Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Molly Seidel
Episode Date: December 23, 2023Olympic marathoner Molly Seidel joins panelists Shantira Jackson, Bobcat Goldthwait, and Roxanne Roberts to talk joints, Instacart, and working out like Taylor SwiftLearn more about sponsor message ch...oices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Big news stories don't always break on your schedule, but with the NPR app, news, culture,
and podcasts are ready when you want them in your pocket. Download the NPR app today.
From NPR on WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
The weather outside is frightful,
but my voice is so right.
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 so much.
Listen, I've arrived at the holiday season.
Let's be honest, it can be a slog.
It can last forever.
There's a lot of things we all got to get through.
It feels like a marathon.
So we thought that maybe to get some tips
in getting through this kind of difficult time,
we'd talk to American marathon star
and Olympic medalist Molly Seidel.
She'll be joining us later,
and hopefully she'll have more advice for us
than just, oh, yeah, just poop your pants and keep going.
Our quiz is more of a sprint,
so give it a try by calling us at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
Now let's welcome our first listener contestant.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, my name's Jennifer Lopez, and I live in New York City.
All right.
I'm going to play it cool.
I'm going to play it cool.
I'm assuming, and forgive me for this presumption,
you are not that Jennifer Lopez,
but I'm going to say an even better Jennifer Lopez.
Is that right?
I can't say.
You can't say?
Well, can I ask, what do you do in New York, Jennifer?
I am a nanny over here.
Really?
Can I at least hope that you nanny
for some insanely wealthy person
so you get to, like, play with their toys all day?
I do.
Well, Jennifer, welcome to the show.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First up, a writer for the Style Section of the Washington Post,
OG panelist Roxanne Roberts is here.
Hello, Jennifer.
Next, a writer for Big Mouth Season 7, now out on Netflix, it's Shantira Jackson.
And a comedian whose album Soldier for Christ is available at Pretty Good Friends Records,
it's Bobcat Goldthwait.
Hello, Jennifer.
Hey, how's it going?
How you doing, you crazy little minks?
So, Jennifer, you're going to play
Who's Bill this time.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three quotations from this 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 in your voicemail. You ready to go? Awesome, yes. All right,
here we go. Here is your first quote. They crowd the gate like it's the front door of a Best Buy
on Black Friday. That was the Washington Post commenting on people who line up long before they need to, to get on a what? To get on a airplane.
Yes, an airplane.
Just as we enter into the holiday travel season,
the Washington Post asked psychologists
if they could explain why so many people get up,
to line up, to get on an airplane
long before they're supposed to. Now they say
part of it is just social pressure. You think, look at that dumb guy standing there way too early.
And then you think, wait a minute, I don't want a dumb guy getting on the plane before me.
I'm going to ask you guys, some of whom flew here, do you do this?
I think it depends on what number you are to get on the plane because there's never enough overhead space.
Right.
So I feel like it's less of me being like, I love standing in line and more of, I don't want to give them my bag.
Right.
You do not have my bag.
I see what you do to that. and at this point there's like 300 people and one space for an overhead bag so it's like yes i literally the last time i flew which was like you know yesterday they were like i'm counting how
many people come with bags there's 78 spots and i was like i gotta be one of the 78. But wait, wait, I also flew here, I flew here today
and quote, the carry-on, one lady had like a normal Royal
and she also had this giant like garbage size bag
that had all sorts of stuff in it.
It was like three pieces of luggage.
I love that for her.
I like the people who have a bag in the bag
and then you see them come through and take the bag out.
I say, I like you.
Really?
Now, see, I think that's bending the rules.
I love that.
Break all the rules.
Break them.
There's something about me that, like, and I don't want to brag, but, you know, I'm often in business class.
All right.
And when I get up, everyone goes, oh, I guess everybody's getting on now.
Yeah, that guy got on. That guy can't be in first class.
I thought that guy was just sleeping at the airport, but apparently.
I guess it's now hobos.
Here is your next quote, Jennifer, and this quote is from a congressman.
His staff is wildin'.
That congressman was talking about
the staff of a particular senator
because a member of that staff
was caught filming a sex tape where?
In the Congress room?
Yes, in a Senate hearing room, in fact.
We're using the word staff really loosely.
We are.
So what happened was, sometime in the last few weeks,
a staffer brought a friend, a very, very close friend,
to a congressional committee room,
and there made a sex tape.
So it's amazing.
It's not often a film makes the top 10 on both LinkedIn and Pornhub. That's the most business that's gotten done in
the Senate in a long time. That's true. And the best part, the tape was released by the Daily
Caller, which chose... Very reputable. Very reputable, which chose to censor certain body parts
by covering them up with a picture of the Capitol Dome.
Which I guess was tasteful,
but couldn't have they given the guy a little credit
and used the Washington Monument?
Jennifer, your last quote is from the New York Times.
This year's breakout shape is unknown.
That was from an interesting report that says,
if you want to understand what Americans are interested in,
look at the kind of what that the nation's bakers are buying.
The kind of lettuce?
Not quite.
No? I'm not going to stop and say, what does, uh, lettuce? Not quite. No?
