Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Jason Isbell
Episode Date: January 13, 2024Jason Isbell joins panelists Maeve Higgins, Joyelle Nicole Johnson, and Peter Grosz to talk backhanded compliments from John Mayer, praise from Bruce Springsteen, and keeping eye out for boogers with ...his wife, Amanda ShiresLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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At the Planet Money podcast, we talk to anyone who can help us understand the economy.
Fortune tellers, tango dancers.
Obscure government bureaucrats.
Oh, the obscure ones are the best.
Totally. And of course, we talk to the smartest economists to explain everything from inflation and disinflation to how manatees got addicted to fossil fuel.
That is Planet Money from NPR.
fuel. That is Planet Money from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
Don't worry, Patriots fans, I'll be your new coach.
Call me Bill Bilicic. I'm Bill Curtis, and here is your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you, everybody.
Thank you all so much.
We do have a great show for you today.
Later on, we're going to be talking to Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Jason Isbell.
But first, this is our first new show of 2024,
and like we do every January,
we worry that surely this will be the year where we finally run out of dumb things in the news to make fun of.
But I am happy to report, so far, so good.
Give us a call, answer our questions
about what went off the rails this week.
The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi.
Hi, who's this?
This is Shruti. How are you?
I'm fine, Shruti. How are you?
Good.
Where are you calling from?
So, I usually live in Chicago,
but I am this week in Avon, Ohio.
Avon, Ohio. The world's capital of duct tape. Oh, that's how I know it. Oh, well, I am throwing out everything we had
planned to do this hour. And why are you there? Are you just such a duct tape fan you wanted to
make a pilgrimage? I actually came for my best friend's baby shower, so shout out Hayden,
future baby to be. Right. And just stayed the week, and I hear there's some snow coming to
Chicago, so I'm still here. Right. I was about to say there is a big snowstorm this weekend in
Chicago, and if you were trying to get away from it, you could have done better than Ohio, I'm just
saying. Shruti, welcome to the show. Let me introduce you to our panel. First up, the stand-up
comedian from Brooklyn whose album Yell Joy is available on all the streaming platforms. It's
Joyelle Nicole Johnson. Hey, girl. How you doing? Hey. Next, she is a stand-up comedian you can
follow on Instagram at Maeve in America. It's Maeve Higgins. Hi.
And an actor and writer who can be seen
in the acclaimed improv show
Two Square at Caveat in New York City
on January 30th. And it is
his birthday. It's Peter Gross.
Hello.
So, Shruti, welcome to the show.
You, of course, are going to play Who's Bill this time.
Bill Curtis is going to start this year off like he did last year,
recreating for you three quotations from the week's news.
If you can correctly identify or explain just two of them, you will win our prize.
Any voice from our show you might choose on your voicemail.
Are you ready to go?
Yes.
Stakes high.
Yes.
That's right.
The stakes are very high.
Your first quote is from a press release from Boeing. Yes, that's right. The stakes are very high.
Your first quote is from a press release from Boeing,
apologizing for an incident that made the news this week.
We regret the impact this has had on our customers and their passengers. So what small inconvenience had an impact on the passengers on one of Boeing's airplanes? Well, I believe it was
when the exit door in the middle of the plane blew off, left a gaping hole in the plane. That's right,
the door blew off in the middle of the flight, and the big gaping hole in all the air flew out,
and it forced the plane to make an emergency landing. The airline pointed out that fortunately the seat next to the hole that was created was unoccupied,
although they didn't say at what point it became unoccupied.
If there was somebody that was going to get sucked out of a plane, I hope it would be the person who
was barefoot and had his feet up on the back of the seat.
We all know who we want the
blowout to be next to. Oh, the screaming
baby? Oh, no.
That's terrible.
Peter, Hayden's not even born yet.
No, not Hayden.
He'll be a perfect child.
Isn't the person in the emergency row
supposed to be strong enough to hold onto
the door? Yes.
They go around in check. Are all of you willing to Isn't the person in the emergency row supposed to be strong enough to hold onto the door? Yes.
They go around in check. Are all of you willing to hold onto the door with all your might?
When?
Not if, but when?
As 4,000 atmospheres try to push it out of the plane, you have to answer verbally.
No, actually, this is the thing.
People are calling it a door.
It was not a door.
It was a door plug.
It was not a door.
It was a door plug.
And what it does is it covers up a hole in the fuselage that is supposed to be an additional emergency exit door.
It's like a toupee for a plane. Right, exactly.
Did they find it?
Did it, like, land on someone's back door?
Yes, this is the crazy thing.
The door itself landed in someone's yard.
Immediately, this being where we live now, ran out and filmed it, which is cool.
And not only that, and this is absolutely true,
but an iPhone,
a passenger's iPhone, was also found
on the ground, working perfectly.
16,000 feet.
