Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Kathleen Hanna
Episode Date: July 27, 2024This week, punk icon and author Kathleen Hanna joins panelists Peter Grosz, Meredith Scardino, and Mo Rocca to talk about her new memoir and the SooperDooperLooperLearn more about sponsor message choi...ces: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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The Olympics take center stage this summer, this time in Paris.
The 1A Podcast dives into topics beyond the headlines with our series, Rings and Things.
Take a look at what it takes to prepare for an event like the Olympics, from designing
uniforms to new sports making their debut this year.
Join us for Olympics coverage this summer with the 1A Podcast from WAMU, NPR.
Hey, it's Peter Segel here, and I want to tell you about some exciting things that are with the 1A podcast from WAMU NNPR. realized, so are we! So Wait, Wait is going to the convention. We'll be bringing you
bonus podcasts with our exclusive convention coverage talking about the things no one else
is brave enough to. And Wait, Wait producers Ian Chilag and Mike Danforth are bringing
back How to Do Everything. It's my wife's favorite comedy podcast from NPR. And I wish
I was kidding. We'll have fresh
episodes for you right here in the feed. Get ready for all this new stuff coming
your way. Don't be scared by what's new. Embrace it. You'll love it.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is, wait, wait, don't tell me. The NPR News Quiz. I'm the man with a gold medal in voice gymnastics.
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 so much.
It's really great to be back with you.
Later on, we're going to be talking today to Kathleen Hanna of the feminist punk band
Bikini Kill.
They are touring again this summer, 34 years after the band was founded.
We'll ask her what it's like to have to get your doctor's permission before you jump into
the mosh pit.
But first, we want to hear your anthem of rebellion.
Give us a call to play our games.
The number is 1-888-wait-wait.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Mary Kryan from Old Mystic, Connecticut.
Now, I happen to know Old Mystic, having been there.
No way.
Yeah way. Yeah way.
And what do you do there?
I'm actually a nuclear test engineer in a small shipyard in Groton, Connecticut.
Oh my God.
Wow.
That's where they build our nuclear subs.
So when you say you're a nuclear test engineer, does it look like they turn on the nuclear
engine, you have to go down there for a while, and you come back and if you're fine, it's
working?
It's a terrific savings in light bulbs.
Exactly.
Well, welcome to the show, Mary.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First up, she is the creator and show runner
of Girls 5EVA, a fabulous show,
all three seasons of which are on Netflix.
It's Meredith Scardino.
Hello, hello.
Hello.
Hello.
Next, a writer and actor who can be seen at the Williamstown Theatre
Festival July 30th and 31st in the new play Marcel on the Train. It's Peter
Gross. And a correspondent for CBS Sunday Morning and author of the New York
Times best-selling rock-toe-genarians late in life debuts comebacks and triumphs it's mo rocker
Hi Mary
So Mary of course you're gonna start us off with who's bill this time bill Curtis is gonna read you three quotations
We found in this week's news your job correctly identify or explain just two of them do that
You won our prize the voice of anyone you might choose for your own purposes whatever they may be
All right. Oh ready to they may be. All right, ready to go?
Yes.
All right, your first quote is an official message delivered from a presidential campaign
officially on Thursday.
Trump is old and quite weird.
That is the shift in tone we're seeing now that who is the likely Democratic nominee
for president?
Vice President Kamala Harris.
Yes indeed Kamala Harris.
Biden is out.
Kamala is in and Democrats are really jazzed.
It's not about Harris potentially being the first female president or the first South
Asian president.
It's about her being a president we don't have to worry about on the stairs
Democrats are just an amazing change of mood because they finally have the candidate they want
anybody else
And she'll also be wouldn't she be the first brat president that's yes
Yes, she is the first brat president. Or so she was called by Charlie.
Help me out.
XCX.
XCX.
XCX.
Right.
She said Kamala is brat.
And this apparently won her the youth vote for reasons
I am incapable of understanding.
I've been enjoying watching all the pundits talk about,
now, our young, of course, someone young in the office
told us
what brat is.
And just like going and trying to figure it out.
It's very sad.
The funny thing is also it's kind of like a messy party girl a little bit who makes
some mistakes.
And so sometimes when you tell someone that, then they're like, oh, so they don't like,
she doesn't like her?
She doesn't like Kamala Harris? And it's like, no's like no no, that's a compliment. It's a compliment
It's a good thing and she has to win Wisconsin a swing state and over there. They might think she meant she's a brat
So interesting you mentioned Wisconsin because she
She loves butter like these cooking videos are amazing and there's a video
She loves butter like there's a great video of her telling someone off camera, she didn't realize she
was on camera, how to make a Thanksgiving turkey and she just goes all in on the butter
and then in a recent cookie baking video it's the same thing and I thought that is such
a great swing state strategy.
Oh yeah.
Do you think she's taking like big butter kickbacks?
Now the question is of course everybody's talking about now we have to talk about something is who Kamala Harris is gonna pick as her running mate
and everybody thinks of course Joe Biden. No one has said he's too old to be
vice president. Vice president doesn't matter. We all know it doesn't matter.
Could be a butter Joe Biden. You know, carved out of butter.
Oh, butter Biden.
No back better butter Biden.
Alright, your next quote is from a disappointed frequent flyer on Southwest Airlines.
This is the end of the people's airline.
That person was talking about what big change from Southwest that they announced this week.
Oh yeah, no more just pick your own seat.