I'm not going to stop and say, what does one bake with lettuce?
I will instead, I will instead give you an example.
Um, all the little Christmas tree-shaped ones we're seeing right now indicate it's going to be Christmas soon.
Oh, cookies!
Cookie cutters, in fact.
Cookie cutters.
According to the Times, in their in-depth investigation,
cookie cutter sales predict cultural trends.
For example, this is all true, demand for guitar shapes
spiked right before the huge Taylor Swift Ears tour.
Lipstick and convertible car shapes sold well before the Barbie movie came out.
So if cookie shapes predict the future, we can say with some confidence,
2024 is going to be a really big year for circles.
Now, we just happen to have a big cookie baker
on the panel, Rachan,
who's been baking professional cookie baker,
or a competitive cookie baker.
Competitive and enthusiastic, and I probably,
I was trying to think,
I probably have about 1,000 cookie cutters.
Right.
Yeah.
Lots and lots of cookies.
What's your favorite?
That's a humble brag.
No, because what happens is that,
is that they're the classics,
the shapes and the Christmas trees
and the candy canes and the snowmen.
But I also have the Capitol, the White House, and the Washington Monument.
This is true.
They say that cookie cutter sales can even predict elections.
They say that in 2016, Hillary Clinton-shaped cookie cutters sold in proportion to Donald
Trump-shaped cookie cutters at about the same results
of the actual election.
And we don't have like a predictive statistic for Biden Trump because, and this is true,
Biden's look is generally so boring that you can't really come up with a cookie cutter
shaped like him.
I feel like he is cookie cutter shaped.
Yeah, he is.
It seems part of the cookie cutter.
It's like, is this
a ghost cookie? What am I
eating? The cookie cutter
maker suggests that if you do want to do something representing
Biden, you go for the aviator glasses that
have become sort of his trademark, or
just leave a regular gingerbread man in the
oven for way too long.
Bill, how did Jennifer do in our quiz?
Got us off to a great start.
3-0.
Perfect score.
Well done, Jennifer.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I think I can say that having won on our show so well that you are the most accomplished,
Jennifer Lopez, there is.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate that.
Thank you, Jennifer.
Take care. All right. much. I appreciate that. Thank you, Jennifer. Take care.
All right. You have a good day.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news. Roxanne, a new study just discovered that apes, chimps and bonobos, may have the ability to do what?
Is this one of those fake studies or is this a real study? This is an actual, real study done by actual scientists.
And reported in the Washington Post, I'm sure.
You know, I've been busy making Christmas cookies.
I understand.
So I need a hint.
You need a hint.
Well, to study this, the apes were sent to their high school reunion without name tags.
To recognize old friends.
Yes.
Apes can recognize old friends.
Recognize old friends.
Researchers found that chimps and bonobos were able to recognize images of apes they had met before,
but hadn't seen for as many as 25 years.
And they're like, oh my God, Dale, it's me, Bobo.
I threw that poop on you, remember?
That's why I never borrow monkey money.
Because they'll know, man.
Yeah, they'll go, dude, where where is that That was like 20 years ago man
Get off my case Bobo
I don't know the rate of ape aging
I don't know how different you look
If you're an ape
From 25 years ago
They lose hair and stuff
Do they do
There's nothing sadder than a bonobo with a comb over it.
Yeah, like...
Yeah, like, like...
Bubbles, Michael Jackson's monkey.
He looks like a used car salesman now.
He's got like...
No, he really does.
He's kinda put a couple LBs on and he's bald.
You've seen him recently?
Yeah, well, not personally, but yeah.
I will remember you like always. Coming up, except no substitutes.
It's our Bluff the Listener game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT-TO-PLAY.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
The day's top headlines.
Local stories from your community.
Your next podcast binge listen.
You can have it all in one place, your pocket.
Download the NPR app today.
On It's Been a Minute, we talk to up-and-comers and icons of culture.
From Barbra Streisand.
You're such a wonderful interviewer.
To Tracee Ellis Ross.
Your questions were so wonderful.
And Christine Baranski.
Oh, thank you for your wonderful questions.
Here are the questions these icons loved to be asked.
Listen every week to It's Been a Minute from NPR.
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.
Cheese cave!
Listen to the Planet Money podcast 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 for us, we make room for you.
Listen to the 1A podcast from WAMU and NPR.
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 Roxanne Roberts, Bob Golfwaite, and Shantira Jackson.
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
called 1-888-WAIT-WAIT-TO-PLAY-OUR-GAME-IN-THE-AIR.
Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Lucy Roberts calling from Los Angeles, California.
What do you do there in L.A.?
I'm a sign language interpreter.
Oh, wow.
Okay, that is a great thing to do.
I've always thought of sign language interpreters. The best thing, in my experience, is sign language interpreter. Oh, wow. Okay, that is a great thing to do. I've always thought of sign language interpreters.
The best thing, in my experience, is sign language interpreters, even when they're talking
to a hearing person, will continue to sign, and it's like hearing somebody talk in Technicolor.
It's awesome.
Yes, we do that.
We're a lot like Italians in that way.
We talk with our hands.
We do that.