Straight down. Found it, and not only was it
working perfectly, but it still had the baggage
receipt in the airplane.
So it had the flight number.
Oh, we're into where this came from. Oh, right? And it's, thank God that this guy's iPhone was on airplane mode when they found
it, otherwise Boeing would be like, we warned you, look at what happens when you don't listen.
All right, your next quote was a headline on the Today Show this week. It's about a product that all of a sudden everybody is lining up for hours to get,
and they're sometimes even fighting each other over it.
Here we go.
Why is everyone suddenly so thirsty?
So, what is this latest absolutely must-have product?
Having eavesdropped on a conversation between two Target workers this week,
I know
it is the pink Stanley mug.
You're right.
The Stanley insulated mug.
Move over, Beanie Babies, Tickle Me Elmo's, Ozempic, the latest must-have item.
People are going crazy over it.
It's, it's, it's the Stanley insulated tumbler.
There have been fights at Target stores.
A guy jumped over the counter at one Starbucks that was selling them,
grabbed a bunch of them, was trying to run out when he was tackled by security.
One cup.
The security took it and was like, ran, ran.
Well, it wasn't that judge in that case drinking out of one of those cups
and the guy jumped over to try and get it.
Maybe that's what was going on.
The guy who jumped at the judge who was just trying to get his cup what is
so special i don't have that is my question because it's just an insulated mug right i mean
we have lots of different kinds of them there are thermoses what is what is going on apparently your
house can burn down and the cup will still have ice in it well yeah this actually a lot of people
joel's right this video went viral recently.
This woman's car caught fire and burned down to the frame.
Oh, yeah.
Women drivers.
She should have been trying to do her hair with her hair dryer.
You're right.
Stay home.
In the video, right, she goes into the burnt-out car
and she pulls out her Stanleyley mug no and shakes it and
it's still got solid ice in it yeah after a fire oh so it's like a global warming solution in a way
if we can just find a way to encase the entire planet in a large enough oh my goodness stanley
thermos it does feel like it's the thing where Mark Zuckerberg is going to be like, build me a home out of that.
Apparently they should make
airplanes out of it.
Apparently, yeah.
It's the Stanley Door.
Alright, your last quote
is someone lying.
I read at least
339 books last year.
That was a comment on the Washington Post,
specifically a comment on a story saying that you are in the top 50% of all Americans
when it comes to reading if you read how many books in 2023?
You know, it's sad.
I imagine it's low, but could I get a hint?
This is like card sharks.
All right, I'm going to give you a hint.
I'm going to give you a hint.
It's more than one.
Let's say three.
No, that's too many.
It's the right number of martinis.
It's more than one.
It's two.
All right. It's two. It's two, number of martinis. It's more than one. It's two. All right.
It's two.
It's two, yes.
Two books.
According to the survey, 50% of Americans read less than two books during all of last
year.
Now, I personally read 200 books because I say it counts as a book if you turn on the subtitles on Netflix.
Yes.
And they didn't say how
long the books, because some books are just
longer than others.
You know who's skewing the numbers is kids.
Because you can read
a book to a kid, you can read
three books in one night.
One of my books I read last year, I just
tore through in one night because I really wanted to find read last year, I just tore through in one night
because I really wanted to find out who the monster at the end of the book was.
Who was it?
It was Grover.
I'm sorry, was that a spoiler?
It was Grover.
He's so scared and it's him.
That's funny.
My kids were taken away.
I was there, Grover.
Bill, how did Shruti do on our quiz? Shruti got them all right. I was there, Grover. At Sherbert Fest.
Bill, how did Shruti do on our quiz?
Shruti got them all right.
She's a winner.
Congratulations, Shruti.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for playing, Shruti.
Thank you.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Peter, it's a bit later than usual, but winter has finally come to Canada.
And with it, a warning from officials saying that drivers there should never, ever let a moose do what?
I was going to say it has something to do with a moose.
And then you said moose.
I swear to God I was going to say moose.
They should never let a moose call shotgun.
They should never let a moose call shotgun. They should
never let a moose
hit their car. They should never
let a moose drive. They should never let a moose
out of the
fridge too long.
You probably won't guess it without a hint.
Let me try to give you one. No, I think I might.
We have
an hour and a half. Well, one of the
reasons is you don't want to have a moose with its tongue stuck to the hood of your car.
You shouldn't let a moose lick your car.
Exactly right.
The Canadian government says, please do not let moose lick your cars.
Canada, winter, snow, ice, and with that, they salt the roads, right?
And that means the salt gets on the cars, and that attracts moose who like to lick the salt off the cars.
This is also known as a Canadian car wash.
I bet it's adorable to be sitting there,
because moose, meese, mice.
Moose.
Moose.
They're not, like, cruel.
They're not coming at people.
No, they're big herbivores.
And can you imagine how adorable it would be
to have an enormous ungulate outside your car
with its big tongue?