Yeah, they're switching to assigned seating like all the old boring airlines.
Southwest is finally getting rid of its trademark first-come first-served seating plan.
Now it's just like any other airline.
They're even changing their
slogan, you know, you are now free to move about the country. Now it's Southwest, free
will is an illusion.
They're going to get pilots now too, I heard.
Yeah, really. As opposed to whoever's like the first in line at morning goop A, you get
the seat way up front.
But wait, so the person from that quote is like, oh, it's all over?
The people enjoyed fighting for their seats?
People loved it.
One Southwest passenger told The Washington Post, quote,
I woke up to a ton of texts from friends giving me the news.
And another said he liked the old system
because he was a, quote, dedicated middle seat
enthusiast.
I feel like he's going to be fine.
You think he's going to be fine?
It's still the worst seat. You're always going to be fine. You think he's going to be fine? It's still the worst seat.
You're always going to be able to get that seat.
The guy who said he was a middle seat enthusiast, he has a friend?
Yeah.
Because if he had a friend, he wouldn't need to sit in the middle seat.
Doesn't that sound a little bit like some kind of pervert euphemism?
A middle seat enthusiast?
Now, what's interesting, Meredith, is apparently they're not doing it to earn more money to
compete with the, you know, as they call them, the legacy airlines like United and American
and Delta.
They're doing it, they say, because the other competing cheap airlines are beating them
on price and they need to compete with them.
And Spirit Airlines is like, oh, you're getting rid of open seating?
Fine.
We're getting rid of seats.
All right, here is your last quote.
It's from the New York Times about where some people need to apply deodorant now.
Where your butt meets your thigh.
Like a big pizza pie, that's a more.
No, that was not a more.
That was the Times giving romance advice.
Because what is making dating much harder than it was?
Oh, the heat.
The heat because of climate change, right?
That's the answer.
The New York Times says that climate change is ruining dating because it's making us
all sweaty and gross all the time.
This article was written by a guy who would be sweaty and gross in ten degree colder weather.
This is why I can't get a date.
This is happening to everyone that I've talked to in my apartment.
But you know.
I'm a middle seat enthusiast.
I was going to say middle seat guy doesn't mind.
Remember, this is service journalism so they have solutions for you daters out there who
are dealing with the heat.
Apply deodorant liberally, especially to that spot.
Choose indoor activities for your date, and most importantly, only sleep with them on
a first date if they have air conditioning.
It's also funny that that's the spot that they picked as a place to apply deodorant.
I mean, what's it again?
Where your butt meets your thigh.
I'm just going to say that place does get damp.
Yeah.
Is there going to be a whole...
There will be.
It's not now.
It's fine now.
Don't worry about it.
But I just want you to know, in theory.
But what about like in, you know, how are things in Norway?
Exactly.
Or somewhere where it's like a little cooler?
Is it just Shag City?
Nothing's getting in the way.
Oh, you mean what they used to call Oslo, now Shag City?
Yeah, I got it.
Bill, how did Mary do on our quiz?
Like a mushroom cloud, she blew the roof off and won three in a row.
Congratulations!
Thank you.
Well done.
Thank you.
Right now, panel, we have some questions for you. And first, it's a game that we're going to call...
The Race for the Bronze.
Because let's not kid ourselves.
So the Olympic Games in Paris have now begun, and we are going to ask you about some events
that are happening there, rapid fire, true-false style.
So if you get yours right, you get a point.
Here we go.
Moe, true or false, after reports
that the Paris Olympic Village would be furnished
with quote cardboard anti-sex beds,
an Olympic gymnast posted a video showing
that you could in fact have sex in the beds.
I'm gonna say true.
That is true.
Meredith, true or false,
he did it by having sex on the bed.
True.
No, it's false.
He just did somersaults on the bed, but no guarantees if that's not how you have sex.
Peter Chur...
Did he stick to landing?
No.
Peter Chur false.
The first American torchbearer in the torch relay was the first responder who had rescued
victims of recent tornadoes in Ohio.
True.
No, it's false.
The first American torchbearer was the senior executive vice president of customer offers
and order processing at Best Buy.
So inspiring.
And Peter, true or false, after injuring his ring finger practicing for the Olympics, Australian
field hockey player Matthew Dawson had to miss out on the games.
I'm going to say false. practicing for the Olympics, Australian field hockey player Matthew Dawson had to miss out on the games.
I'm gonna say false.
It is false because he had the doctors amputate the finger
so he didn't have to miss the games.
Oh, wow.
Wait, say the first part of it again?
What was the problem?
So he injured his fingers, ring finger.
How? Do you know how?
Presumably playing field hockey.
Okay.
Apparently it was a choice between missing the games
and letting his finger heal or cutting it off and going. So he went. Anyway, that does it for our 2024
Paris Olympics preview. Remember, it's not about winning or losing, it's really only
about winning. And also, if you have recently voluntarily amputated your finger, do not
swim in the River Seine. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. From NPR. On this week's episode of Wild Card, actor and Reading Rainbow host LaVar Burton says
he knows people see him in a certain way.
It is hard to imagine you getting really angry about something.
Oh my God, you could not be more wrong.
I'm Rachel Martin.
Join us for NPR's Wild Card podcast, the game where cards control the conversation.
New from the Embedded Podcast.
Elite female runners are being told they can't compete because of their biology.
Not only can you not compete, you're not actually female.
Hear about the 100-year history of sex testing in women's sports and the hard choices these
athletes are facing now.