Well, Lucy, welcome to the show.
You're going to play our game on which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Lucy's topic?
We'll replace it with something of equal or lesser value.
You can't always get what you want, according to the Rolling Stones,
who ironically did get what they want, eternal life.
Our panelists are going to tell you about people getting something
they didn't ask for this holiday
season. Pick the one who's telling the truth. You'll win the weight-waiter of your choice in
your voicemail. Are you ready to play? I'm ready. Bring it on. All right. First, let's hear from
Shantira Jackson. A restaurant in Worcester, Ohio, recently had the surprise of a lifetime when
Michael Jordan Jr. called to make a reservation for an ultra-private surprise holiday dinner for
his dad, Michael Jordan,
who would be in town for the Cavaliers game.
The owner, Jerry Rothwell,
worried his diner, The Roadhouse, wasn't fancy enough,
so he flipped the decor faster than the Property Brothers.
The day of the dinner, two all-black SUVs pulled up
and out hopped a 5'6", middle-aged white man named Michael Jordan.
He was in town for an insurance convention and a Cavs game. Jerry pushed his disappointment aside enough to give white Michael
Jordan and his friends a night to remember. Plus, Mr. Jordan was so thrilled he even recommended
that the National Actuarial Association hold next year's holiday party at this diner.
As long as they kept the enormous banner that says,
we honor Michael Jordan, the greatest of all time.
A restaurant thinks they're hosting a party for Michael Jordan,
and they are, just not that Michael Jordan.
Your next story of something unwanted
comes from Roxanne Roberts. Charlie Conway planned the perfect proposal for his Christmas-loving
girlfriend, Sarah. A photo with Santa at Boston's Natick Mall. Then Santa would present a ring box
to Sarah and say, perhaps you'd like this for Christmas, and Charlie would drop to one knee.
The mall's general manager was not only in on the plan, but arranged for a discount on the ring and
a TV crew to cover the happy couple. But things went awry quickly. In a really unfortunate coincidence,
Santa was actually Jack Summers, an out-of-work actor and Sarah's ex-boyfriend.
WCVT-TV later reported that Sarah suddenly recognized it was Jack behind the beard,
burst into tears, and ran off with Santa in the ring in hot pursuit. A dumbfounded Charlie was
filmed looking frantically from the camera crew back to the fleeing couple
when the dust settled
Jack was fired from the Santa gig
he and Sarah were back together
and Charlie was broken hearted
but not empty handed
the mall donated a
$5,000 shopping spree
a full refund for the ring
and season tickets for the Red Sox because misery loves
company. A man thought he was going to get engaged with the help of Santa, but did not.
Your last story of a sucky substitute comes from Bobcat Goldthwait. Bahama-bound cruise ship
passengers on their way to a 10-day Christmas Caribbean vacation
were devastated when their voyage was rerouted to Jamaica?
No, Boston.
The passengers dreamt of lying on warm beaches,
eating conch fritters while sipping pina coladas,
but now they get to freeze in New England
eating fried clam sandwiches, simping Dunkin'.
The MSC Miravigali was scheduled to sail from NYC to the Bahamas,
but severe storms forced a last-minute change in the ship's itinerary.
You would think people would be glad to avoid a giant sea storm, but no.
Turns out people would rather die than go to Boston.
No. Turns out people would rather die than go to Boston.
I did not pay $5,000 to come to Boston, said Connie C., who lives in Pennsylvania, according to The Globe.
This was supposed to be our Christmas vacation.
Lakia Allen shared on TikTok, we're from Chicago. We wanted a change in weather. Her friend Vale Montgomery added, we have kids in the pool. It's cold outside.
The pool is not heated. The pool is not heated.
The pool is not heated. While many passengers are disappointed at the change of plans,
you know, there's got to be one guy who was like, oh, hell yeah, I love the departed.
All right.
All right.
So, somebody wanted something.
Somebody was hoping for something,
but they ended up with something else.
Was it from Shantira Jackson, a restaurant,
thinking that they were going to be hosting the great Michael Jordan,
and got another Michael Jordan for their big customer?
From Roxanne Roberts, a guy who thought
that he'd walk out from his visit to
Santa with his fiance and instead got, you know, baseball tickets as his fiance ran off with Santa.
Or cruise passengers who thought they were going to the sunny warm Bahamas ended up in the not
sunny, not warm Boston, Massachusetts. Which of these is the real story of a disappointment in the week's news?
Well, I was going to choose Roxanne's until she said that the mall gave him a bunch of stuff,
which I don't think they would at all.
I'm going to go with Bobcat's story about the cruise.
All right.
You've chosen Bobcat's story of the cruise passengers who ended up in Boston,
in the Back Bay, rather than the Caribbean Sea.
We actually have tape of one of these disappointed people.
There was a slight change to the route,
and we ended up in Boston.
So instead of going down, we're going up.
Yeah, that was a cruise passenger talking to CBS Boston
about being rerouted from the Bahamas to Beantown.
Congratulations, Lucy, you got it right.
You earned a point for Bobcat.
And you've earned
our prize, the voice of your choice
in your voicemail. Congratulations. Well done,
Lucy. Yay, thank you so much, guys.