We have different definitions of adorable.
You would not like this.
Absolutely not.
Are you kidding me?
What animal do you want licking your car?
A baby seal. Aww.
Coming up, our panelists tell you all a lovely fairy tale.
It's our Bluff the Listener game.
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Bill Curtis.
We are playing this week with Maeve Higgins, Peter Gross, and Joyelle Nicole Johnson.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Right now, it's time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff the Listener Game.
If you'd like to play, call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
Or if you feel phones are just too 20-23, check out the pinned post on our Instagram page at WaitWaitNPR.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Freya Hurwitz from Newton, Massachusetts.
Hey, Freya, how are you?
I'm good. How are you, Peter? I'm well. I know Newton pretty well. What do you do there? I am the director of
procurement for TripAdvisor, and I have a little side gig where I make some woodworking products.
You do? You're a woodworker. What sort of things do you make? I make bowls and cheese knives and
charcuterie boards. So basically, it's all appetizer-oriented.
Pretty much, yeah.
That's really great.
Well, Freya, welcome to the show.
You're going to play the game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what's Freya's topic?
Fairy tales can come true.
Who wouldn't want to live in a fairy tale,
visit an enchanted kingdom,
and trade your firstborn child
for some homemade goblin gold?
Well, this week we heard a story so magical
that seemed to be right out of the pages of a storybook,
but it's true.
Our panelists are each going to tell you one.
Only one of them, of course, is real.
Are you ready to play?
Ready.
All right.
First, let's hear from Joyelle Nicole Johnson.
Every day, Rodney Holbrook, a 75-year-old retiree in Wales,
messes about in his work shed and leaves everything
in disarray. Then, in the morning, he wakes up to find everything has been put back in its place.
Was it a judgmental ghost? A neighbor with a penchant for tidiness? He knew it wasn't his wife.
After setting up a night vision camera to catch the Good Samaritan in action, he found out to his surprise it was a meddling mouse.
That's right, a tiny field mouse with possible OCD
was organizing the workbench of the 75-year-old retiree in his nightly stead.
I'm just awed by it, really, Mr. Holbrook said.
Every day I take it out and it's all back in again.
An expert described this as intrinsically mousy behavior.
When reached for a comment, the mouse added,
he's such a slob.
Squeak!
Every night, a mouse comes out and neatens up a man's workshop.
And by the way, we can call the mouse Mickey
because that's in public domain now.
Your next story of something
very fairy comes from Peter Gross. Hilda Laufner of Bopard, Germany has always been proud of her
long, luscious hair, which clocks in at 10.5 meters. For the metrically challenged, that's 34
feet 5 inches. This week, the local paper, the Bopard Times-Picayune, was doing a story about
Hilda's new world record,
and she was in her attic rooting around for an old picture of herself with short hair,
since Hilda hasn't had so much as a trim in almost 50 years.
For the metrically challenged, that's still 50 years.
Suddenly, tragedy struck.
Hilda accidentally locked herself in the attic.
Someone save me, she cried out the window, Germanically,
like a classic damsel in
distress. Her neighbor, Laszlo Scherzer, heard her pleas and called her. I'd love to help, but I have
bad knees and can't climb stairs. However, I do have very strong arms. So Hilda lowered her hair
out her window for Laszlo to climb. It took him half an hour to scale all 34 feet 5 inches of her hair, but he did it, saving the fair maiden.
When asked to comment, Hilda said,
Ow! That really hurt!
Screw this, I'm getting a haircut.
A woman with exceptionally long hair
is rescued by someone who climbed up it.
And your last story of a nonfiction fable
comes from Maeve Higgins.
The scientific phenomenon of animals
speaking human languages for 30 minutes
each Christmas Eve
is having a lingering effect into the new year.
The Wall Street Journal reports
that a 78-year-old box turtle named Diana
confronted her owner
about failing to take financial advice year on year.
Diana said bitterly, quote,
if you're a moron of a grandmother,
listen to me about Microsoft stock back in 76,
maybe this damn celery will be organic.
Meanwhile, the Greenwich family in Massachusetts
were shocked by their guinea pig Jordan's take on the Supreme Court.
Jordan spoke at length about how the court should be expanded to 20 judges,
insisting 19 of them should be guinea pigs.
And finally, Glenda Garvey was surprised when her nine-year-old Jack Russell, Melissa,
revealed something very profound.
Speaking to CNN, Ms. Garvey said,
Every year on Christmas Eve, Melissa says she loves me and I say I love her.
But this year, she said she didn't just love me, she's in love with me.
When asked to comment,
Melissa just drank really fast from her water bowl
for a long time, then pretended to be asleep.
Woo!
Lesbian dog!
Okay, one of these fairy tale-like events really happened.
Was it from Joyelle Nicole Johnson?
A man discovers that the person or thing
cleaning up his workshop every night
is in fact an adorable little mouse?
