
I've always been the anti-fashion.
I think that's what makes me kind of unique,
that I'm not trying to please or prove myself to anyone.
It's not in how I look.
It's how I dress other people.
Come on.
Really?
Yeah.
All right, well how about Halloween?
I would expect if you came to my Halloween party,
which I hope you do someday,
I would expect that you would walk in with like the costume.
Is this correct?
Yeah, that's why I don't go to Halloween parties.
Yeah.
Well, Ruth Carter, what a pleasure to talk to you.
We've invited you here to play a game we're calling,
I Hate Mondays.
You designed Black Panther, so we decided to ask you
about the Orange Panther.
That is Garfield.
Oh.
Oh.
The inexplicably beloved comic strip character.
Answer two out of three questions correctly,
you'll win our prize for one of our listeners,
the voice of anyone they might choose in their voicemail.
Bill, who is Ruth Carter playing for?
Brant and Angie in Indianapolis.
Oh.
Now, you ready to play, Ruth?
I'm ready.
Here's your first question.
Garfield was invented by his creator, Jim Davis, back in 1978.
What inspired Mr. Davis to create the beloved character?
A, his own cat, a beloved tubby tabby named Taft.
B, his brother, who was fat, lazy, loved lasagna,
and occasionally cleaned himself by licking his hands.
Or C, a desire to create a quote,
a good marketable character unquote,
that would make him a lot of money.
His tubby tabby.
No.
Oh.
It was C, he wanted to make a lot of money.
Really?
Oh, that's disappointing.
He did some research.
And at the time, there were all these dogs in the comics,
but no cats.
And he figured there were like 15 million cat owners who
might enjoy a cat comic.
So he created it to be popular.
And it worked.
Got it.
All right, you have two more chances here.
In 2004, Garfield the movie came out.
It was panned by critics, of course.
But Garfield was voiced by legendary actor Bill Murray.
Why did Bill Murray agree to play Garfield?
Was it A, the producers agreed to pay him with a lifetime supply
of Italian beef sandwiches from his favorite Chicago restaurant?
B, he mistakenly thought that the movie's screenwriter,
Joel Cohen, with an H, was Joel Cohen of the Cohen brothers.
Or C, he was still angry that he wasn't allowed to provide
a voice for the gopher in Caddyship.
Oh, I'm going to try B.
You're right.
Yeah, that makes sense.
As unlikely as it sounds, he thought that he was doing a movie that was written by one
of the Coen brothers and he says he didn't realize his mistake until he was in the studio
recording his lines and all of them were terrible.
All right, last question.
If you get this right, you win.
Here we go.
Not every Garfield strip has been embraced by his fans such as
which of these examples? A, a 2007 strip in which Odie burns an American flag while screaming
death to America. B, a 1997 strip in which John's girlfriend Liz catches him wearing
her underwear. Or C, a series of strips the week of Halloween 1989 written as a horror comic in which
Garfield faces his greatest fear, existential loneliness.
Oh brother, let's see.
I'm going to try B.
You're going to try B in which John's girlfriend Liz catches
him wearing her underwear?
No, wait.
No, don't do that one.
Let's take C. C, C.
So you're gonna go for C, the existential heart?
That's what it was.
Yeah.
That was a hard one.
It was hard, but if you've never seen
these very real comics from 1989,
I highly recommend you look it up.
Because Garfield, as opposed to being funny
and chubby and angry, he wakes up in an empty house
where no one is left
and he spends all week panicking
because he's facing his greatest fear, loneliness.
Bill, how did Ruth Carter do on our quiz?
Ruth got two out of three, which is a win for us.
Yay!
Yay!
I won!
I finally, oh, I won a second prize, yay!
Congratulations. It's gotta be better, right, I won a second prize. Yes. Congratulations.
It's got to be better.
It's just all uphill.
It's like Oscar, wait, wait, don't tell me, Nobel.
Woo.
Ruth E. Carter won the Oscar for costume design for Black Panther
just this year.
A museum exhibit featuring her designs
is now traveling the world.
Ruth E. Carter, thank you so much for joining us
on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Congratulations on the movie and the Oscar. And we'll look forward to what's next. Take care.
If you haven't kept up with the best songs out this year, we've got you covered. On all songs
considered from NPR Music, we hit pause to look back at the best tracks of 2024 so far.
Chapel Rowan is just a complete star on this song and it's been wedged in my brain ever since I first heard it.
Listen to All Songs Considered every Tuesday wherever you get podcasts.