Listen to Tested, a new series from CBC and NPR's embedded podcast.
The Constitution, our founding document, says a lot about how our country has evolved and
who we want to be.
But it's not set in stone.
So for the next month, we'll be digging into the history behind some of its most pivotal amendments.
Listen to We the People on the Throughline podcast from NPR.
Truth. Independence. Fairness. Transparency. Respect. Excellence.
This is NPR. So at this point in the show, we want to take a moment and give you an exciting update in
the world of NPR+.
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Now, back to the show.
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 Peter Gross, Bo Rocca, and Meredith Scardino.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segel.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you so much.
Right now it is time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, Bluff the Listener game.
Call 1-888-WAITWAIT to play our game on the air or check out the pinned post on our Instagram page
at WaitWaitNPR.
Hi, you're on Wait Wait Don't Tell Me.
Hi, my name is Aaron and I'm calling from Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
Oh my gosh, Jackson Hole, a fantastically beautiful place.
I was lucky enough to be at once.
What do you do there?
I work in operations for a hiking and biking tour company
that takes people on trips in Grantee, Ton Teton and Yellowstone National Park. Oh wow that
sounds like a dream job am I right? Yeah it's a dream job I love it.
Well Aaron it's great to have you with us you're gonna play our game in which
you must tell truth from fiction. Bill what is Aaron's topic? Not safe for work.
There's all kind of faux pas one can do at the office,
drink all the coffee without refilling it,
stealing all the company secrets,
selling them to the Chinese.
Our panelists are gonna tell you about something
someone did at the office that raised a few eyebrows,
caused some problems, pick the real one,
and you'll win the weight-weighter of your choice
on your voicemail.
Are you ready to apply?
I am ready.
All right.
First, let's hear from Peter Gross.
Obergs Technologies is a small growing company that wanted to ease the workload of their
overstressed staff, but instead of hiring new workers, which would be too expensive,
they employed the services of a four foot five inch AI robot named Quickie, a strange
portmanteau of co-worker reality.
The bosses wanted Quickie to have a human touch, so they allowed it to sit in on meetings,
listen to conversations in the break room, and generally observe their work habits.
When Quickie went live this week, it mimicked human office behavior a little too well.
It stole people's lunches.
It microwaved fish in the kitchen.
It started coming in late and saying it had car trouble.
It even asked to leave early saying it, quote,
probably had COVID and then went to a baseball game.
Then in a bizarre mashup of excuses,
it requested the whole week off because its grandmother was
dying and also having a baby.
Oberge Technologies was thoroughly embarrassed
and had to apologize to irate customers
because they had just sold and shipped 1,000 units of their latest invention, a 4 foot 5 inch AI robot named Quickie.
A company hires a robot to be an employee and it turns out to have learned all the worst
habits from its fellow employees.
Your next office ordeal comes from Meredith Scardino.
Usually the only thing that stems from a cubicle that has the power to paralyze an entire office
is the way one guy eats salad.
It's disgusting.
But at Protective Solutions LTD, a small packaging supply company in Stonehouse, England, there's
something even more intrusive in the workplace.
A tiny potted plant purchased 15 years ago and brought to work by the company's bosses
has grown and grown into what is now a 300 foot long beast.
According to the managing director of Protective, the rapidly growing Hedera plant, quote, goes
wherever it wants to.
With offshoots tracing the ceiling, dipping down to the floor, covering desks and strangling
desktop computers.
Displaying the cockiness and entitlement of an 80s day trader and with, quote, new sprouts
appearing every day, morale at protective is at an all-time low.
As employees gunning for a corner office have to hear sorry, it was taken by the boss's
plant.
A little bitty ivy plant brought in 15 years ago has now completely taken over an office
in England.
Your last workplace comes from Morocco.
Zach Bagnoli had a problem.
Every July his Minneapolis-based insurance company hosts a summer soup-tacular party.
This year he was tasked with making gazpacho, the traditional cold tomato-based Andalusian
favorite, rich with vegetables and spices.
But Zach forgot to bring the batch he'd made from home.
Luckily, for 14 years he'd been accumulating McDonald's fancy ketchup packets in his lower
left desk drawer.
After squeezing them into that goldfish bowl that sat empty since the
pandemic, he added some spice, courtesy of Taco Bell hot sauce packets from 2018, lower right-hand
drawer. As for the crucial vegetables that make gazpacho a meal, in his upper left drawer, he found
33 packets of Heinz sweet relish from that Wendy's that closed during the Bush administration.
Bush 41.
Most people chose to sip Zack's nitrous gazpacho through the coffee stirrers he kept in his
upper right drawer.
Still, most everyone fell sick with a nasty case of gaspacho and sodium poisoning.
Symptoms include feeling intoxicated and confused.
Said Zach, I'm not worried.
I just blamed Mindy and her Burger King mustard shots.
Those things were disgusting.
All right.
Here are your choices.
Something odd and unpleasant happened in an office recently.
Was it from Peter Gross, a company that makes an AI robot, trained one to be an employee
and it became the worst one they ever had because it learned well.
From Meredith Scardino, a little plant brought into an office has become a giant, monstrous
ivy that is threatening to push the humans out.
Or from Moe, an office worker in Minneapolis treated his coworkers to his ketchup packet
gazpacho, making them sick with sodium poisoning.
Which of these is the real story of an office mishap we found in the news?
I'll go with the story of the McDonald's and the soup packet.
Great. Done. Final answer.