Thank you so much for playing, Lucy.
And thanks for doing what you do. Take care.
You too. Bye.
And now the game we call Not My Job.
After winning multiple NCAA distance running championships as a college student,
Molly Seidel was wondering what to do next and decided to run her first marathon at the Olympic Trials kind of on a whim,
and she made the team.
Then in Tokyo, she figured just making it to the starting line was achievement
enough, but she ended up with the bronze medal in the Olympic marathon. That's why we assume
by the end of this interview, she will be the host of this show. Molly Seidel,
welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Oh, thanks so much for having me.
It's a pleasure to have you. I wanted to first
go over this story. So you had been a distance runner and the story I heard was that you just
said, you know, maybe I'll go run a marathon in the Olympic trial, see how that goes. Yeah, basically
what happened, I was living in Boston at the time and with my sister, we were at a holiday party
and just sitting on the rooftop of this townhouse.
And Izzy was like, it would be really funny if you ran your first marathon at the Olympic trials.
I was like, that actually would be hilarious.
And then everything kind of spiraled out of control from there.
Yeah.
Now, according, I will say, according to Runner's World, what were you doing on the top of that building?
I was smoking a joint on the roof.
Sorry, Mom.
So you were smoking weed
and you go, I think I'm going to be in the Olympics.
See, now that's happened to me,
but it's never worked out.
So you go down
from the roof and you go
and you run the Olympic marathon trials
and you win. I got second. You
got second. Yeah. Which is, as we all know, good enough. First loser. Yeah. First loser. And,
and have you discovered the secret to running marathons for someone who hasn't ever run a
marathon before? Were you chased a lot? I get asked a lot, like, what are you running from?
Yeah. Honestly, like, I think the coolest part of all of this is
just every time I'm a little bit surprised by, like, getting to, like, go and qualify for the
Olympics, like, first time out. That was, like, you don't expect that. Then I come away with a medal
in it. Right. There's been so many just cool, exciting things in my career. Like, it's honestly been kind of a joy ride.
So, all right.
Now, I have watched the video of the end of the marathon.
Now, again, this was, I believe, your third marathon.
You had run one in the meantime during the pandemic.
And this is what you can see if you watch the last five minutes or so of the marathon.
You see the eventual gold medalist and the silver medalist were both women from Kenya
and they look pretty tired.
They're like, oh my god,
I gotta get through this. I think I'm gonna win this, but
I am beat to heck. That's what's on
their faces. And then there's
you and you're like, I'm gonna win a
marathon! You were like, woohoo!
Woohoo!
I honestly,
Well, I think the problem
is that the
so Paris Chepchishire and Bridget Koskai
who came in first and second
these are world record holder
like multi-time medalists
so for them going and winning another medal
is just another like walk in the park
for Bridget she was probably like disappointed
because she was getting second and not winning
meanwhile this was the best day of my life.
So I should say this is the first medal that any American woman has gotten in the Olympic
marathon in, I think, 18 years, right?
So that's quite something.
These are not easy to come by, these medals.
And so I do want to touch on the many, many years
before that medal that you labored,
shall we say, in obscurity.
So for example, we understand that in addition
to your Olympic medal,
you also have the extraordinary distinction
of having once been the second fastest
DoorDash delivery woman in Flagstaff, Arizona.
Yeah, as you could probably guess, pre-Olympics, the title of professional runner doesn't make
you much money.
So I was delivering a lot of groceries in the meantime before I made it.
Was that with or without a car?
That was with a car.
Okay.
Yeah.
No, I wasn't carrying that to people's homes.
I was an absolute nightmare, though.
To get that second fastest shopper, I would, like, sprint through Whole Foods.
Like, I have this layout memorized of most of the Whole Foods in Boston.
Really?
So, was there a secret to your efficiency as a door dasher?
Probably aggressive driving.
And, yeah, being willing to, like, push over an old lady for some avocados.
Right.
Just relentless. That is how you
win a medal. This is how you win competitive drive. Did you, did you, um, I got to ask you one more thing,
which is, have you heard about Taylor Swift's workout that she says she did? We were actually
just talking about this, that apparently Taylor Swift, to get ready for her concert,
ran for like three and a half hours on the treadmill
while singing all of her songs as well.
Like, that would be unbearable.
To be on a treadmill for three and a half hours a day,
like you've, you got to be working through some stuff.
$250 million for that tour.
I'd do it.
Really? I'd do it. Really?
I would do it. I would sing the
entire Eros tour, too,
for $250 million.
What can you say?
Well, she probably slows it way down
for the really slow songs.
So, kind of, that's a walk.
Yeah, I wonder if she's like running the whole time
or if she's walking. I don't
know, but I'm sure whatever she's doing...
Can't we just call her up and ask her?
As a matter of fact, we can.
Hang on a second.
Taylor, she's backstage.
She's backstage.
Could you imagine if, like, that's how we soft-launched Taylor Swift to be in here?
You all thought you were getting a marathoner.
Yeah, I know.
Well, Molly Seidel, we are delighted to have you here,
and we have asked you to play a game we're calling...
