Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Ray Romano
Episode Date: May 6, 2023Ray Romano joins panelists Tom Papa, Matt Rogers, and Helen Hong to talk about the secret to marriage, rewatching yourself on TV 15 years later, and having a good poker face. Support NPR by signing up... for Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
No coordination necessary.
You know who the real king is.
Bill Curtis.
Yay!
And here is your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, everybody.
Oh, it's good to be back.
Thank you. Thank you, Chicago.
Later on, we're going to be talking to Ray Romano about his new movie, Somewhere in Queens.
Now, in his famous sitcom, Everybody Loves Raymond,
he played a guy who lives with his wife and kids close to his parents,
and everybody is really great.
And in the new movie, he plays a guy who lives with his wife and kid
close to his parents, and everybody is pretty terrible,
including him.
That's right.
Ray Romano has broken bad.
If you haven't yet turned to the dark sides, get started by giving
us a call. The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924. Let's welcome our first listener
contestant. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi. Hi, who's this? This is David Mandelbaum.
Yeah. And I'm in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. Isn't that near or about where
President Biden has his beach house? It's exactly where President Biden has his beach house. Oh,
wow. Okay. Right. So do you see him at the ice cream parlor? Is that a thing that happens?
The bookstore. Oh, well, that's very literate of you.
Well, welcome to the show, David. Let me introduce you to our panel. First up,
Well, welcome to the show, David.
Let me introduce you to our panel.
First up, it's the host of the Las Culturistas podcast.
It's Matt Rogers.
Hi, David.
How are you?
Next, her podcast is Go Fact Yourself, and you can see her Saturday, May 6th at LAist's Crawford Family Forum in Pasadena.
It's Helen Hong.
Hi, David.
Hi, everybody.
in Pasadena. It's Helen Hong.
Hi, David. Hi, everybody.
And lastly, his new book, We're All in This Together, So Make Some Room, is now
available for pre-sale. It's Tom Papa.
Hey, David.
David, you are going to play
Who's Bill this time. Bill Curtis is going to
read you three quotes 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 choose on your voicemail. Are you ready to go?
I'm ready. I studied. You did? Okay. Your first quote is from a young girl named Winifred,
who was asked by a reporter, what is the first thing that someone should do when he becomes king this weekend.
Do a backflip.
That child, with the strangely deep voice,
was referring to the coronation of whom?
King Charles.
King Charles III, yes.
His coronation is this weekend.
It is the biggest international TV audience ever to watch someone put on a new hat.
Legally, Charles III became king the moment Queen Elizabeth died,
but this is just his official onboarding.
After the ceremony, he gets his company laptop
and the code to the castle bathroom.
I had no idea this was happening.
Really?
Yeah, I felt like it was kind of a non-news issue.
Well, there are generally two kinds of people.
There are the people who have,
Americans who absolutely just follow everything
about the royal family.
Yeah.
And people I like.
Yeah, exactly.
I was over in London just a couple weeks ago doing shows,
and they were setting it up with like,
I mean, huge, huge huge huge i mean for miles
just bleachers they're so excited i'm like wow this is a thing like this is they're so into it
good for them yeah and then i went up to like the little souvenir booth and they're like getting
ready with the merch and the biggest problem is his face on a magnet. I don't want to, you know, I don't want to be trite or mean,
but it's not a great face. No. It's not a magnet face. It's not a magnet face. It's not a mug face.
It's not a flag face. It's not a t-shirt face. And yet the face does look like refrigerated.
And it's, it's kind of awkward. I mean mean what do you say to someone when they
become like king congratulations like seems weird when his only achievement
is outliving his mother and he almost didn't pull it off
yeah no let's give it up for queen el, who took him to gain seven, if you know what I mean.
All right.
David, your next quote is from a picket sign.
What have many held up in Los Angeles this week?
Pay us or we'll spoil succession.
That was somebody striking and refusing to do what job?
The screenwriters.
Yeah, the screen and television writers.
The Writers Guild of America is on strike.
Woo-hoo!
Good, isn't it?
That sound, that sound that he made,
it's also what the studios are doing right now.
Television and movie writers went on strike this week,
throwing down their laptops,
and then yelling,
oh no, did I break the screen?
My pilot pitch was on that.
The members of the union, the then yelling, oh no, did I break the screen? My pilot pitch was on that. The members
of the union, the WGA, will not write a word until their demands are met. But the question is, does
this extend to all forms of writing, right? Can you sign for this, miss? Uh, no. We could have used a writer on that joke. You see, that's what happens.