Or from Peter Gross,
a woman with extremely long hair
is rescued by someone who climbs up it,
Rapunzel-like?
Or from Maeve Higgins,
the animals spoke on Christmas Eve
like they do every year.
But this time we have questions.
It's from CNN.
It is.
And it's amazing.
Of course it's from CNN.
They have a talking wolf.
Oh, hello.
Too soon.
So, Freya, which of these stories was the real one in this week's news?
Well, I'd love to make some comment about guinea pigs on the Supreme Court,
but I'm going to have to go with Joyelle's workshop mouse.
The mouse that neatened up the workshop every night, that's Joyelle's story.
Well, to bring you the correct answer, we spoke with someone familiar with the real story.
The house mouse is the second most successful mammal on planet Earth.
Wouldn't it be fabulous if we could put the mice to work?
That was Bobbi Corrigan, an urban rodentologist who studies rats and mice,
commenting on how this behavior isn't that surprising.
Congratulations, you have not only won a point for Joelle just for telling the truth so charmingly,
but you have won our prize. Congratulations. Thank you very much.
Take care. You too. Bye-bye. Bye-bye.
And now it's time for the game we call Not My Job. Jason Isbell has won four Grammy Awards,
and he's been acclaimed as
America's greatest living songwriter, not to mention his first major film role was starring
in Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon. Not bad for a guy who named his backing band after
an insane asylum. Jason Isbell, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Thank you. Thank you very much. So great to talk to you.
Now, I said that when I introduced you,
but it is true that people think
you're one of the greatest songwriters alive.
Like John Mayer called you our greatest living lyricist.
So my question is, what is his problem with your tunes?
That's what I thought too.
He doesn't like my guitar playing.
That's what I thought. He made He doesn't like my guitar playing. That's what I thought.
He made up for it when he wrote that song about your body being a wonderland.
Yeah.
It was originally Wonder Bread, but he changed it.
And I heard you say once that when you met Bruce Springsteen,
he immediately launched into one of your songs.
He did, yeah.
He said that his son had brought my album home,
and he had really fallen in love with this song called Traveling Alone,
and then he leaned in and he started singing it.
And I immediately thought, oh my God, this man is singing my song in Bruce Springsteen voice.
This is kind of a meta moment, because that song in Bruce Springsteen voice. This is kind of a meta moment because that is really Bruce Springsteen voice. But yeah, he was very, very kind, which meant a
whole lot to me. Sure. Well, how do you respond to that? Did you feel like you needed to do a little,
you know, dancing in the dark for him just to even things out?
Yeah, I felt like I needed to do that. I really felt like I need, sang uh thunder road in its entirety acapella i did a knee slide at the end
um there is i i don't know what you want to call it a stereotype a cliche maybe i'm gonna joke about
you that you only write very sad songs but have you ever just sat down to just like you know just
show the world and write a song like my puppy is so cute or something like that just to show you got that club in your bag?
No.
No.
That club.
That club's not good for hitting the ball for me.
No.
I haven't.
I've written songs for my daughter.
My daughter is eight years old.
Oh, sure.
And I have made up songs for her that are happy.
And she did not like them. Oh, sure. And I have made up songs for her that are happy. And she did not
like them. So I went. And so I read this thing about you that you went to college, you're a
creative writing major, but you left college one credit shy of getting your degree. And then
just recently, years after you left school, you went back and they gave you your degree.
Is that right?
Right.
Well, I didn't go back.
Like they, I don't know if I'm supposed to tell this.
If you don't know you're supposed to, then you definitely are.
I definitely am.
Yeah.
Wait, wait, don't say that.
So what happened was it was a human fitness and wellness course.
So it was a book course about like how many calories are in a cupcake.
And they would, this was in like the 90s.
So they would, well, they would take you in and pinch you with the little forceps and tell you if you were overweight or not.
And I was not about to do that.
So wait a minute, this was the only course you had to take to graduate college, this human health course, and you were like, absolutely not, I'd rather just leave.
Yes.
Wow.
He'd been pinched enough, he was like, I've got to get out of here.
It was one of the most beautiful moments of my life, because I remember distinctly thinking, I can get out of here and walk out, and no one's going to arrest me or anything.
You can, like, don't tell your children this,
but you can just leave.
And so more recently, the college approached you and said,
we are aware that you were one credit shy,
and you never graduated, so what did they say?
They said that I knew enough now about those things.
And they gave me my degree. They said that I knew enough now about those things.
And they gave me my degree.
But I don't know if the degree that they gave me is a degree that existed before that moment or not.
It looks like something they made up.
Like it's got the word studies in it more than once. I don't know.
I don't know what I could use it for,
but I'm very proud of it. Sure.
You are married to another
wonderfully talented singer,
musician, and songwriter, Amanda Shires.
And you were actually on NPR's
Tiny Desk concert.