Call Now. Please, I beg of you, call now.
You run, as we have been discussing, marathons,
so we thought we'd ask you about another incredible test of endurance,
the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon,
in which the late comedian would raise money for muscular dystrophy
for 24 hours live on TV.
If you answer two out of three questions correctly about it. You
win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone they might choose from our show for
their voicemail. Bill, who is Molly Seidel playing for? Kyle Walton of San Francisco, California.
All right. Now, first question. One of the first times that Jerry Lewis appeared in a fundraising
telethon before he launched his own was back in 1952. And when Lewis walked out on the set of the telethon, host Bing Crosby ran right off. Why? A, the two of them
had been engaged in a high stakes game of tag for seven years. B, Crosby was terrified that Lewis
would run over and take off his toupee. Or C, Crosby, as he said later, quote, had to pee like a racehorse.
One of these is real?
One of those is real.
I think I have to go with C.
You're going to go with C?
Makes sense, yes.
I understand that, but the answer was B.
Apparently, Lewis had made a thing
about tearing off Crosby's toupee,
and he wasn't going to let it happen again.
All right, here is your next question.
One of the great things about watching
the telethon was that Jerry Lewis
would improv, and the improvs
would get wilder and wilder as the night
wore on. That might explain why
he once made an impassioned
plea for who to donate to his
cause. A, any children who
had just received money from the tooth fairy,
B, his friend Dave, who
he once loaned 75 bucks, or
America's drug dealers?
Were they allowed to say drug
dealers in the 50s? Well, first of
all, this was now later on when he started this
thing, so this was into the 70s and 80s.
Let me just say this. You
should get this.
I think they're telling me I should go with the drug dealer. You always should go with the drug
dealer. It's a general rule. It's worked well for you so far. Yeah. And by the way, this was not
like a one-off joke. Hey, if you're a drug dealer, send me your money. No, he actually said, take away the cue cards.
And he talked to the camera.
And he talked, it's like the Miami Vice period.
And he talked to the drug dealers in Miami where he singled out.
And he said, I know you make a lot of money.
Maybe you should take some of that money and donate it to my kids.
Wouldn't you feel better about what you do?
It is surreal.
All right.
Last question.
The show over the years featured a lot of great musical acts,
but in the middle of the night,
as you can imagine,
that's when they had some lesser musical acts come on,
including which of these?
A, the Hell's Angels Singers,
B, Ray Sanders,
Master of the Musical Turkey Baster,
or C, Limp Bizkit?
It's, oh.
It definitely can't be B.
You're saying it definitely cannot be B.
You're absolutely certain
that you,
it can't be Ray Sanders,
Master of the Musical Turkey Basin.
Can you play a turkey baster?
Okay, so I think I have to go with B.
You're going to go with B,
Ray Sanders, Master of the Musical Turkey with B. You're going to go with B, Ray Sanders.
Master of the Musical Turkey Baster. You're right.
Yes!
Molly! Like I said.
Thank you. Thank you.
2 to 3 a.m.
You'll never know what you might have seen.
What was this show? Oh!
Bill, how did Molly Seidel
do on our quiz? 2 out of three, she wins another bronze.
So she's the winner.
Congratulations.
Molly Seidel is an Olympic bronze medalist in the marathon.
Her Instagram handle is bygolly.molly,
and you can root for her in February at next year's Olympic trials.
Molly Seidel, thank you so much for joining us.
I appreciate it so much. You're the best. Molly Seidel, thank you so much for joining us. I appreciate it. Thank you so much.
You're the best.
Molly Seidel, everybody.
In just a minute, we'll tell you the one thing
you must not do to your Tesla.
In our Listener Olympic Challenge,
call 1-888-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.
What does it mean that Trump's mugshot recalls Paris Hilton's? What does the fake resume of
George Santos tell us about American myths? What if I told you that the Kardashians are the new Kennedys?
On It's Been a Minute, I give you fresh ways of thinking about what's going on.
Listen every week to It's Been a Minute from NPR.
The NPR app cuts through the noise, bringing you local, national, and global coverage.
No paywalls, no profits, no nonsense.
Download it in your app store today.
NPR brings you the updates you need on the day's biggest headlines.
The Senate narrowly passed the debt ceiling bill that will prevent the country from defaulting on its loans. Stories from across the world. Knowing how to forage and to live with the land is integral to a nice culture.
And down your block.
From CPR News, this is Colorado Matters.
And you can find all of that and more in your pocket.
Download the NPR app today.
Hey, it's Peter Sagal.
The year's almost over.
And here at Wait, Wait, we are counting our blessings.
After all, 2023 gave us George Santos, the Chinese spy balloon, the coronation of King Charles.
I mean, really, so many funny hats.
Here's hoping the news will be even easier to make fun of in 2024.
But we could not do it without your support.
This is where I want to say a big personal thank you to our Wait,
Wait, Don't Tell Me Plus supporters and anyone listening who already donates to public media.