That's what happens.
Chaos.
Chaos, what we're seeing.
Seriously, if any major Hollywood producers just heard that,
they'd be like, God, get him back, quick.
Look what can happen.
I do just want to say, if there's ever a question that I don't know
and I don't answer, it's not that I'm stupid, I'm on stress.
Exactly. And I don't know if I don't answer, it's not that I'm stupid. I'm on strike. Exactly. Yes. And I know you guys can confirm this or not because apparently
the writers, many of them think that the picket lines is a great place, you know, to meet dates.
And this is true. One writer has even suggested putting different tape, pink or blue or both
on your sign to signal who you might be interested in dating.
Oh my God, I'm there.
And it's, oh, excuse me, Helen's got to go. But, and that's, I'm really glad he said that
because otherwise we would have thought the whole thing was just really the world's worst
gender reveal party. I guess I just hope you're not looking for someone with a job. That's the problem. Because I
have news for you about the job. Yeah, both people are going to hoping, oh, if this works out, I'll
have someplace to sleep. as they get older.
Ugh.
Ugh.
Ugh.
Ugh.
So, David, what do we do more as we age?
Shrink?
Shrink.
Was that the noise of Bill shrinking?
Um.
Ugh. Grown? Grown, yes. That's the answer. There you go. Grown. shrinkage.
Grown? Grown, yes. That's the answer. Grown.
The New York
Times, paper
of record, tried to answer this question.
Why is it that once you reach
a certain age, any movement that
changes your elevation
is accompanied by some sort of zoo
noise?
Is it across all cultures?
I think it is, right? It's like a human thing. Do you guys, you guys must do this, right? Yes.
Tom, I know you do it. Hey, easy. Yeah, it does happen. And my daughter actually pointed it out to my wife and I, and she said, you know, every time you guys move, you're groaning more and more.
And it was like, yeah, because you're killing us.
Those are death rattles. Yeah. I think it really, I think what, what, um, our listener said,
shrinking was the first thing that he thought. And he's not far off. I think gravity is just
on us all the time. And once you get over 40, you're like, just take me.
This, by the way, it's a great way to check people's age if they don't have ID.
It's like, here, have a seat.
Now, get up.
Bill, how did David do in our quiz?
Next time you're in the bookstore, David, tell the president you got them all right.
Yeah. Yeah.
David, thank you so much for playing.
It was my pleasure. Thanks.
Alright, panel, it is time for you
to answer some questions about this week's news.
Ugh.
Matt, the drug lord Pablo Escobar was killed years ago,
but his legacy lives on as the nation of Colombia still has to grapple with what?
The drug problem there.
That's right. That's the funny answer we were looking for.
No, it's not.
It's not.
But I said it kind of funny.
You did say it with a kind of insouciant wilt. I gave it some gravitas.
Yeah, it was funny.
No, not that.
I'll try again.
I'll give you a hint.
Okay.
They're hungry, hungry.
Hippos.
Hippos, yes.
Oh, yeah.
I got that.
Wait, what? Hippos, yes.
There's an infestation of hippos in Colombia
thanks to Pablo Escobar.
He had like a hippo thing?
He had a hippo thing. Well, he had this
private zoo. And he was like, hippos
is my thing. Well, he had all these animals,
but when he was killed, the
hippos escaped.
And they've been breeding so much,
and ruining so much of the landscape in Colombia,
they're very large, that Colombia has declared them an invasive species. Hippos are pests.
The exterminator comes over and says, yeah, I opened up the crawl space. There's a nest back there.
And they love cocaine. Yes.
And they love cocaine.
Yes.
People are trying different solutions.
They're trying both airlifting them out to wildlife sanctuaries. I love that.
I love the image of a hippo hanging off of a helicopter.
With her little legs, yeah.
That's one thing they're trying.
And the other thing they're trying is castrating the hippos.
No!
Yes.
So they can't reproduce.
Now, fortunately, though, for the people of Colombia,
the hippos are mostly peaceful and only become aggressive
when you try to either pick them up or castrate them.
I should say so.
They're killing machines.
Yeah, they are.
So far, this is true, only two people, two people have been injured by hippos.
And you know what they were thinking, which is, oh my God, I'm being attacked by a hippo.
Yeah, that's embarrassing.
That's like being attacked by a manatee.
Yeah.
How embarrassing and humiliating of a death would that be?
Oh, this giant sea cow is just gumming me to death.
But you know what, though?
It sounds awful
to be gummed to death.
That sounds slow and terrible.