And you were with her, right?
And there's this moment during the concert that you do,
which is wonderful, everybody should look it up,
where your beautiful, talented wife looks at you
and leans close and says, do I have any boogers?
Yes.
And you lean in and you check and you say no.
Right.
And I just want to say,
is that like what your relationship is normally like?
I think so, yeah.
I think that's true love.
If you feel comfortable enough to ask,
and they feel comfortable enough to answer,
then, you know, you're being a good friend
to that person in that moment.
And, you know, the only other option
was just go with the boogers
and play the show with the boogers
and nobody wants that
to happen
the problem is when
I see boogers and she doesn't
then we have a problem
and when that happens
and you're like you have boogers
and she's like no I don't do, well, I'm a college graduate?
Yes.
I have my degree in studies and other studies.
Jason Isbell, it is so much fun to talk to you. We have invited you here to play a game that this time we're calling Big Ben is Clock?
No, Isbell.
So we have decided to ask you, Jason Isbell, three questions about Big Ben,
which many people don't realize is not the clock.
It's the bell in the clock.
Answer two out of three questions correctly.
You'll win our prize for one of our listeners.
The voice of anyone they might like from our show going bong, bong on their voicemail.
Bill, who is Jason Isbell playing for?
Jared Maynard of Dearborn, Michigan.
All right.
Here's your first question about Big Ben.
The man who designed Big Ben, both the clock and the bell,
was Baron Grimthorpe, who was a lawyer and self-proclaimed expert on clocks.
In fact, his fame about his expertise on clocks was such
that he was repeatedly elected president of Britain's Horological Institute.
Great guy to have in charge, but there was a problem.
What was it?
A, he was never weirdly on time to the meetings
B he was so obnoxious as a person a condition of him becoming president was that he never attend any of its
dinners
Or see he demanded that the clock in the Institute's clock tower be digital
in the Institute's clock tower be digital?
Sure.
I mean, since you called him a self-described expert,
I would say that he's not somebody you would want to sit down at dinner with.
You're exactly right.
I would go with B.
That's right.
In fact, he was originally charged
with picking someone to design the clock,
and he said, you know who's best at designing clocks?
Me.
All right, you got that one right.
You were very sharp on that.
Grimthorpe, as I said, gave himself the job of designing the clock and the bell,
which immediately cracked the first time they hit it with something.
And he dealt with that disaster by doing what? A, he took responsibility, apologized, and handed
off the job to someone else to do correctly. B, he claimed that he meant it to crack because it
would sound better that way. Or C, he made friends with a guy who worked at the foundry that made
the bell, got him drunk, and convinced him while drunk to say that it was all their fault.
Ooh, C is tempting.
But it's hard for me to imagine this man making friends with anybody.
I'm going to go with B again.
No, it was actually C. He did get the guy drunk, convinced him to say
it was the foundry's fault. That not being true,
the foundry sued him for libel
and won, and then he got angry
and said it again, and they sued him again,
and they won again.
So, last question. If you get this right,
you win. In addition to
the bell of Big Ben and the clock,
and the bell, by the way, is and the bell by the way is still cracked
The Baron is memorialized forever
By what a the phrase to grim Thorpe which means to ruin a building while attempting to restore it
Be an act of Parliament requiring all clockmakers to this day to prove that their products were not
clockmakers to this day to prove that their products were not designed by baron grimthorpe or c being the only person to be buried in a small nave of westminster abbey known as the jackasses
corner oh um i think it's a i think it is you're right it is a yeah. Wow. Bill, how did Jason Isbell do in our quiz?
Well, we know he did not grimthorpe this.
Two out of three, you're a winner, Jason.
Again.
Jason Isbell is a celebrated singer-songwriter
whose new album, Weather Veins, is up for three Grammys.
Jason Isbell, thank you so much
for joining us on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
What an absolute thrill
to talk to you. Take care.
In just a minute,
Bill tells you how to win your next
slam dunk contest in our
Listener Limerick Challenge. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT
to join us on the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
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It's actually gorp.
That's Planet Money from NPR.
Do you want in on a secret?
Like why your favorite pop star is so popular?
Or why a makeup fad is suddenly sweeping your feed?
It's that none of these things happen by accident.
On the It's Been a Minute podcast, I don't just tell you what's trending.
I dig deeper to find out why.
Join me, Brittany Luce, on It's Been a Minute from NPR.
Hi, I'm Jen White from 1A, the home of good conversation. But what makes it great are the
ideas and insights you bring to the show every day. It seems only fair that when you make room
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis.
We're playing this week with Maeve Higgins, Joyelle Nicole Johnson, and Peter Gross. And here again is
your host at the Studebaker
Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill!
In just a minute, Bill
puts on his safety harness to go to the
rhyming gym in our listener limerick
challenge. If you'd like to play, give us a call at
1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-
924-8924.