New from the Embedded Podcast, what happens when three Republican women challenge their own party?
Maybe we need to speak out a little bit bolder.
Maybe we need to do something to get people's attention.
They have a front row seat to democracy.
Now you do too.
Listen to Supermajority from NPR's embedded in WPLN.
Want to maximize your summer without stretching your budget?
LifeKits got you covered with guides on exploring your neighborhood for cheap.
Don't let money or time be the thing that decides whether or not you will have fun.
You can have fun almost in spite of those things.
Make the most of every day this summer, whether you're jet setting or staying close to home.
Listen to the LifeKit podcast from NPR.
The same year that Ruth E. Carter won her first Oscar, Richard E. Grant was nominated
for his first Academy Award after more than three decades as an actor. We talked to him
before the ceremony.
Everybody say, Hi Richard.
Hi Richard.
There you go.
Hi y'all.
Oh, you've learned American. Very good.
So as I was saying, I usually ask actors
what role they're most recognized for.
Usually I can guess.
In your case, I can't.
So is there a role?
Is it Withnail and I, that great cult movie
you did a long time ago?
Is it some more recent stuff?
It falls into two distinct categories.
It's either people old enough to have seen Withnail and I,
this cult movie from 1987, or it's that other great masterpiece Spice World the movie.
There you are.
Do you know like what like a quintessential Richard E. Grant part is?
Like somebody says, this is the perfect part for Richard E. Grant because it's a...
Because the person is usually on the edge of a nervous breakdown or manic.
Yeah, I would say that your characters all seem either happily or unhappily on the edge of a nervous breakdown or manic. Yeah, I would say that your characters all seem either
happily or unhappily on the edge.
Unhinged.
Yes, that's the word I was looking for.
We also read that you enjoy smelling things.
I do.
I make perfume.
You do, yes.
How do you go about making perfume?
And if you're an actor, is this something you've studied?
Well, in 1969 when I was 12 years old,
the first American that I ever met
called Betsy Clapp with a double P.
And I felt mad enough with her.
She was fast talking, gum chewing.
She taught me how to French kiss.
And I don't know whether you know what that means.
It's use of the tongue.
Oh, yes.
That has recently arrived here on these shores, sir.
Oh, good.
And I tried to make perfume for her out of gardenia and rose
petals boiled up in sugar water, just turned into stink bombs.
And then finally, 40 years later, I professionally
made it as an adult. So it's lime, marijuana, and mandarin
as signature notes of the original scent.
Wait a minute.
You just said marijuana?
Yeah.
So does this perfume have a name?
Is it like Passion by Richard E. Grant?
What's it called?
No. No, you fool.
It's called Jack.
It's called Jack.
It's called Jack.
It's unisex and it comes in a Union Jack bag inside a box.
And you can buy it online here and in stores in New York
and in LA.
Wow.
And it's very useful if somebody catches you
and you've been smoking weed all day, you can say, oh no.
You're catching a whiff of my lovely perfume
from Richard E. Grant called Jack.
That's a great sales gimmick.
You've given me the best sales pitch here that I could have dreamt of.
We read that you're so interested in scent, obviously you are, that you like smell everything
you encounter.
Yeah, I don't understand why everybody doesn't.
Who is your best smelling co-star? Ah, well, I don't want to offend anybody,
because everybody has their own distinct ones.
But there are some that I never want to smell again,
and I'm not going to tell you who they are.
Right.
I do want to ask you about your new film, which
is, again, amazing.
Can you ever forgive me?
You play a real person who really lived
and did some unpleasant things.
He was, among other things, a bit
of a liar and a cheat and a criminal. And did that appeal to you when you got the partner?
You were like, okay, that's going to be a challenge.
It did appeal to me because you understand through telling the story how he falls into
this life of crime with Lee Israel. He's so brilliantly played by Melissa McCarthy. And
I think that once you understand why people do what they do, then compassion can flood in. So you understand people and
you can feel sympathy for them.
Right. The relationship between your two characters are extraordinarily central to the movie.
And I always wonder if actors do this. Did you, like, spend time with Melissa McCarthy
improvising, pretending to be the people so you could get to know each other? It was just
go on the set and you were friends or whatever you were with them?
I met her on Friday in January,
a year ago in Manhattan for two hours,
and we had lunch and then we started shooting on the Monday.
And I knew within about four nanoseconds of meeting her
that we would probably be friends for life
because it felt like lightning in a bottle.
So it was just luck as much as anything.
And I'd imagine she smelled wonderful.