Because, you know, we can't make fun of the news if there is no news, which is why we need
journalists to cover everything in the first place. To anyone out there who isn't a supporter
yet, right now is the time to get behind the NPR network, especially
with our journalists gearing up for, you know, a relatively important election. Supporting public
media now takes just a few minutes and it makes a real difference. So join NPR Plus or just make
a tax-deductible donation now at donate.npr.org slash waitwait. And thanks.
dot NPR dot org slash wait wait. And thanks. 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 Roxanne Roberts, Bob Galthwaite, and Shantira Jackson. And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois,
Peter Sagal. Thank you, Bill. In just a minute, we're simply having a wonderful Christmas rhyme
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, panel, of course, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Roxanne, there is yet another workplace trend.
This one is called coffee badging.
That's where employees go into the office just to do what?
I assume just to steal the office coffee?
Exactly right.
To drink a single cup of coffee
and then turn around and go home.
Employees are doing this apparently
to protest their company's return to office policies because nothing sticks it to the man.
It's quite like spending an hour in traffic each way and then drinking the worst cup of coffee
you've ever had. According to new research, 58% of hybrid employees, that is, you know, work at home,
admit to coffee badging and say it's a way to show their face at the office while still doing a majority of their work at home. It's second in popularity
among them to bathroom badging, where you go to the office, head into the bathroom, spend 45 minutes
sitting quietly in a stall contemplating how all of your dreams led you to here. I used to do that.
Really? What was the job? I used to work at Banana Republic.
And I would just go sit in the bathroom and look at my blackberry.
Whoa, that's old school. It's old school. And then I would be like, all right, time to fold some chinos. Nobody bothers you if you go in there. If you go into a bathroom for 30 minutes,
they're going to be like, what are you doing?
Absolutely not.
They'll be like, okay.
Shantira Hafize Erkan was hired to be the head
of the central bank in Turkey
with a mission of bringing down rampant inflation
in that country.
But it is so bad there that she had to do what?
Print money, and it was okay.
No, that might have been the problem.
Not that.
Give me your hand.
I will.
She's like, Mom, can you knock before you come in?
I'm a senior government official.
Oh, so she made everybody be roommates.
No.
Does anybody else know?
I'm guessing she had to move in with her mother.
She did.
She moved in with her parents, both of them.
Hafize Erkan served in various important posts
in international finance all over the world
before moving back to Turkey to run their central bank
with the mission of stopping inflation,
which is up to 70% a year.
And it was so bad, in fact, the inflation.
Are you laughing at the inflation rate?
When I get overwhelmed, I laugh. That's too
much. That's too much. I didn't know you were also an economist. Yes, that's too much. In fact,
inflation and housing is so rampant, she could not afford an apartment of her own, and she had
to move in with her parents at the age of 44. Is that sad? Do you imagine her just going back to
her old bedroom with the posters of Milton Friedman and Paul Krugman on the wall?
All right, Bobcat, you've probably heard of Flacco the Owl, right?
Sure.
Flacco escaped from the Central Park Zoo last year,
went to live in the wild in the park,
became a huge celebrity in New York.
Recently, though, Flacco the Owl has taken up a new activity.
What is it?
Skateboarding. No, although that would be cool. No, I, Flacco the Owl has taken up a new activity. What is it? Skateboarding.
No, although that would be cool.
If a little retro.
Okay, give me a hint. I'll give you a hint.
The creepiest part is when he turns his head all the way around
to follow you to the bathroom.
So, what's his hobby? He's just watching
people? Yes, he's
flying up to apartment windows and staring at the people.
Oh, okay.
That's what he's doing.
So he said, yeah, but it's very specific.
He only goes to Birdwatcher's house.
Right.
He's like, how do you like it?
It's really cool where he like looks at the people, the binoculars, goes, oh, and makes a note.
Flacco the Isle was everywhere in New York City in 2023.
He went to the Rockefeller Center, the Met Gala.
He was seen on Broadway spitting out little pellets with hair and bones from the cast of Hamilton.
But recently, he has started showing up on people's windowsills to stare at them and freak them out.
I mean, I get it.
Trying to find an apartment in New York is hard.
It's really true.
You know, he's looking in your windows and he's about to ask, so how much are you paying for this place?
Yes.
He could just be looking for graduation caps.
In the classic wise owl, they always wear them.
They always have.
Either that or he's trying to figure out how many licks it takes to get to the center of the Tootsie Roll.
Either one.
A Tootsie Pop. Coming up, it's lightning fill in the blank,
but first it's the game where you have to listen for the rhyme.
If you'd like to play on air, call or leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924.
You can catch us here most weeks at the beautiful Studebaker Theater in downtown Chicago.
And check us out on Instagram at WaitWaitNPR.
It's tons of fun with tons of pictures of us you will not be able to unsee.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, how are you?
Hi, who's this?
My name is Paula Ciccone.
Hey, Paula Ciccone, where are you calling from?
I'm calling from Menden, Massachusetts.
Menden, Massachusetts?
Yes.
It is a great little town south of Boston.
South of Boston.
Great.
Have you seen a very unhappy cruise ship recently?
Not in my area.
No.
Well, Paula, welcome to the show.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three news-related limericks
with the last word or phrase missing from each.
If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly on just two of them,
you'll be a winner.