I know, but that's the point.
You could be like,
I get away from,
like, what are you doing?
And he's like,
I'm bringing the pain.
Yeah.
Coming up, when location, location, location isn't all that matters,
it's our bluff, the listener game called 1-triple-8-wait-wait-to-play.
We'll be back in a minute with more Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from 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 Helen Hong, Tom Papa, and Matt Rogers.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thank you.
Segal. Thank you, Bill. Thank you. Right now, it is time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff,
the listener game. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to play our game on the air. Hi, you are on Wait,
Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, this is Jeremy Dilworth from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Hey, Jeremy,
what do you do there in Gettysburg? My paid work is that I teach a course, a dance course, at our local institution of higher learning.
Excellent. Yeah, but my unpaid work is I homeschool
the last kiddo that's in our house.
Really? The others have fled?
They have.
They've been schooled and they're out
and about in the world in colleges
and all of that stuff. That's great.
Well, good for you. It was all you then.
You did it. Pretty much. Well, you know. And speaking great. Well, good for you. It was all you then. You did it.
Pretty much.
Well, you know, it takes a village.
And speaking as one parent to another,
you know what they love?
If you remind them of that every day of their lives.
Yes, yes.
They love that.
Well, Jeremy, welcome to the show.
You're going to play our game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Jeremy's topic?
It's the perfect place.
Almost.
We all know what it's like, right? You find the perfect place with plenty of room, right in your price range.
No, you don't know that. It's impossible. It never happens. Capitalism is a death spiral.
Our panelists are going to tell you about someone who almost found the perfect spot to be, only to
discover there was, of course, a big catch. Pick who's telling
the truth and you'll win our prize, the weight-waiter of your choice on your voicemail.
You ready to play? I am strapped in. I'm ready. First, let's hear from Tom Papa. A small claims
court in Colorado has pierced the mystery of a haunted house. Kelly and Doug Clark love to rent
haunted properties on Airbnb. It's fun, says Ms. Clark, especially
when the spirits know that we have good intentions, which we obviously do because we're both Leos.
The couple were excited to spend the weekend in an old Denver home advertised as haunted by a
spirit searching for his long-lost cat. On their first night, they heard a cat meow and eerie
footsteps. Quote, we were very excited and very scared. When we got to the top of the stairs,
we saw an actual ghost dash behind the attic door. But when they opened the door, what they saw
was scary in a very different way. It was the property owner's 23-year-old son. The father told the judge,
quote, the kid won't get a job and he won't move out of the attic, so I figured at least he could
bring in a little money as a ghost. I guess he can't even do that right. A haunted Airbnb turned out just to have a deadbeat son in the attic.
Your next story of real estate in a bad state comes from Helen Hong.
We thought we hit the jackpot with our new East Village place,
said Grace Kim of New York.
It's 1,000 square feet for just $6,000 in a prime New York neighborhood.
No rats, no roaches. Amazing!
But the first night we moved in,
we literally heard the loudest gong you've ever heard right above our bed.
Turns out the gonger in question is 77-year-old Lenny Markowitz,
the only professional gong tuner in all of the eastern United States.
It's a dying art. You can't just hit a gong and expect it to sound just right. You got to have
the full spectrum of brassy notes as well as other brassy notes. It's mostly brassy notes.
It's a gorgeous sound, especially in the middle of the night when everything else is quiet.
Please stop, it's 2 a.m.
Mrs. Kim can be heard yelling from downstairs.
Did somebody say something?
Oh well, back to the gong, says Mr. Markowitz, who also tap dances in his spare time.
The couple moves in below.
The East Coast's only professional gong tuner.
Your last story of a place showing another face comes from Matt Rogers.
Earlier this year, a German human resources company rented space in an office building
located in the upmarket district of
Frankfurt. The space was perfect, and the landlord said he'd always be easy to find. That turned out
to be true. You could see him out the window, sunbathing, naked, almost every day. The company
withheld their rent, saying the constant public exposure of the man's private bits in a visible lounging area
devalued the property. The landlord sued them, arguing that his desire to get a little even
color on his between-me-down-theirs did not affect the building's utility. A German court agreed,
pointing out that the landlord could only be seen if you leaned out the window anyway, so what's up
with that, guys, huh? The company will both pay
back rent and learn to appreciate the glory of the male form in all its fullness. All right, we found
one of these stories in the week's news. Was it from Tom how a couple who rented an Airbnb that
they hoped would have haunted really just had a deadbeat son? From Helen Hong, a couple who rented an Airbnb that they hoped would have haunted really just had a deadbeat son.