Right now, a panel of some more questions for you from the week's news.
Joyelle, the skincare company Sephora has a problem.
Some customers say that their new Delicia Drench brand body butter is great on the skin
and it smells wonderful, but it also does what?
Attracts mousse.
So close.
It attracts something,
they say, but not moose.
Terrible men?
I'm going to go
so far as to say even worse.
What's worse than that?
Mice?
Smaller.
Smaller than mice? And worse.
Like roaches?
I'm going to give it to you.
Wolf spiders.
Wait, what?
How are you going to give that to Joanne?
She got three wrong answers.
Don't be jealous.
This is the problem.
I've been doing this for a while, Maeve.
And what I saw happening after she said roaches
was 20 minutes of trying to get her to the right insect.
I would have never gotten the wolf spider.
Let's just skip that. Let's go right to spiders.
I didn't know wolves had spiders.
I would have never gotten the wolf spider.
It's like a pet for a wolf.
My spider!
It all started with a Reddit
post saying, quote,
about the product, if you're scared of wolf spiders, watch out for these lotions,
LOL, right?
And Reddit, who knows?
But more and more reviews started being posted on the Sephora website rating Delicia Drench
four stars and 6,000 hungry wolf spiders.
But what do you expect when you slather your body with something literally called
butter?
Excuse me, I use shea butter. That was rude.
Well, when you put on shea butter, what do you attract?
Oh boy. Rich men.
There you go.
First class, baby.
Rich nerds.
I use
Kerrygold butter.
All over my body on your skin
I wonder what that's for
who's buying this stuff?
oh Dave is
yeah
Peter, a Facebook group for tourists in New York City
suggests an inexpensive and easy
tip for anyone wanting to experience
what it is like to live in the Big Apple.
All you have to do is what?
The something rat related?
It is not rat related.
Okay.
Can I have a hint?
Sure.
Everyone's got to get home.
Well, you've heard of walking tours.
These are stalking tours.
Oh, God.
Stalk celebrities?
Not celebrities.
Stalk regular people?
Stalk regular people.
Just follow New Yorkers around as they live their life.
Oh.
That's, please don't do that.
No.
I think we all live there.
I think that's big for us.
I will quote from this Facebook group, again, devoted to tourists visiting New York.
Quote, pay attention to the homes, the locals on the street.
Follow them discreetly to discover where they shop and eat.
It reads as if it were written by a serial killer who was just trying to get away for the street. Follow them discreetly to discover where they shop and eat. It reads as if
it were written by a serial killer who was just
trying to get away for the weekend.
I worry I might not
be doing anything, like, exciting enough.
I'm just, like, wandering
into CVS forgetting why.
Going back out again. Oh, my
card's not working.
And they're like, the locals are so fascinating.
They walk in a building and then they just walk right out of it.
They make no sense.
Look, she's screaming at a pigeon.
Why?
Imagine they're going home.
So it was so exciting.
They went into a laundromat and they couldn't leave because somebody might steal their clothes.
It was great.
I know.
I'll follow you.
I'll follow you, oh. I'll follow you, oh.
Coming up, it's lightning fill in the blank,
but first it's the game where you have to listen to 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 here most weeks at the beautiful Studebaker Theatre
in downtown Chicago, and come see us on the road.
We'll be in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on February 1st.
And then in Austin, Texas on February 29th.
Our first ever show, by the way, on a February 29th.
For tickets and information to all of our live shows, go to nprpresents.org.
And you can follow us on Instagram at waitwaitnpr.
Come on.
Do it.
We dare you.
Be cool.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me., do it. We dare you. Be cool. Hi, you're on WaitWait, don't tell me.
Hi, Peter.
Hello, who's this?
This is Carrie Pacuco.
Carrie Pacuco.
Where are you calling from, Carrie?
I'm calling from New Orleans,
but I used to live in Chicago.
Oh, really?
How could you ever leave?
I put a snow shovel on the hood of my car
and drove south until people said, what's that thing?
That's why.
I can believe you.
Well, welcome to the show, Carrie.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three news-related limericks with the last word or phrase missing from each.
If you can find that last word or phrase correctly, two of the limericks will be a winner.
Ready to play?
Absolutely. Okay, here is your first limerick. In December, I drank like a champ.
In the new year, that vice I'll revamp. But I think stopping cold is a little too bold.
I don't think I'll go dry. I'll go... Damp? Damp, yes! Very good.
So you have heard, as we all have, of dry January.
That's when you give up drinking for the month.
But now there's a less intense version called damp January.
Why damp?
Well, because they went through a thesaurus,
and every other word that means slightly wet is just disgusting.
So the idea is that some people say,
well, instead of quitting alcohol cold turkey,
you commit to damp January.
That's like dry January,
but with a splash of Jack Daniels.
I've never done a dry January,
and I never will.
Yes.
You just said it's so drunk.