Alright. Your choice then is Moe's story of the guy who made gazpacho with nothing but
McDonald's ketchup packets.
To bring you the correct answer, let's hear from someone who knows all about this real
story.
It started off as a little plant in their bathroom and Ali and Desmond in here.
And it just seems to like the environment in here.
That was Charlotte, one of the employees at Protective Solutions in the UK talking about
the monstrous 300-foot plant that has taken over their office.
I'm afraid, and this is odd for a guide,
you have been led astray.
So you did not win a game, but you did earn a point
ultimately for Mo for his delicious recipe,
and we can't thank you enough for playing,
and I look forward to seeing you and talking to you
where you work as soon as possible.
Thank you so much for calling.
Thank you.
Let me grow, let me grow, let me grow.
And now the game we call Not My Job.
Back in 1990, Kathleen Hanna formed the feminist punk band Bikini Kill and, without really
meaning to became
the face of the riot girl movement.
They set out to smash the patriarchy but 30 years later it still seems to be here so they
have to tour again.
They're doing it this summer.
Kathleen and Hannah, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. So let's talk about the tour first.
Bikini Kill was the first of many musical projects, or rather one of many musical projects
you've done.
What inspired you to get the band back together, as they say, and take them on the road?
I really need a beach house in Malibu, and feminist art pays so well that I just figured, you know, go for the
millions.
I mean, clearly with everything going on in the world, we are just like kind of reinvigorated
to sing the songs again.
Absolutely.
It just felt like the right time.
You know, I didn't want to sing these songs 15 years ago and I really want to sing them
again now.
They feel really like it feels good physically to sing them on stage.
Maybe when you sang them 30 years ago it worked but the effect wore off.
Now you have to reapply bikini kill.
Let's talk about your background.
I was reading in your book, I was reading your book that you recently published, Rebel
Girl, which is a remarkable memoir.
But I was surprised by so many things in it. One of them, I was so surprised by your first time singing on stage, which you say in the
book was like a really important moment.
You realize that's what you wanted to do.
Could you tell us about that?
Yeah, I got the part of Annie in the musical Annie.
Yes.
If you're going to play Annie, that's the show to do it in.
Yeah. And if you're going to play Annie, that's the show to do it in, yeah.
Well, what actually happened was a woman
who had a son who went to the school
complained that it was sexist, that there weren't very
many parts for boys in it.
So the play actually ended up being a really horrible mashup
of Annie and Oliver.
Also, about orphans, I guess, they're
like, let's do one of boy orphans and girl orphans. Wow. And then they were fighting
each other so it was like West Side Story also. I couldn't believe that because it's
far from the worst thing that happens to you in your youth, but it was amazing to me that
like there, you know, this girl
who deserves this break and deserves this outlet, she gets it and even at the age of
whatever it was, 11, the patriarchy comes and ruins it again.
It's like, that's terrible.
Did you in fact end up with a big fight with Oliver at the end?
Only one orphan can walk away.
I mean, I did give him some pretty bad glars in the hallway but
he was like two feet tall like and I was like four foot eight so I really felt
like it was not a fair fight right and he was a very cute sweet kid and he made
everybody cry with that where is where is love it's a tear-jerker it is a
tear-jerker can you can you still do or have you been tempted to do the big song tomorrow from that song from that show?
Oh, I do it all the time. Can can can we hear it?
I can't do it with earplugs. Let's see. Uh, the sun will come out
I can't do it right now
I just drove here from Hershey Park, Pennsylvania
I literally, I just drove here from Hershey Park, Pennsylvania. Oh.
I was like, I was on roller coasters for like 10 hours.
So I'm sort of like, fried.
Did you just go to Hang or were you guys playing at that,
there's a big venue there?
Oh, yeah.
No, we don't play venues at that.
It's not that big?
OK.
Thank you very much.
You could.
You deserve it.
Yeah, of course.
You know, I went to ride the super duper looper again because I rode it when I was like 10 and so
I took my son so he could ride it and he loves roller coasters.
He's an enthusiast.
That's great.
I was just there a month ago.
It's thrilling.
It's a nice park.
It's a nice park.
When you walk around in a big public place like Hershey Park, are you recognized by your
fans from any of the projects you did? But I'm thinking mainly of Bikini Kill.
No, and oddly the day that we went it was Foo Fighters who were playing and Foo
Fighters, Dave Corlew used to be in Nirvana and we were friends with them when we all
first started playing music and everyone was wearing Nirvana shirts and Foo
Fighters shirts and not one person
recognized me. So as I was sort of on the rise, I was like coming to terms with, did
I make the right decision? Like, should I have like, should I sign to a major label?
Should I have, you know, and I was like, you know what, my son is so psyched right now
and we're having a really good time and no one's coming up and bothering us. And I was
like, this is actually kind of awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah, there you go.
That is great.
Yeah.
And now I wish it would make the story perfect
if it turned out that Dave Grohl had played Oliver in that production.
You did.
I wanted to ask you about what, I mean, because people talk about your band.
Like, it started this huge movement called Riot Girl
of independent women in punk and in music.
And I want to ask you what your sense of your own legacy
and influence was looking back now.
I mean, are you talking to, like, for example,
young women who saw you, you know,
who showed up when they were young and saw you
and were inspired to do something?
I mean, what do you feel is like Bikini Kill's legacy?
I don't know.
I don't really think about it.
Like, do you think about your legacy?
All the time.
I don't know.
I just...