From Helen Hong, a couple who moved into their dream place in New York City
to find that it was a nightmare under a gong tuner.
Or from Matt, a German company that moved into their new offices
and then refused to pay rent because the landlord
kept sunbathing naked outside their window.
Which of these is the real story of real estate with a problem?
window. Which of these is the real story of real estate with a problem? Well, one summer,
we spent some time in a flat in Frankfurt, Germany, and I can attest to the openness of many Germans that they feel in their flat. So I'm going to have to go with the Frankfurt story.
All right. You're choosing Matt's story of the Frankfurt nudist landlord. That's a good name for an album, by the way. Well, to bring you the real
story, we spoke to an expert on this subject. If the landlord is, you know, sunbathing nude in that
property, you have a very good argument that the fair market value of that property is diminished.
That was landlord, tenant, and real estate attorney
Melvin L. Sims III,
managing partner of the Tenants Rights Group, LLC.
Congratulations, Jeremy.
You got it right.
You earned a point for Matt Rogers.
You've won our prize,
the voice of your choice in your voicemail.
Well done.
Jeremy.
Thank you.
Thanks, everyone.
Bye-bye.
Thanks for joining us today.
Take care. Take care.
I think it's kind of funny When people see a gray sky when it's blue
It's all about the money
And all I see is
La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la And now the game where we ask people who've done a lot about something that matters very little.
It's called Not My Job.
Ray Romano created and starred in one of the most popular sitcoms ever, Everybody Loves Raymond, playing a dad coping with his wife, kids, and parents in Long Island.
In his new movie, Somewhere in Queens, he's a dad coping with everything in Queens.
We assume his next movie, he'll be a dad in Manhattan.
And when he turns to tragedy, he'll be all the way west to New Jersey.
Ray Romano, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Happy to be here.
Thank you.
Thank you.
So one of the most amazing or interesting things I find about you, Ray,
is that when you started your sitcom, Everybody Loves Raymond,
you were playing a married dad of three small children,
a girl and young boy twins,
and you were, at that time,
a real-life father of a young girl and two baby twins, right?
That is true. So you spent all these years as a TV dad while being a real dad. Did being a TV dad affect your real dadding,
if you will? Well, I was never home to be a real dad. I mean, in that way, it did affect me.
I was wondering if you were home with your real kids and they said
something that wasn't amazingly charming and funny,
if you would call for a rewrite without
realizing where you were.
You know what's funny is my wife and I
one night were in bed watching
the show, and
she said to me, she goes, you said
more to Patty Heaton in that scene than you've said to me she goes you said more to patty heaton in that scene than you've
said to me all week and yeah and i told her we have writers it's easy
did you did you go into the office the next day and turn to one of the writers and say guys could
you give me something to say at home tonight i'm not every it's funny because anytime we would have a fight sometimes my wife would
look to me and say um i don't want to see this on the show i do not want to see
and did you and what did you think when she said that where you were like okay or you're like well
maybe i can talk her into it or maybe she... I would tell her to
go cry on a bag of money.
I should point out, by the way, I think everybody needs to know this,
you're still happily married to the same person
today, a few years later.
35. 35 years. Wow. That's tight.
That's like cheapness.
But seriously, you've played a dad and a husband for so long in so many different iterations.
Have you learned some wisdom? Obviously, you're good at it.
Well, I mean, people ask me, how do you do it? How do you stay married so long?
And I always quote one of my ex-therapists.
I've been through many therapists.
And one of my ex-one says, you need to pretend you're not a narcissist.
Wow.
And, of course, did you say, I can pretend I'm not a narcissist.
I can do that.
I'm great.
That's right.
I'm good at pretending.
Yeah, but, you know, it's exactly what he meant.
And I think we know what he meant.
Sometimes it's not all about you, you know.
Is that when you fired him?
Yeah.
No, no, no.
Your show is on TV
all the time now
in syndication.
Do you ever find yourself
like the rest of us
in a hotel room
late at night
and Everybody Loves Raymond
is on and you watch it?
It's sadder than that
to be honest with you.
I don't know
if it's a late midlife
or early end of life crisis.
Yeah.
But I'm watching them now
and I'm rating them from one to a hundred. I'm watching them now and I'm
rating them from one to a hundred.
I'm not kidding.
I have a chart.
I have a chart.
You have a spreadsheet?
I do.
I've watched about
45 of them. There's 210 total.
And I started rating
them and the highest so far I got was a 91.
91 is the highest.
Wow.