I'm further good.
I'm further, you don't need to.
No, when you think about it, damp January is the perfect solution. It's a way of both giving up alcohol and a way to deal with the stress of giving up alcohol.
And it means like you just might have one drink a day.
Yeah.
Well, I think...
A quick one in the morning.
Yeah, sure.
You know, just to take the edge off
and then, you know. And then one just
before dinner, maybe. Yeah.
And then at dinner, the wine, obviously, that accompanies
a fine meal. I'm not drinking. I can
relate to this. I'm a damn January person.
Are you really? Yes. So you're like, you're cutting back
but not like, okay. Exactly. So tell me what your
routine then is. Oh, I was
sick for the first week, so.
So you're sort of So you're like, you're sick for the first week, so. So you're sort of
So you're like, you're sick for the first week, you didn't drink,
and now you're drinking like you usually do, so if you
average it out, it's only damp ginger.
Okay.
Okay.
You were sick for two days, is that right?
Alright, here
is your next limerick.
My desire to dunk is no whim, so All right, here is your next limerick.
My desire to dunk is no whim, so I joined this Connecticut gym.
We've adjusted the rules so we all can look cool. In our league, we have lowered the...
Rim?
Yes, rim.
Good news for everyone who is short or weak or both.
Low rim basketball leagues are sweeping the nation.
These leagues lower the height of the basket from 10 feet to 8 1⁄2 feet so that everyone can dunk the ball.
Move over, Air Jordan.
It's ground DeVito.
8 1⁄2 still probably has a few people who can't dunk, I would imagine.
Hey, why are you looking at me?
I was looking at Bill.
And if you're like, wow, that's great.
They should make more dumbed down easy versions of other sports as well.
Have I got great news for you about pickleball?
Why, how have they made that easier?
I was just trying to think, like, okay, they took tennis and they made it easier to pick up.
How would you make pickleball easier? And all I could come up with was that little paddle with a rubber ball on it. Yeah, yeah.
All right.
Here is your last limerick.
As bananas get shipped into town,
their freshness will not let me down. With edited genes, they stay yellow or green.
Our bananas will never turn brown.
Yes, you are good A company called Tropic
Has gene-edited bananas
They say
So they never turn brown, reducing food waste
And of course, cutting global banana bread production
By 98%
But are they
Is there still
I mean, as a comedian, it's my duty to ask
Like, the banana peel,
that's never going away, right?
Slipping on a banana peel.
That's the thing.
We don't know.
They say, we've patented this gene-edited banana.
It will not go brown.
We don't know anything else about it.
And we should not get excited until we do.
For example, it might be like it never turns brown, but it screams now when you eat it.
Bill, how did Kerry do in our quiz?
Carrie is really good with three in a row.
Carrie, congratulations.
Congratulations.
Thank you so much.
This was fun.
Thank you.
Take care, Carrie.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
At Planet Money, we take you to the furthest reaches of the global economy.
From the currency black markets of Buenos Aires,
to the Caribbean island where no one owns property, to the giant underground caves where the U.S. government
stored a national cheese supply. Listen to the Planet Money podcast from NPR.
The biggest presidential primary day in this campaign cycle, Super Tuesday. Will the Republican
nominee be settled after these votes? Check out the NPR Politics Podcast for all the news you need about what happens when voters have their say.
Now on to our final game, lightning fill in the blank. Each of our players will have 60 seconds
in which to answer as many fill in the blank questions as they can. Each correct answer is
worth two points. Bill, can you give me the current scores? I believe
Joyelle has four, Peter has two, and Maeve has one. Maeve? Yeah. Surprisingly, you're in third place.
Okay. There's still time. There's still time. You're going to do this. We're going to ask you
these questions. You're going to fill in the blank quickly and rapidly. Okay. Rock it through it. Yeah.
Peter, don't be dawdling. All right. You're right, Maeve. I'll pick it up.
Here we go.
The clock will start when I begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
On Wednesday, Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis faced off in the latest blank.
Presidential competition.
Yes.
Close enough.
Debate.
Yes.
On Wednesday, the SEC approved plans to offer exchange-traded funds tied to cryptocurrency blank.
I don't think it's fair, these questions.
I don't even know what you just said.
Just say a word.
Money.
Money, no, Bitcoin.
After 27 years, Tiger Woods announced an end
to his advertising partnership with blank.
Golf.
No, he's still playing golf,
but he won't advertise with Nike.
Okay. This week, a new
report found that in 2023,
there was a 300% increase
in people naming their dog blank.
Maeve? No.
Would have been a
coincidence were I to ask you that.
No, a 300% increase in people naming their dog
Beer.
The yearly report found that Beer was one of people naming their dog Beer. Wow.
The yearly report found that Beer was one of the most popular dog names of 2023,
proving the old saying, a dog is a man's best enabler.
That's because people wanted to go, come here, Beer.