I am entirely focused on death, Kathleen Hanna.
Wonder what I shall leave behind.
I'm surprised you're not.
But I...
He's already curated his own museum.
I have.
No, I mean, to my knowledge, I've never inspired anybody to
start their own band, but you have.
Yeah, I mean, it feels super great.
Like when things like that happen, like, you know, I was on
the street and some women like pulled their car over and was
like, I became a women's studies professor because of you.
And I was like, that's the highest compliment of all time.
So it just makes me feel like I'm a super successful artist and like I do my job well but I don't feel
like I'm like a legacy icon or any of that stuff. Like I'm really looking forward to the stuff I'm
going to do next week and the week after that and the week after that. Like I'm still making music
and I'm still writing and I have a bunch of projects. I'm making a documentary about my
music and I'm still writing and I have a bunch of projects I'm making a documentary about my my late uncle who is the world's oldest living drag queen
Darcelle 15 from Oregon yeah so I have a lot of projects going and I'm always
looking towards the future I'm like a shark I can't stop moving or I'll die
well Kathleen Hanna it is a pleasure to talk to you. We have invited you here to play a game that this time we're calling...
Kathleen Hanna Meet Hanna Barbera.
Hey, you let up.
You must know, I think you and I are similar in generation, so you must remember that Hanna
Barbera is the legendary animation studio behind beloved shows like the Flintstones
and Scooby Doo and less beloved shows like the Partridge Family 2200 AD. So we're gonna ask you
three questions about Hannah Barbera the animation studio get two right and
you'll win our prize for one of our listeners the voice of anyone they might
choose in their voicemail. Bill who is Kathleen Hannah playing for?
Sonny Paley of Georgetown California. So here's your first question Flintstones
fans take the show very seriously so when many of them realize that no one ever mentions what Barney Rubble's job is, they
began calling the studio at all hours.
The calls were so frequent that the studio responded how?
A, by having whoever picked up the phone immediately say, I know why you're calling.
You want to know what Barney Rubble did for a living.
He worked at the quarry.
B, by making a special eight-hour long episode that follows Barney Rubble did for a living? He worked at the quarry. B, by making a special eight hour long episode
that follows Barney's entire work day minute by minute.
Or C, by just canceling the show out of spite.
Oh god, that's so hard.
I thought he, for some reason I was thinking
he worked at the bowling alley.
No, he just spends a lot of time there.
That's right, A. And no surprise, the majority of those
calls were late at night from drunk people. Next question, that was very good. After the
Flintstones, Hanna-Barbera had another huge hit with Scooby-Doo. Now in order to create
Scooby, animators did what? A, gave an actual Great Dane LSD and watched how it acted. B. Gave themselves LSD, looked at a Great Dane,
and drew how it looked.
Or C. Studied all the desirable traits of award-winning show
dog Great Danes and then drew the opposite.
Oh, wow.
I guess I'll go with the safe answer, three. But I think it's really two.
But I'm going to say three.
It is three, or rather, C. And I feel bad that you saw it as a safe answer.
Yeah.
So they interviewed a great game breeder.
But what's the most perfect example of the breed?
If it's a perfect dog, what does it look like?
And she described it, and they just drew the opposite. All right. Though they were
hugely successful, as we remember from our childhoods, Hannah Barbera loved to
work fast and cheap, so sometimes a mistake slipped through, like which of
these in the Saturday morning cartoon Super Friends? A. Sometimes a
superhero's pants would disappear mid-scene. B. Sometimes Batman's voice
would come out of Superman's mouth.
Or C, sometimes Green Lantern had three arms.
Oh, that's B.
Actually, yes it was B. It was actually all of the above.
I love when they do that.
Wow. Not a lot of quality control back in our youth. Am I right? Bill, how did Kathleen
Hannon do in our quiz?
She killed the bikini!
Kathleen, you're something!
Not many people do that well.
That's true. Three right. Congratulations.
Kathleen Hanna is a singer, songwriter, and punk icon.
Her new memoir, Rebel Girl, is out now.
It is a bracing and moving read.
And you get to see her on tour this summer with Bikini Kill.
Kathleen Hanna, thank you so much for joining us on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
That was Kathleen Hanna.
That was an enormous party.
Take care.
In just a minute, Bill shows off his signature cocktail in our Listener Limerick Challenge.
Call 1-3-8-wait-wait to join us in the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
New from the Embedded Podcast.
Female athletes have always needed grit and talent, but for decades, they've
also needed a certificate.
There was chit chat about, is that really a woman?
And even now, they're still being checked and questioned.
Their story is the newest series
from CBC and NPR's Embedded.
It's called Tested.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
Do you want in on a secret?
Like why bro culture is making a comeback
or why a makeup fad is suddenly sweeping your feed?
On the It's Been A Minute podcast,
we know these things don't happen by accident.
So join me as we go beyond the trends and find out the why.
Follow the It's Been A Minute podcast from NPR.
The Bullseye podcast is, according to one journalist, the, quote,
kind of show people listen to in a more perfect world.
So make your world more perfect.
Every week, Bullseye puts the pop in culture,
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and novelists to keep you on your pop culture target.
Listen to the Bullseye podcast, only from NPR and Maximum Fun.