How do you watch all your old shows and still say you're not a narcissist?
I'll tell you why.
Because the highest I gave was a 91.
I'm very hard on you.
There you go.
What's the lowest so far?
They're in the 70s. Some of them are in the
70s, you know.
I learned something, and I should have known this about you, and I'm sorry
I didn't, but apparently you are an excellent
poker player. Yes, people think
I'm a good poker player. They think I'm a good
golfer, when in reality
I play poker and I play golf, but I'm a good golfer when in reality I play poker and
I play golf, but I'm not
good at either one of them, really.
Is that not true?
I'm average.
He's good.
He's good.
The last time I was with Ray, he came on my radio
show and he had this bag
next to him. I was like, what's in the
bag? He said said I just came from
poker and there's a lot of cash in there what you literally have bags of money literally like had
the classic black valise filled with cash yeah he walks around with bags of cash for your wife
I don't have access to my cash. I have... My wife gives me an allowance.
Do you have a good poker face?
Because you don't seem like you would.
Why do you say that?
Why do you say I wouldn't have one?
Because you're just so, like...
Because I'm a bad actor?
No, that's not what I meant.
Yeah, expressive actor.
Thank you, thank you.
He gets a bad hand and he just...
Oh, boy.
That was Tom Papa, not me.
Oh, boy.
Well, Ray Romano, we have invited you here to play a game
that this time we're calling...
Everybody Loves Raymond, but Everybody Hates these things. So, as we've discussed,
you started in Everybody Loves Raymond, which is nice if you're Raymond. So, we thought we'd ask
you about things that everybody hates. Answer two to three questions about things everybody just
loathes, and you'll win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone they might choose.
Bill, who is Ray Romano playing for? Gary Wilson of Seattle, Washington. All right, you ready to do
this? I'm going to try my hardest. All right. Here's your first question. Everybody hates taxes,
right? Especially when you're forced to pay taxes when you buy something you want. Which of these
is a real tax? A, the Texas enormous belt buckle tax, B, the Canadian mayonnaise with french fries tax, or C, the Illinois bribe tax?
Hometown crowd, thank you. The least ridiculous, I guess, is C.
I'm sorry of those three
the least ridiculous
is that when you bribe a politician
here in Illinois
you have to pay a certain percentage
of the bribe
to the state
I get it
I got it right, right?
No, but I love you for trying.
It was actually the enormous belt buckle tax in Texas.
It's true.
In Texas, the belt buckles are taxed at a higher rate
than the belt itself.
Really?
Yeah, so the bigger, more elaborate, and more expensive your belt buckle,
which they love down there, the more money you have to spend.
All right, Ray, you still have two more chances.
Here is your next question.
Everybody hates traffic jams, particularly over in China.
That's why a new service has arisen there to make them a little less horrible.
What is that service?
A, you can order aerial photographs of the traffic jam
sent to you so you can prove to your boss or whomever that's why you're late. B, alcohol
delivered to your stuck car by drone or C, a service in which two people show up on a motorbike.
One stays with your car and the other weaves through traffic with you and the bike to get you to your destination. That one, the last one.
You're right, Ray, exactly.
Because as you probably figured out, that is a great idea.
And this is why China is beating us in global competition.
You have one more question.
If you get this right, you win.
Everybody hates going through airport security.
Which of these were once seized
at a TSA checkpoint?
A, a 20-pound live
lobster, B,
one of those enormous pairs of
ceremonial scissors for ribbon cuttings,
or C, a gun
hidden inside a raw
chicken?
Well,
I have cut a
ribbon at a bed, bath, and beyond.
And never again.
Yeah, a lot of good it did then, man.
Never again.
Alright.
I'm going to say the gun hidden
in the thing. You're right. I'm going to say the gun hidden in the thing.
You're right.
Not only that, they were all found on passage.
What?
All of the above.
Bill, how did Ray Romano do in our quiz?
He got a 75 by our rating.
But two out of three is a winner, Ray.
Woo-hoo!
Congratulations.
66%.
Ray Romano's new wonderful movie
is Somewhere in Queens.
Ray Romano, thank you so much for joining us
on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. What a pleasure to talk to you.
Thanks, Ray. Thank you.
In just a minute, you better have a green thumb in our Listener Lumber Challenge game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
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 Helen Hong, Tom Papa, and Matt Rogers.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sago.
Thank you, Bill.
In just a minute, join Professor Rimeritus Bill
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, some more questions for you from the week's news.
All right, Tom, it's time for a new game that we're calling...
