Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Stephen Smith
Episode Date: November 18, 2023L.L. Bean CEO Stephen Smith joins Hari Kondabolu, Maeve Higgins, and Roy Blount, Jr. on stage in Maine to talk about jelly beans.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesN...PR Privacy Policy
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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.
Listen now to the Up First podcast from NPR.
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm your main squeeze.
I'm Bill Curtis, and here is your host at the Merrill Auditorium in Portland, Maine, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
Thank you, Maine. It is so great to be here in Maine, famous for its pine forests and coasts, and of course, lobster.
And in honor of this great state, Bill and I are both drenched head to toe in melted butter. Later on, we're going to be talking to the CEO of the famous Maine clothing
company, L.L. Bean, because of course we are. But first, we want to hear about what you're wearing.
Give 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, this is Sylvia from Washington, D.C.
Hey, Sylvia. How are you? I'm good. How are you? I am fine. What do you do there in Washington,
D.C.? I'm a student at George Washington University. A student at George Washington.
Excellent. And what are you studying there?
Yeah, I'm double majoring in political science and religion.
Well, if you're going to be in politics, you're going to need God.
So that makes good sense.
Sylvia, welcome to our show.
Let me introduce you to the panel we have this week. First up, a comedian headlining Columbus Theater in Providence, Rhode Island,
this Sunday, November 19th.
And the Comedy Loft in Chicopee, Massachusetts, this Saturday, November 18th.
It's Hari Kondabolu.
Next, a comedian you can follow on Instagram at Maeve in America.
It's Maeve Higgins.
Hi.
On Instagram at Maeve in America, it's Maeve Higgins.
Hi.
And a humorist whose column on Substack is Take Another Little Piece of My Heart Now,
it's Roy Blunt Jr.
Hey.
Hi, Sylvia.
So, Sylvia, welcome to the show.
You're going to play, of course, Who's Bill this time.
Bill Curtis right here is going to read you three quotations from this week's news.
If you can correctly identify or explain just two of them, you'll win our prize.
Any voice from our show you might choose on your voicemail.
Are you ready to play?
I was born ready.
Hey!
You're going to go far in politics.
Sylvia, here is your first quote.
It is a man challenging someone else to a fist fight. You're going to go far in politics. Sylvia, here is your first quote.
It is a man challenging someone else to a fist fight.
Right here, right now, stand your butt up.
That was Senator Mark Wayne Mullen,
who was part of one of many fights that happened this week.
Where?
In the Senate. In the Senate. In Congress.
Very good. Welcome to the Capitol Thunderdome. Senator Mark Wayne Mullen of Oklahoma was mad
because a witness at a hearing, the head of the Teamsters Union, had tweeted mean things about
him. So, Mullen challenged him to a throwdown
right there in the hearing room.
The Teamster said, bring it on, you know,
while thinking to himself, oh man,
I thought this was going to be the one day this week
I didn't have to hit somebody with a wrench.
I like the fact that it was Bernie Sanders
who finally called for ceasefire.
Oh, yeah.
It was so good.
He was great.
I got the quote right here.
Stop it. Stop it. No, here. Stop it. Stop it.
No, no. Sit down.
You know you're a United States senator.
Basically.
And credit to Senator Sanders for keeping the lid on this fight.
But let's face it.
If Bernie Sanders
can hold you back, you
were not really going to fight that guy.
I didn't even know how to talk.
Stand your butt up?
No, no, no. He don't play that.
He said a lot of weird things.
He said, for example, he said, hey, look,
we're consenting adults.
Whoa.
This is also true.
And as he stood up presumably to come out there and fight this teenster,
he took off his wedding ring and everybody watching was like,
he's either going to punch this guy or cheat on his wife with him.
Notice how there were no Democrats involved in this, right?
Yeah.
Because, well, no, that's not, let's not.
It's not, do you know why?
Because in fight or flight, Democrats are the flight.
All right?
That's what this is.
Wait, but don't you think the Teamster is a Democrat?