["Bullseye"]
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this wait wait don't tell me the NPR News Quiz
I'm Bill Curtis we are playing this week with Mo Rocca Peter Gross and
Meredith Scardino and here again is your host at the Studebaker Theatre in
Chicago Illinois Peter Segal thank you Bill theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal. Thank you, Bill. In just a minute, Bill gets
arrested for committing a white-collar rhyme. If you'd like to play, give us a call at
1-888-888-924-8924. But right now, we'll handle some more questions for you from the week's
news. Mo, there's a new form of deception, apparently, between married couples.
It's not about cheating.
It's that couples are hiding what from each other?
Not big purchases.
That's too obvious.
That's exactly right.
Wow.
Stealth shopping is what it's called.
Several people who do it were profiled by the Wall Street Journal, the go-to paper for
husbands who get mad at their wives for buying stuff.
And it's true, people are ashamed of spending so much money.
One woman said she comes home from the stores, right?
She smuggles her packages into the back door and then hides them.
One guy gets his new shirt sent to his office and launders them so they don't look new when
they come home.
Makes sense.
All of that is much easier than having a ten second conversation.
And these are all marriages that are going to last forever and ever.
Peter, the Washington Post reports that with the big rise in VR gaming, right, that's
with the headset, you're in the virtual reality, there's also a big rise in VR gamers doing
what?
Walking out into the street and getting hit by a real car.
Almost. Basically going to the ER because they're injuring themselves.
You've heard of course of injuring yourselves
while playing actual games in the real world, but now you can do the same thing
without risking any health benefits or exposure to the sun.
So of course, right, you're playing VR games, you have this headset,
you're wearing sort of headphones, you have immersive virtual world, you think
you're igniting your lightsaber to fight Darth Vader right in front of you when you don't
see that you're standing at the top of the stairs.
Or you're in a knife store.
Bad place to do that.
Don't do it in a knife store.
So don't go into a knife store.
With no cases.
So you're like, don't, whatever you do, important knife store. Don't go into a knife store. With no cases. So you're like,
don't, whatever you do, important safety tip, do not go into a knife store and play your VR combat
game there. Don't do it there. And if you own a knife store, don't let the guy with a VR thing in.
I know you want to be welcoming. You know, yeah, you want to be like, this is the cool Knife Store. You're a cool Knife Store guy. It's fine.
Yeah, come on in here.
I'd rather you do it here than some other Knife Store.
Just imagine down at like, you know, a cool Knife Store.
It's like, guy comes in just carrying his PlayStation 5
and his VR headset, he puts it down.
So you just mind if I do this here?
Yeah, bro.
Cool.
Whatever.
Totally, man.
There's no rules here.
Live in the present.
It's the Knife Store.
Right. Mo, a knife store. Right.
Mo, a team of Japanese scientists have published a list of ways people can reduce food waste
in their home, including doing what before throwing out old food?
I mean, to eliminate food waste before you can throw it.
Can you give me a clue?
Sure.
It's like something like, I'm sorry, I filled up on bread first.
Oh, uh, um, uh, eat it yourself.
No, you can't eat it, it's gone bad.
Oh, you can't eat it yourself.
So, uh, uh, you have wronged this food, Moe.
What do you do when you apologize for the food?
You apologize for the food.
You apologize for the food. Oh! God. That was...
You got it.
A lot of things on this list, very common sense, like making sure that the oldest food that's
closest to aspiring is closest to the front so you see it, and telling your leftovers
you're sorry before throwing them away.
And you have to make it, just so you know, you have to make it a real apology.
It's not like, oh, I'm sorry that you felt the need to get moldy.
Couldn't you just get Nancy Pelosi to come in there and just take the food and tell us
about it?
Just pressure the food to leave voluntarily.
She's good at that.
The idea, you may be wondering why you do this, but the idea is over time you'll become
so aware and so guilty about the way you're wasting food that you will buy more efficiently
just what you need. Plus, you'll save money on electricity because you're wasting food that you will buy more efficiently just what you need.
Plus you'll save money on electricity because you're going to open your refrigerator less
often because you don't like how the pasta looks at you.
It would also suck to be in a relationship with someone that doesn't apologize that easily
and then you hear them at the freaking refrigerator saying sorry to like some fish.
How could we let it get so bad?
So I guess I'll have to say I'm sorry again.
Coming up, it's lightning fell in the blank,
but first it's the game where you have to listen
for the rhyme.
If you'd like to play on air, call or leave a message
at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924 where you can see us most weeks here at the Studebaker Theater
in Chicago or come see us on the road.
We will be in Minneapolis on August 29th and 30th.
And check out the WAITWAIT standup tour coming this September to Fort Lauderdale, Tampa,
Orlando, and Atlanta.
Tickets and information for all shows can be found at nprpresents.org.
How you are on WA Wait Don't Tell Me.
Hi Jennifer Hill I'm from Decatur, Georgia.
Decatur, I know all about Decatur, east of downtown Atlanta right?
Correct.
Absolutely, I know it well. What do you do there?
I am an assistant professor at Agnes Scott College.
Agnes Scott College I have not heard of though that's a pretty cool thing. What do you teach?
Chemistry.
Chemistry? Oh you're one of those real professors you can't teach chemistry you either
have it or you don't well welcome to the show Jennifer bill Curtis is gonna 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 and three news related limericks with the last word or phrase missing from each if you can fill in that last word
Or phrase correctly and two of the limericks you'll be a winner ready to go. Yes. Here's your first limerick
Here's a tweet from the CNN fixture showing off his eponymous spritzer
It's a fun brunch with booze when oh no
Breaking news get back to the office wolf
and oh no, breaking news, get back to the office, Wolf.