What's that phenomenon?
This week, we learned about the Maruko Aoki phenomenon,
which is an actual documented biological reaction
where many people, when they enter a bookstore,
have a sudden urge to do what?
They have an urge to...
Can you give me a hint?
Yeah, well, if reading is the number one thing
you do in a bookstore...
Oh, number two.
Yes, number two, yes. What? Oh one thing you do in a bookstore. Oh, number two. Yes, number two.
What?
Oh.
It is a widely reported phenomenon.
Many people say they walk into a bookstore and for some reason immediately have the urge to poop.
Oh, that makes sense.
Does it make sense?
Yeah, because when you poop, you want to be reading something.
Exactly.
I mean, maybe that's it.
It's like you walk in, you see all the books, you go, hey, where do I do most of my reading?
Yeah.
Right.
And they say, not here.
Yeah.
And this phenomenon, which has been documented over the years, a lot of people say, yeah,
it happens to me too, is called the Mariko Aoki phenomenon after one Mariko Aoki who
wrote a letter to the editor of a magazine some years ago saying this happened to her
and she wondered if other people felt the same,
and they were like, yeah, that happens to me too,
just like Mariko Aoki, for whom it is now named.
Does she like that this is named after her?
I would guess not.
I don't know if that's, if I Googled my name
and that was the first thing that came up,
I'd be like, oh, man.
Yeah, that's not good.
This is good to know, though,
because I stop up when I'm be like, oh, man. Yeah, that's not good. This is good to know, though, because I stop up
when I'm traveling on the road a lot.
Sometimes I'll go a whole week,
and not until I get back home is my body like,
okay, now we're safe.
We've got to get you to a Borders.
That's not healthy.
Well, it's all right, but now I know I can just go to a bookstore
and my problem will be solved.
Preferably local.
Everyone be pooping at your local bookstore.
Local independent.
Local independent bookstore.
Local independent bookstore.
Matt.
Yes.
Matt, there's another reason to be wary
of ordering French fries at dinner.
According to a new study, fries can make you what?
Boop.
Fries in a bookstore.
Don't.
Oh, man.
That's why they never put bookstores in Burger King.
I mean, instead of ketchup, they should come with a little Zoloft.
Oh, they make you tired.
No.
What?
They make, what is the, my mental health is incredible.
Wait a minute, wait a minute.
I was about to say, you're a comedian and you don't know what Zoloft is?
I did not know this was possible.
My comedy is connected to my joy.
I didn't know that French fries can make you sad.
Yes, depressed.
French fries can make you depressed.
Okay, sorry, guys.
Wow.
Fried food, in particular French fries,
are linked to depression,
or in the case of curly fries,
they're linked to each other.
A new study says that people who eat fried foods,
and again, especially French fries,
have a higher risk of anxiety and depression
than people who don't,
but they're still way less depressed
than the people who ask for the side salad
instead of the fries. Seriously.
That is, that is, that is
not true. Yeah, that's not true.
I guess that's what's making me...
It's flat out wrong. Yeah, it's wrong. It's just not, it's not correct.
No. Well, wait a minute. You may not believe me,
or you may be thinking, yeah, right, french fries
cause depression. In my case, depression
causes french fries.
But it is actually chemistry.
There are compounds in french fries
linked to depression and anxiety.
Fortunately, you can render those
compounds inert by smothering
them with melted cheese.
Amen.
Now we're talking.
French fries make me happy.
I eat them on the road all the time and still
never poop.
Hey, Mike Danforth,
Wait Wait executive producer here with a plug for our quiz game
The Wait Wait Wayback Machine.
It's a game we play with a Wait Wait Don't Tell Me
plus listener where we
challenge them with questions from the show that are no joke.
Oh, uh.
20 years old.
Was that Freedom Fries?
Play along.
Henry Kissinger?
For news trivia, you'll be surprised you remember.
Clown Babies?
Or wish you could forget.
Kim Jong Un.
Was that Checklist of Akia?
It was, of course, Joe Lieberman.
Oh, yeah. We play with a new contestant every few weeks. You can listen and learn how to enter for
a chance to play if you're a Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Plus supporter. If you're not, you can
sign up on our show page in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. 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,
or click the Contact Us link on our website,
waitwait.npr.org.
You can see us most weeks right here
at the beautiful Studebaker Theater in Chicago.
We'll be in New Orleans on May 25th,
and at Tanglewood in Western Massachusetts on June 22nd.
Tickets and info are at nprpresents.org.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Oren from Tampa.
Hey, Oren, how are things in Tampa?