Ready to play?
Sure.
Here is your first limerick.
Don't miss Teslas with water.
Oh, gosh.
That's a plan I will just have to squash.
The steering corrodes, and then it explodes, because
some Teslas break down
in the
wash? In the wash!
Yes!
A California man
lost power steering in his Tesla
when he went over a speed bump.
So he took it to the dealership, and the dealer
explained the wiring had corroded,
certainly because, the dealer said, the owner had made the stupid but common mistake
of taking his luxury car through a car wash.
It's tough when you're driving your new car off the lot and the dealer says,
you'll love the car, but remember, never ever get it wet.
That's like, it's so interesting because like when you you i really need to wash my car a lot it's like
you do something good it's like no good deed goes unpunished yeah exactly like i'm gonna wash my car
do you have a tesla no i'm a comedian
i have a Honda.
They're crappy, but they're waterproof.
Here is your next limerick. When the steel mill closed, Steubenville cut backers.
But our towns reborn.
Who knows by what factors?
It's our Christmas display of Tchaikovsky's ballet.
We've got hundreds of six-foot-tall...
Oh, nutcrackers.
Nutcrackers, yes!
How about that?
After years of struggling to revitalize its economy,
the Rust Belt town of Steubenville, Ohio, found a solution.
Hundreds of giant nutcrackers.
Tourists come every year to see the over 200 six-foot-tall nutcrackers
lining downtown, featuring everything from-tall nutcrackers lining downtown, featuring everything
from Wizard of Oz nutcrackers
to the brand-new Jake from State Farm nutcracker.
The Mitch McConnell nutcracker is actually just Mitch McConnell,
and his staff says he'll snap out of it in a second.
Here, Paula, is your last limerick.
On the HMS Humpback, we sail.
Unlike Ahab, we're not doomed to fail.
We're not under a curse.
We just want to converse.
And we had a nice chat with a...
Whale?
A whale.
A group of researchers in Alaska claim
to have had a 20-minute conversation with a humpback
whale. It's an amazing breakthrough, but
unfortunately for the scientists, the whale had just
had the craziest dream and just wouldn't shut
up about it.
For the experiment, the scientists
equipped a boat with these giant speakers,
and then they played a pre-recorded whale
song into the water, and a whale
responded to the recordings and sang back,
and it's like so cool.
But they don't know what the whale said.
It could have just been yelling,
would you shut that off the whole time.
I think the whale was going,
hey, do you guys know where any Italian yachts are?
To sink them?
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was orcas.
What do humpbacks do?
Humpbacks, I don't think sink Italian boats.
They just chew?
They just chew.
They're like, I don't need to do revenge.
Right.
But one thing humpbacks do, I know this, is they leap up in the air for reasons that
scientists don't know.
And now they know because they can understand.
They're going, watch this.
Bill, how did Paula do in our quiz?
Very, very well.
How about perfect?
How about perfect, Paula?
Thank you so much for playing, Paula.
Take care.
Thank you.
Have a good day. Up First achieves the rare one-two punches of being short and thorough,
national and international, fact-based and personable.
Every morning, we take the three biggest stories of the day and explain why they matter.
And we do it all in less than 15 minutes.
So you can start your day a little more in the know than when you went to sleep.
Listen now to the Up First podcast from NPR.
The economy can sometimes feel like a big, scary wilderness filled with jargon and unreadable charts.
The Planet Money podcast is here to help.
We love spreadsheets.
Yeah, let us be your guide to the global economy.
We brought snacks.
Is that trail mix?
It's actually gorp.
That's Planet Money from NPR.
Now it's time for our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank.
Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill-in-the-blank questions as they can.
Each correct answer now worth two points.
Bill, can you please give us the scores?
Roxanne has four.
Bobcat has three.
Shantira has one.
All right, so Shantira, you are in third place.
That means you will go first.
Here we go.
The clock will start when I begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, the Colorado State Supreme Court disqualified blank from that state's presidential ballot.
That's right.
On Monday, a federal judge ordered the unsealing of documents related to the case of blank.
Tony Soprano.
No.
Much worse.
Jeffrey Epstein.
On Wednesday, a federal judge blocked a California law barring blanks in certain public places. Gun worse. Jeffrey Epstein, on Wednesday, a federal judge blocked a California law
barring blanks in certain public places.
Guns.
Yeah.
In addition to delighting fans of true love everywhere,
according to a new analysis,
the Taylor Swift and Travis Kelsey romance has also blanked.
Increased football ticket sales for Kansas.
No.
Well, they might have done that,
but they've produced over 138 tons of excess carbon emissions.
that but they've produced over 138 tons of excess carbon emissions. This week, a man using a car dealership website's AI-powered chat box tricked it into blanking.
Driving for him.
No, he tricked the website into selling him a car for a dollar.
Send me that article.
Yeah, so they've got this...
I got a Honda.
So this chatbot is powered now by ChatGPT,
and the guy tricked the chatbot first into agreeing
that anything it would say to him is, quote,
a legally binding contract, no takesies-backsies.
Then he got it to agree to sell him a new Chevy Tahoe truck for $1.