Blitzer. Blitzer, yes, what could it possibly be but Wolf Blitzer.
So it's last Sunday, just picture this,
in your Wolf Blitzer and you work all the time,
you're on TV all the time, and you finally take a break.
Oh my God, nothing's happening today.
You go out for brunch and at the place you go,
there is a drink called the Wolf Spritzer on the menu.
And you're like, that's great, of course you gotta have one,
and then you gotta have another, it's a name for you.
It's not like President Biden is gonna drop out of the race today.
So right before the news broke, a wolf blitzer had tweeted a picture of himself holding up
a wolf spritzer, and he's got this relaxed and happy face of a man who knows he's got the day off.
And when he did absolutely have to run into the office and go on the air, he looked sad
as if his wolf spritzer was just off camera with the ice melting.
And he's not allowed to drink it.
Can I just say that years ago I was in a parking lot of a restaurant in Bethesda, Maryland,
and I was with my Colombian aunt who was already in her
80s and CNN is international and Wolf Blitzer came through. He was coming into the restaurant
and she got so excited and I swear to you started going, el lobo, el lobo. Very, very
excited.
That's great. Did the wolf turn around and go Guinness? Here is your next limerick.
Hi, cold baby birdie, I see ya.
My tacos give me an idea.
This wrap keeps you warm and safe from the storm.
You'll be fine in this grilled corn.
Tortilla?
Tortilla, yes, a Texas woman found an orphaned baby bird in the ground without a box to keep it
in.
She quickly warmed up a tortilla on the grill and wrapped the bird up in it.
That's cute.
Turns out the strategy was surprisingly delicious.
I mean, effective.
How does this story end?
It could go two extremely different ways.
No, it has a very happy ending.
They wrapped up the bird in the tortilla, and then they called a wildlife rehab center,
who came over and found the bird safe and healthy after they brushed the shredded cheese
off of it.
Sadly, the second little bird didn't make it after it said it was on a low-carb diet
and asked for a bowl instead.
Here is your last limerick. Most sharks would prefer to abstain, but much nose candy goes down the drain.
It flows past the ports and the sharks get a snort because the water is filled with...
Cocaine.
Yes, cocaine.
A new study of sharks captured off the coast of Brazil showed that every single
shark tested positive for cocaine.
Every single one.
This explains why sharks are always like, I have to keep swimming or I'll die.
Say hello to my little fiend.
I mean, it occurs to me, like, apparently, like, there are parts of the sea that are,
like, filled with cocaine because of all the cocaine that are being flushed down toilets.
And I'm like, we're wasting too much cocaine.
Yeah.
Isn't there a program?
There's enough of it to get into this ocean and make the sharks cocaine heads.
There are people who need cocaine and can't afford it.
And there are people flushing cocaine down the toilet. We have to, as a country,
find a way to get these people together.
Or else what are we doing on this planet? So wasteful.
It is so wasteful.
So wasteful.
Bring in Sarah McLachlan song up slowly.
Yeah, exactly.
Bill, how did Jennifer do in our quiz?
Yeah, do you believe Jennifer?
She ripped right through it for a total win. Yeah. Congratulations. Well done.
This summer on Planet Money, we're bringing you the entire history of the world.
At least the economics part.
It's Planet Money Summer School.
Every week we'll invite in a brilliant professor and play classic episodes about the birth
of money, banks, and finance.
There will be rogues and revolutionaries and a lot of panics.
Summer School, every Wednesday till Labor Day on the Planet Money podcast from NPR.
Here at Shortwave Space Camp, we escape our everyday lives to explore the mysteries and
quirks of the universe. We find weird, fun, interesting stories that explain how the cosmos
is partying all around us. From stars to dwarf planets to black holes and beyond, we've
got you.
Listen now to the shortwave podcast from NPR.
Numbers that explain the economy.
We love them at the indicator from Planet Money, and on Fridays we discuss indicators in the news.
Like job numbers, spending, the cost of food, sometimes all three.
So my indicator is about why you might need to bring home more bacon to afford your eggs.
Ba-doop.
I'll be here all week.
Wrap up your week and listen to the Indicator podcast
from NPR.
Now onto the 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 now worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Yes I can.
Peter has two, Meredith has three, and Mo has four.
Whoa, all right. So, Peter, you are in third place. You're up first. The clock will start
when they begin your first question. Fill in the blank. During a speech from the Oval
Office on Wednesday, blank explained why he dropped out of the presidential race.
I mean, if they're all going to be this easy, I'm going to be very happy. Joe Biden.
Yes. Following a global tech outage, thousands of blanks
were canceled across the country last weekend.
Flights.
Yes.
This week, the House voted to create a bipartisan task
force to investigate blanks' assassination attempt.
Trump.
Yes.
Blazing across almost 300,000 acres,
a blank in Oregon was named the largest in the country.
Forest fire.
Wildfire, yeah.
For a number of incidents, Florida police
warned residents not to blank on the side
of a particular highway.
Pull over and let their alligators go to the bathroom. No, pull over to take selfies with a quote depressed bear who's been hanging out there.
On Thursday, Disney reached an agreement with union workers to avoid a blank at Disneyland.
Strike?
Yes, according to data Monday was the hottest day across the globe, beating the record set on blank.
Sunday?