Hot.
Yes.
The nice part of the year is done.
Now you will suffer till October.
That's how it is.
I get it.
Oren, 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 two of the limericks,
you'll be a winner.
Ready to play?
No, but let's do it anyway.
That's the attitude.
Here's your first limerick.
In my haute couture gardening pants, I apply for botanical grants.
Philodendrons in pots make up Christie's top lots, and I'm bidding on fine indoor...
Plants.
Plants!
Yes, very good.
This week, the most expensive houseplant ever sold was auctioned off for $19,000.
It was a fern.
No, I'm kidding.
It was a white variegated mini monstera plant.
That exotic plant, if you don't know it, has nine leaves, white and green marbled pigments,
five bedrooms, three baths, and a working fireplace.
What?
This apparently is not the first time a house plant has sold for thousands of dollars.
According to one of the auctioneer's spokespeople, plants have become an increasingly popular
luxury status symbol over the past few years.
It's perfect for anyone who wants a Birkin bag, but one they can kill with neglect.
$19,000?
For a house plant. But if you you dry it up it gets you really high
like does it do your laundry
I don't think so I think it's just a plant
I think it sits there
and I don't know how to put this
like a potted plant
alright here is your next
limerick
my runoff I'll clean and devour.
Though this ale that I made seems quite sour.
Recycled waste gets a hoppy, bright taste.
I brew beer from the drain of my...
Is there a hint I can get?
It's gross.
I'll give you a hint.
It's gross.
It has a drain on the bottom. It's where. I'll give you a hint. It's gross. It has a drain.
It's where you go if you wanted to wash your body, babe.
Shower?
Yeah.
Shower.
Yeah, it's shower.
Wow.
This is wrong.
A California water recycling company has partnered with a brewery to make beer with the water collected from the showers, laundry, and sinks of a 40-story apartment building.
Why?
And French fries make us depressed.
It's a Kolsch-style beer, which I think is a better choice than an IPA because IPA a lot in the shower.
All right. here is your last
limerick. The U-Bend
traps air. You can't
spoil it. Here's an air hose.
You'll need to uncoil
it. Your porcelain
bowl plays a life
saving role.
Use this snorkel to
breathe from the toilet. Toilet, yes.
This week we learned about the toilet snorkel, a potentially life-saving device in case of fire.
So say you're trapped in a burning building, filling with smoke, you need a source of clean
air. Guess what? There is clean air inside your toilet. All you do is you strap
this face-hugging mask onto your face. It's got a long hose coming off the middle of it. Then you
kneel in front of the toilet, insert the long hose down through the toilet, through the water bend,
and into the fresh air in the standpipe. Then, not done yet, you sit with your face in the toilet,
breathing that good air until you're rescued. Or alternatively, you could just say,
you know, I'm good. I'll burn to death. But if you try this, you have to hope it works
and that you get out of there. Because if you don't and they find your remains
kneeling with your head in the toilet, somebody is going to say,
well, at least he died doing what he loved.
See what happens when the writers strike.
Yeah.
Bill, how did Oren do on our quiz?
He got them all right.
He is perfect.
Thank you, Oren. Thanks so much for playing.
Stay cool.
Now on to our final game,
Lightning Fill in the Blank. Each of our players
will have 60 seconds in which to answer
as many fill in the blank questions as they can.
Each correct answer now worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Tom and Helen each have two.
Matt has four.
What?
What?
Oh, please.
This game is crazy.
All right.
Well, Matt, you're leading the pack, so we'll choose Tom to go first.
Here we go.
The clock will start when they begin your first question.
Fill-in-the-blank. Tom to go first. Here we go. The clock will start when they begin your first question. Fill in the blank. On Thursday, the U.S.
denied Russia's accusation that
they were behind the drone strike on the blank.
The Kremlin. Right. This week, Ron
DeSantis and his hand-picked oversight board
filed a countersuit against blank.
Disney. Right. On Thursday, the ex-leader
of the Proud Boys was found guilty for his
involvement in blank. January 6th. Yes.
This week, a Pennsylvania woman who was too embarrassed
to tell her family she wasn't graduating from college blanked. Passed out. No, faked her own
disappearance. On Monday, environmental groups sued the FAA over private space company blank's
failed rocket launch and its debris. SpaceX. Yes, best known for If You Could Read My Mind and The
Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, singer-songwriter blank passed away at the age of 84. Gordon
Lightfoot.
Bald.
Yes.
Police immediately knew the man was up to something fishy when he saw them and darted into a barbershop,
even though he was completely bald.