Come here, Beer.
Yeah.
Good beer.
Bill, how did Maeve do?
She got one right.
There you are.
God bless.
And actually, I'll just say, for this round, you get double.
Well, you got two more, and that's a total of three.
You're almost in first place.
Joyelle still has four.
But you're right there.
You are.
You're right there.
You're within striking distance.
Okay. All right. Peter, you're right there. You are. You're right there. You're within striking distance. Okay.
All right.
Peter, you're up next.
On Wednesday, former New Jersey Governor Blank suspended his presidential campaign.
Chris Christie.
Right.
On Monday, New York City announced a lawsuit against the bus companies transporting Blanks into the city.
Migrants.
Right.
This week, two Republican-led committees approved a report which recommended holding blank in contempt of Congress.
Hunter Biden?
Yes, indeed.
This week, a man in Alabama was arrested after he blanked at a Bass Pro Shop store.
He jumped into the tank and said, look at me, I'm a fish.
That's what he did.
Yes, pretty much. What?
He, he, he.
What?
I don't, I don't know if he said that, but he did take off all his clothes
and did a cannonball into the giant fish tank.
Wow.
That was a 100% guess.
I believe you.
On Tuesday, NASA announced it was postponing its plans to return to the blank.
Fish tank.
Moon.
No, the moon, yes.
With a total of five wins, the movie oppenheimer led the 2024
blank awards golden globe awards yeah yes this week an indiana couple held their wedding ceremony
with 30 guests at their favorite coffee shop even though they had not blanked uh been married
no married bother getting permission from the coffee shop employees of the Employees of the Mansion House Coffee Shop
in Indianapolis were shocked
when a full wedding party,
including bride, groom, officiant guests,
walked into the coffee shop,
took over a whole room,
blocked the entrance with their stuff,
and had their ceremony.
Even worse, once the ceremony was done,
everybody just sat down at the shop,
ordered one coffee,
and sat on their laptops for six hours.
Bill, how did Peter do on our quiz?
Six right, 12 more points, a birthday high of 14.
All right.
Yes, birthday boy.
If you get five, we tie.
That would be fun.
All right, so, Joyelle, this is for the game.
Here we go.
Fill in the blank.
This week, the UN began hearings on allegations
that blank is committing genocide in Gaza
Israel right this week a man in Wisconsin was arrested for drunk driving after he blanked
crashed into a Bass Pro Shop and
It worked for Peter I don't blame
Stuck a police station for a hotel where he could crash for the night
According to a new report executives at Tesla and SpaceX are becoming concerned by
Blank's drug use.
Jessica Berg. That's not even a person.
No.
It's just an employee. Mark Bezos.
No.
The other one, Elon Musk, citing
a new state law on
objectionable books in schools, a district
in Florida has banned Blank from
their libraries. Merriam-Webster.
Exactly. Dictionaries.
The Sarasota School District
refused a donation of new dictionaries, citing a
recently enacted Florida law on
objectionable content in school libraries.
Critics called this decision ridiculous,
and they stressed to the school board officials
that dictionary is spelled
D-I-C-T.
Bill, did Joyelle do well enough to win?
Well, she got three right, bringing her total to ten,
which means...
Birthday boy!
The birthday boy is the champion.
This is the best thing that could have ever happened on my birthday.
We'll take a minute and our panelists predict after the Stanley Cups,
what will be the next big craze to sweep the nation.
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 Koticka writes our limericks.
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shana Donald.
Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre.
BJ Litterman composed our theme.
Our program is produced
by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Dornblas,
and Lillian King.
Special thanks to
Monica Hickey
and Blythe Robertson.
Peter Gwynn is Pretty in Pink.
Emma Choi is our vibe curator.
Technical direction
is from Lorna White.
Our CFO is Colin Miller.
Our production manager
is Robert Newhouse.
Our senior producer
is Ian Chilock
and the executive producer
of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mike Danforth.
Now panel, what will be the next big craze?
Joelle Johnson.
I'm never having a baby showers.
Maeve Higgins.
The next big craze is a team.
A moose cleaning the outside of your car, a mouse cleaning the inside.
And Peter Gross.
Instead of breaking up,
people will say to their partner,
no, honey, you sit in the window seat
on our Boeing plane.
Well, depending on how that happens,
panel, we'll ask you about it on
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you, Bill Curtis. Thanks also to Peter Gross,
Joelle Johnson, and Maeve Higgins.
Thanks to our fabulous audience
here at the Studebaker Theatre
in downtown Chicago.
And thanks to all of you for listening.
I am Peter Sagal.
And we'll see you next week.
This is NPR. Telling me how you spend your money. And we dig until we get answers. I had a bad feeling you were going to bring that up.
Planet Money finds out.
All you have to do is listen.
The Planet Money podcast from NPR.
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On It's Been a Minute, I give you fresh ways of
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