Right, the day before before this week a woman
In Canada was ordered to pay a man six hundred dollars after a court ruled that the Coldplay concert
They went to was not blank
Was not the best concert that she would ever go to in her entire life
No that the Coldplay concert they went to together was not in fact a date
The woman said she should not have to reimburse the man for the $600 tickets
because they were obviously on a date and he was treating her,
but the court said otherwise.
So remember, guys, for your own security, this guy got lucky,
but for your own security, whenever you ask a woman to accompany you
to an expensive event, always clearly say, I do not find you attractive in any way.
Bill, how did Peter do in our quiz?
Peter came from behind to get six right, 12 more points, total of 14 puts him in first
place.
All right.
Meredith, you are up next on Wednesday.
Israeli Prime Minister Blank gave a speech before Congress.
Netanyahu.
Netanyahu, yes.
On Monday, scientists confirmed the discovery of Blank 13,000 feet under the sea.
A sea worm.
No, oxygen.
This week, Russia began offering Moscow residents $22,000 each to fight in the war against Blank.
Ukraine.
Right.
On Wednesday, Taiwan experienced flooding after a powerful Blank hit that coast.
Typhoon.
Yes.
After being criticized for his speech at the RNC last week, Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson defended himself by saying Blank hit that coast. Typhoon. Yes, after being criticized for his speech at the RNC last week, Wisconsin Senator Ron
Johnson defended himself by saying blank.
Sorry.
No, he said they wrote the wrong speech into the teleprompter.
After being accused of under serving customers, chain Mexican restaurant Blank said they're
quote reemphasizing generous portions.
Chipotle.
Yes.
On Thursday the NBA announced the new
$77 billion deal with blank.
Netflix.
No, Disney, Comcast, and Amazon.
This week, fans of Hello Kitty were shocked
when a spokesperson for the company
revealed that Hello Kitty isn't blank.
No.
A cat.
It's not.
During an appearance on the Today Show,
VP for Sanrio, the Japanese company
that created Hello Kitty, confirmed that she is quote, not a cat, but an eight-year-old
girl.
Ooh.
And a cat costume.
That explains her cat ears and litter box.
Shocking.
Shocking. Bill, how did Meredith do in our quiz?
She's tracking well. Five right, 10 more points, 13. One behind Peter.
All right. So, Bill, how many does Mo need to win?
Well, five to tie and six to win.
Here we go.
All right, Mo, this is for the game.
Here we go.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, Kimberly Cheethold, the director of the blank,
resigned.
The Secret Service?
Right.
On Thursday, NASA confirmed that there's still
no set return date for astronauts stuck on the blank.
In the space station.
Right.
This week, the British royal family
issued new measures to help combat blank
on their properties.
To combat paparazzi.
No, climate change.
On Friday, SAG-AFTRA authorized a strike
against the companies that make blanks.
Oh, the companies that make video games?
Hold on.
Yes, it's video games.
According to the New York Times, several members of his family are locked in a court battle over control of Blank's media empire.
Rupert Murdoch.
Right, after an investigation, a teacher in India was fired when it was revealed he spent half the school day blanking.
A teacher, oh, he spent half the school day, I mean, on his phone.
Yes, he did, playing Candy Crush.
Oh.
After noticing his class was underperforming,
the school superintendent launched an investigation
and found the teacher was spending almost half the day
playing Candy Crush on his phone.
When asked how he could just stare at his phone all the time
and ignore his students, he said, by way of explanation,
who?
Hmm.
Bill did, Mo, do well enough to win. Big news he got 14 which is a tie with Peter. Congratulations. Holy cow. In just a minute we're gonna ask our panelists to
predict when it's all over what will have been the standout moment from the
Paris Olympics but first let me tell you all 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 Godica, Ryser Limerick, our public address announcer is Paul Friedman,
our tour manager is Shayna Donald.
Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theater, BJ Lederbren, composer at Theme,
our program is lovingly produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King. Special thanks this week to Monica Hickey and Blythe Robertson.
Peter Gwynn is brat. 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 Chilag. And the executive producer of Wait Wait Don't Tell Me is Mike Danforth.
Now panel, what will be the big moment from the Paris Olympics? Morocco.
The usually peaceful Parade of Nations
turns into the 405 as roided up Chinese swimmers
flip off other athletes and cut them off
and suing brawl causes massive pile up.
Meredith Scardino.
Well, they lit the torch mostly just to cover up
the smell of the Sen.
What people did to the Sen.
And Peter Gross.
The Australian 1600 meter relay team will lose their baton
and then find a new one by using the field hockey
players' amputated finger.
Nice.
Well, if any of that happens, we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you, Bill Curtis.
Thanks also to Meredith Scardino, Mo Rocca, and Peter Gross.
Thanks to our fabulous audience here at the Student Writers Theatre in downtown Chicago.
Thanks to all of you out there in the world for listening.
I'm Peter Steagall.
We'll see you next week from Wolf Trap.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is NPR.
Hey, I'm Robert Smith from Planet Money.
And this summer we are bringing you
the entire history of the world.
At least the economics part.
It's Planet Money Summer School.
Every week we'll invite in a brilliant professor and play classic episodes about the birth of money, banks and
finance. There will be rogues and revolutionaries and a lot of panics. Summer School, every
Wednesday till Labor Day on the Planet Money podcast from NPR.
On this week's episode of Wild Card, poet Nikki Giovanni says you can choose your family.
I recommend dogs. But they're faithful, they're intelligent, and they always love you.
I'm Rachel Martin. Join us for NPR's Wild Card podcast, the game where cards control
the conversation.