It seems like an obvious mistake,
but these are exactly the kind
of foolish things you'd expect from someone who spent years thinking their comb-over was fooling
anybody. Bill, how did Tom Papa do in our quiz? Six right, 12 more points, in the lead with 14.
All right. Very good.
Helen, you're up next. Fill in the blank. On Monday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that the U.S. could default by June 1st if the blank was not raised.
Debt ceiling.
Right.
This week, the Federal Reserve again raised blank rates.
Interest rates.
Yes.
On Monday, protesters in France clashed with police over blank reforms.
The retirement age?
Yeah, pension.
This week, tourists in Hawaii were recovered safely after they followed their GPS route into blank. The ocean.
Yes. On Wednesday, NASA
reported that a blank had passed near
the Earth. A comet? No,
an asteroid. This week, a cat burglar accused
of stealing hundreds of dollars worth of items
in the UK was revealed to be
blank. A literal cat.
Yes.
I totally
guessed that. Nice work.
The criminal cat was ratted out by its own owner,
who posted all the stolen items the cat had brought home online,
hoping to identify their owners.
During its life of crime, the cat had stolen shoes, purses,
and various items of clothing.
Many of the items have been returned, but for some reason,
no one wants to claim the dead mice.
Bill, how did Helen do?
I thought quite well.
She did.
Five, right?
Ten more points, but she's too short with 12 short of Tom.
All right.
So, the next question is, how many, then, does Matt need to win?
Five to tie, six to win.
Here we go, Matt.
Tall order, here we go.
This is for the game.
Okay.
On Tuesday, the White House announced it was sending 1,500 troops to the blank to aid immigration authorities.
Ukraine?
No, to the border.
I'm so sorry.
On Monday, don't apologize.
I just am.
On Monday, the FDIC took control of the First Republic Bank and sold it to blank.
The children.
J.P. Morgan Chase.
This week, the FDA approved a vaccine for the respiratory virus commonly known as blank.
Emphysema.
RSV.
On Thursday, raids in Italy arrested over 100 people suspected of having ties to the blank.
Pizza gang.
Mafia. Mafia.
All right. This week, a man
in the Netherlands tried to get out of
a traffic violation by handing police
an ID that said he was blank.
Claudia Schiffer, actually.
Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
According to the new report,
U.S. blank openings dropped for the third
straight month.
Dating opportunities.
Job openings.
On Wednesday, Kate Bush, Rage Against the Machine, and Missy Elliott were all named as inductees to the blank.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Yes, this week the CDC.
The CDC said it was investigating a 35-person COVID outbreak that took place at an event for blank employees.
Lisa Vanderpump's
Pump Restaurant. No.
It took place, the CDC
was investigating a 35-person COVID
outbreak that took place at an event
for CDC employees. Oh.
Well, that's funny.
For the first time since 2019, the
CDC hosted the Epidemic Intelligence Service Conference
for Infectious Disease Experts,
and over 35 people have confirmed they contracted COVID there.
Well, it's unclear exactly when the spread started.
An internal investigation had narrowed it down
to sometime between the apple-bobbing tub and the kissing booth.
Bill, did Matt do well enough to win?
You know, the last time you were here, you did win.
I did win.
You're saying, Bill, is let's focus on that.
Because this time you got two right.
I know.
Which means...
Four more.
Eight.
Which means Tom Papa is the winner of the month.
Yeah.
In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict
what will be the name of the first hit TV show
to be made entirely without professional writers.
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 Godeker writes our limericks. Our public
address announcer is Paul Friedman. Our tour
manager is Shana Donald. Thanks to
the staff and crew at the Studebaker
Theatre. BJ Lederman composed our
theme. Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Our social media superstar is
Emma Choi. Peter Gwynn is
our toilet snorkel. Technical
direction is Melorna White. Our CFO is
Colin Miller. Our production manager is Robert Newhouse.
Our senior producer is Ian Chilog, and the
executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
is Mike Danforth. Now panel,
what would be the first hit TV show made
without writers? Matt Rogers.
The Real Teachers of Tampa.
Helen Hong.
An AI-written comedy titled,
This is humorous and enjoyable and will increase market share.
And Tom Papa.
The all-new Ron DeSantis Mickey Mouse Club.
They can't sing, dance, or act 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 Matt Rogers
Helen Hong, Tom, Papa
Thanks to all of you for listening at home
and our fabulous audience
at the City Maker Center
We the Cinebaker Center.
We will see you next week.
This is NPR.