She did, and she's having my triplets in August.
No, that's great.
Wonderful for both of you.
One last question before we get to the game.
Let's assume that you win, but even if you don't,
getting an Oscar nomination, or hopefully an Oscar,
gives you more options in terms of what you want to do next.
So you've been doing all kinds of different roles
and all kinds of different projects.
Is there a dream thing?
If somebody says, Richard E. Grant, Oscar winner, what would you like to do next? And
you would say?
I want to host your show.
Damn it!
Bye, Peter.
Well, Richard E. Grant, it is a delight to talk to you, as I think I've shown, but we
have invited you here to play a game we're calling...
Richard E. Grant, meet Ulysses S. Grant.
You may or may not know, we here in the U.S. once had a president named Ulysses S. Grant.
He'll probably be the star of a hip hop musical any day now.
We're going to ask you three questions about our president, Grant.
Answer two correctly, you'll win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of their choice, and their voicemail.
Bill, who is Richard Grant playing for?
Chris Billig of Austin, Texas.
All right. Here we go. Grant's original name at birth was Hiram Ulysses Grant, but he eventually
dropped the Hiram. Why? A, he disliked being made fun of for his initials, hug. B, he found
out Hiram was the name of his father's favorite mule. Or C, Hiram Grant owed a lot of money
to the local saloon, but nobody had ever heard of Ulysses Grant.
C. No, it was A, he didn't like being called
Hug. Apparently, elementary school in the early 19th century was just as vicious as
it is today. Next question.
One of Ulysses S. Grant's lesser known claims to fame as a U.S. President is that he had
what? A, he had the first known pet fish in the White House, named You Fishies S. Grant.
B, according to a historian of hairstyles, Grant had the quote, hairiest cabinet in presidential
history.
I've never heard it described like that.
I'm afraid that like, hairy cabinet is a euphemism where you come from.
It's not.
Or C, he wrote the song, Hail to the Chief, which he originally titled, Hail to the Me.
I think it has to be the hairy cabinet, no matter what.
Of course you're right, yes.
Thank you.
According to the book, 1,000 mustaches.
Every man in Grant's cabinet had either a beard, a mustache, or exceptional ear hair.
All right, last question.
As we all know, Ulysses S. Grant first rode to fame and national stature as a general
in the Civil War, but that fate for him was somewhat surprising.
Why?
Was it A, he was so afraid of blood he reportedly couldn't
even look at a rare steak without freaking out? B, his high school voted him least likely
to lead the Union army to victory? Or C, he had a terrible allergy to heart attack?
To what? Heart attack, which was the kind of biscuit...
That one might keep in a hairy cabinet.
Yes.
I think it has to be number two.
Wait a minute.
You think it was his high school?
Yes.
In like 1834, whatever it was he graduated, voted him least likely to lead the Union army?
Yes, definitely.
If you want to go with that, I will respect that because I am a fan, so you just make
up your mind.
Okay, I'm going with that.
And as so many of your characters are, you're gloriously mistaken.
The answer was, of course, A, he was so afraid of blood, apparently, that he couldn't even
deal with a raw steak.
It does make you wonder how, I guess, that's why he wanted to win so bad, so it would be
over.
Bill, how did Richard Grant do on our quiz?
You know, we're going to give it to him because he's starring with one of our hometown stars,
Melissa McCarthy, from Chicago.
So, congratulations. You are a stars, Melissa McCarthy from Chicago.
So congratulations, you are a winner, Richard.
Thank you.
Have I won like Donald Trump won?
No, no, yes.
Yeah, you won like Donald Trump, and in the analogy,
Bill is Putin.
It goes as well for you come Oscar night.
Richard E. Grant has been nominated so justly for an Oscar for his performance.
And can you ever forgive me?
Richard E. Grant, thank you so much for joining us on Wait Wait Don't Tell Me.
What a pride for our audience.
Thank you.
Thank you, Richard.
Good luck.
Bye bye.
Bye bye.
That's it for our Celebrating the Best movie with the title Independence Day Edition.
Wait, wait, don't tell me is a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago.
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Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studabaker Theater, BJ, the leader being composed to our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks to Monica Hickey.
Our welcome to Earf is Peter Gwynn.
Technical direction is from Lorna White.
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Thanks to everybody you heard this week.
That means all of our panelists,
all of our fabulous guests, of course, Mr. Bill Curtis. and thanks to all of you here in the Studebaker Theatre
and everywhere for listening.
You're fabulous.
I am Peter Segel, and we'll be back next week.
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