Even worse, the AI itself bought the undercoating.
Bill, how does Shantira do in our quiz?
Two right, four more points.
Enjoy it.
You're in the lead, Shantira.
Oh, really?
Oh, yeah.
All right, Bobcat, you're up next.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, a federal judge cleared the way
for the removal of a blank memorial
from Arlington National Cemetery.
Civil War.
Which side?
Southern side.
Yeah, the Confederate Memorial.
This week, a chartered jet carrying over 100 migrants
from Texas landed in blank.
Illinois.
Chicago.
Yes, on Thursday, the New York Teachers Union filed suit against Mayor Blank over budget cuts. carrying over 100 migrants from Texas landed in blank? Illinois. Chicago. Yes.
On Thursday, the New York Teachers Union
filed suit against Mayor blank over budget cuts.
His name escapes me.
Next one.
Eric Adams.
This week, a prisoner in Texas escaped
after his mother came to visit him and he blanked.
Pretended he was a baby.
No, put on her hat and sweater and walked out with her.
On Monday, a volcano in Southwest blank began erupting.
Hawaii.
Iceland. This week, a family's
vacation was put on hold after they discovered that
instead of $10,000 of Disney
theme park gift cards, they had bought blank.
$10,000
cards of
Pokemon.
No, close. $10,000 worth of
gift cards for the streaming service
Disney+.
That would not get them
anything at the theme park, but it was good
for 70 straight years of
watching The Mandalorian.
It's fine, though.
They were able to return the cards,
and they got their money back, and they're
very excited for next year's family trip up the Amazon.
Oh, no.
Bill, how did Bobcat do in our quiz?
Two right, four more points.
Seven puts you in the lead, Bobcat.
All right, so how many then
does Roxanne
need to win? Only two to win.
Two to win. Here we go, Roxanne.
This is for the game. On Monday, the Pope
formally approved blessings for blank couples.
Same-sex couples. Right. During her
funeral on Tuesday, President Biden praised
blank as an American pioneer.
Yes. This week, the United States agreed to
a prisoner exchange with Blank.
Venezuela.
Right.
After being ordered to pay over $140 million
for defamation, Blank filed for bankruptcy.
Giuliani.
Yes.
This week, three men were quickly apprehended
after robbing a store in Colorado because Blank.
Because their getaway car was stolen.
That's exactly right.
According to a new study,
Idaho has the highest number of school children who are not blanked.
Who are
not attending school. Who are not vaccinated.
On Wednesday, the House Education Committee
said it would investigate accusations of
plagiarism against the president of blank.
Harvard. Yes. This week, a bank robber in Ohio
claimed he was too high, and that's why he
forgot to blank.
Uh,
he forgot to blank? Uh, he forgot to ask the
teller to give him
the money? That's right!
Wow!
The would-be robber handed the teller a note that
said, give me the, and then just
nothing.
Despite this, the teller understood
and gave the man $700 and a tracking device,
which is how the police found and arrested him
a short time later.
The man, however, is proclaiming his innocence.
He says, quote, I didn't.
Bill, how did Roxanne do on our quiz?
Let's put it on the record.
Seven right, 14 more points.
Total of 18.
Yeah, oh, my God.
Masterfully done.
In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists
to predict what will be the next hot-selling cookie cutter
on the market.
But first, Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
is a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago
in association with Urgent Air Car Productions,
Doug Berman, Benevolent Overlord,
Philip Godeka, Reza Lemnick,
our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shane O'Donnell.
Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre.
BJ Lederman composed our theme.
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks to Monica Hickey and Vinnie Thomas.
Peter Gwynn is our elf on the shelf.
Emma Choi is our vibe curator.
Technical direction is from Lorna White.
Our CFO is Colin Miller.
Our production manager, that's Robert Newhouse.
Our senior producer is Ian Chilock.
And the executive producer, wait, wait, don't tell me, is Mr. Michael Danforth.
Now, panel, what cookie cutter is going to be a big seller next?
Shantira Jackson.
Everybody's supposed to be paying their student loans, and they aren't.
So I think everybody's going to get one that says, I owe you, and send that to Sally Mae.
Roxanne Roberts.
The 2024 election cookie cutter.
It's big, it's misshapen, and no one knows what the end result is going to look like.
And Bobcat Goldthwait.
Well, people think people are getting more greedy,
so it's actually
a gingerbread person
cookie cutter, but with
teeth marks, so it looks like someone's
already taken a bite out of your cookie.
Well, if any of that happens,
we're going to ask you about it on Wait, Wait,
Don't Tell Me. Thank you, Mr. Bill Curtis. Thanks also
to Shantira Jackson, Roxanne Roberts, and Bob
Jack Goldthwait. Thanks to our fabulous audience here
at the Studio Victor Theater in downtown Chicago.
Thanks to all of you for listening.
Have an amazing holiday.
I am Peter Segal. We'll see you next week.
Thank you.
This is NPR.
Instead of scrolling mindlessly, engage mindfully with the NPR app.
With a mix of on-demand news, stories from this station, and your favorite podcast,
you can relax without shutting off your brain.
Download the NPR app today.
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.