Well, he didn't say.
No, not necessarily.
For the purpose of the joke, let's pretend he's not.
All right.
Okay.
Sylvia, your next quote is something you hear at the grocery store right after
you just placed an item in the bag. Please place the item in the bag. That
failure is one of the many reasons many kinds of stores are now getting rid of their what?
Their self-service checkout.
Yes, their self-checkout machines.
Very good, Sylvia.
They came, it seems, just yesterday.
And now apparently they're going and we are going to miss them.
We are, because where else can you see a
grown man scream, I did place the item in the bagging area. I'm so glad those self-checkouts
are gone, because I remember, you know, when it was just cashiers, you know, if they had to,
they didn't know a price to something, either they'd call their manager or they'd just make
up a price, right? Or if they recognized me, yeah, here's a free thing, you know?
And that's something self-checkouts don't give you.
They don't see status.
And that's unfortunate.
Right.
You are the guy who is screaming right into the scanner, don't you know who I am?
I saw you.
At the Barnes and Nobles.
But it's also
like you can get free stuff
easier.
Oh my God, you're right.
That is,
you are right, because
for a lot of people,
it was a chance to get
a little edgy and do a little light
shoplifting, right?
I told the machine
these organic bananas were regular bananas.
No one will take me alive.
Stolen Brussels sprouts taste sweeter.
It's true. It's true.
Okay, Sylvia, your last quote is a sales pitch.
A tender poetic ode to first steps.
That was a major fashion brand that this week announced a brand new perfume for a whole new audience.
Who is it?
Babies?
Yes, babies.
Very good, Sylvia.
You were born ready. It's perfume for babies. Very good, Sylvia. You were born ready.
It's perfume for
babies. It's called
Chanel number this many.
For only
$230,
for a
three-ounce bottle,
Christian Dior is
offering Bon Etoile
scented water
for babies, also known as
Wait, stop! Don't drink that!
I love
this idea. Do you?
Yeah, because how else are you going to know which babies are the jerks?
Oh, the ones wearing the $230
jerks.
Who's a member of the bourgeoisie?
Who's a member of the bourgeoisie? Who's a member of the bourgeoisie?
Where do you apply it on the baby?
Well, that's the funny thing,
because normally everybody goes up to a baby
and they smell their scalp, right?
Because they just have that great baby smell on their scalp.
What do we do now?
It's like you're going to pick up somebody's baby
and smell their pulse points?
I guess you just spray it in the air and then you waft the baby through.
Yes, exactly.
That's the classic way.
You don't want to be overwhelming.
If you really want to do it well, you spray it in the middle of the room
and toss the baby to your spouse.
I mean, I could understand if it was like baby-smelling perfume.
Like a perfume that smelled like a baby.
That you put on a baby.
That you put on a grown up, I guess.
Just not like a baby?
To smell like a baby.
Yeah.
It would be a shame to have a baby that needed baby smelling.
It would be a real shame.
I don't know.
We do everything for him.
We feed him.
He has a little puppy thing that he hugs.
He just doesn't smell like a baby.
I gotta say, okay, fine.
We live in the world we live in. Baby perfume, it's
fine. But what is this
Ozempic Junior?
Nothing worse than a chubby baby. We all hate
those.
Oh, yeah.
I don't want to pick that up and eat it at all. Nothing worse than a chubby baby. We all hate those. Oh, yeah. Ew, yuck.
I don't want to pick that up and eat it at all.
Bill, how did Sylvia do on our quiz?
Sylvia's in Washington, and she's not crazy.
She got a perfect score.
Congratulations, Sylvia.
Wow.
Good luck to you.
Thank you.
May you do as well on your exams as you did here.
Take care, Sylvia.
Can I tell you about my baby?
First of all, he's mine, all mine.
He's so fine, he's like caring wine.
Oh, he drives me out of my mind.
He's so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
He's a body sweet and pure.
And he's mine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
He's a body sweet and pure.
And he's mine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine.
Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine. Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine. Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine. Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine. Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine. Sweet Danny, he's wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, wild, so fine He's so fine
He's about as sweet as a girl
And he's mine
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Hurry, some exciting news for astronomy buffs.
This week, with just a pair of binoculars,
it's possible to look up in the night sky and see what?
Oh, a constellation.
No. Mars. No. Was it Venus? Jupiter. It was not in general
a planet. I will give you a hint. It wasn't a planet? Pluto. Pluto, right?
I'll just tell you, it was tools, a toolbox. Last week, an astronaut on a spacewalk doing maintenance on the ISS
accidentally dropped her toolbox and it floated away in space.
And because this box is so reflective,
anybody with a pair of binoculars can see it orbiting overhead, right?
Wow.
Can you imagine having a really bad day at work, making a bad mistake,
and everybody on Earth can see it?
Hey, hey,
do you see that light crossing the sky up there?
That's the quarterly report
that Phil accidentally deleted.
It'll be there for generations, I guess.
But what does it do to your horoscope
when your moon is in Venus
but your toolbox is in Capricorn?
That is a sexy
horoscope.
It really is, yeah.
And did she,
you don't think there's a chance she did it on purpose
to leave her mark in the sky?
My dad was in construction
and we can see a tower that he helped to build.
Yeah.
Not from space, just from our house.
And that's even so special.
That's true. The only problem is it won't last Yeah. And that's even so special. That's true.
The only problem is it won't last long
because, you know, the orbit's going to decay
and we're told they will re-enter Earth's atmosphere
and burn up, which is actually kind of good
because traditionally, if you wish,
on a shooting toolbox,
your kitchen renovation will come in on budget.
Ooh.
Your kitchen renovation will come in on budget.
Coming up, improve your image with this one simple trick.
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.
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.
The biggest presidential primary day in this campaign cycle, Super Tuesday. Will the Republican
nominee be settled after these votes? Check out the NPR Politics Podcast for all the news you need
about what happens when voters have their say.
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We introduce you
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We did not have a trash can.
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Didn't need one.
We show you how money
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from npr and wbez chicago this is wait wait don't tell the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis. We are playing
this week with Roy Blunt Jr., Hari Gandabolu, and Maeve Higgins. And here again is your host
at the Merrill Auditorium in Portland, Maine, Peter Sagan. Thank you, Bill. Thank you, everybody.
Right now, it's time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff, the listener game.
Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to play our game in the air.
Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, my name is Amy Quinn calling from down east Maine in Sullivan.
Sullivan, Maine, down east.
And I know you mean you're like on the southern coast of Maine, right?
Is that where down east is?
No.
This is like the deep south of New England.
Okay.
So we're actually north of where you are right now.
So you're on the central coast of Maine, but you call it down east to keep people from finding you.
Yeah, or some sailor made something up.
I don't know.
Well, welcome to the show, Amy.
You're going to play our game on what you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Amy's topic?
Image rehab.
Improving a tarnished reputation is pretty hard.
Look at Drew Barrymore's apology video during the WGA strike,
the recently opened Mark Wayne Mullen Center for Peace and Reconciliation.
Our panelists are all going to tell you
about somebody doing their best
to restore their reputation in a creative way.
Pick the one telling the truth.
You'll win the weight-waiter of your choice
in your voicemail.
Ready to go?
Yes.
All right.
First, let's hear from Hari Kondabolu.
Spirit Airlines has long been seen
as the greyhound of the sky.
A cheap air carrier for those with a small budget and an even smaller will to live.
Long a punchline, Spirit has decided to change the narrative by offering something every passenger will appreciate. A passenger lounge.
A space for all Spirit customers to relax before being completely unnerved in the sky.
At airports across the country, you will start seeing Spirit lounges, aka tents set up outside
the airport with 12 folding chairs around a circular table. There will also be five old
elementary school chairs with the desk attached and a sign that says Business Center.
This is Spirit's biggest promotional campaign since their punch card idea.
Fly three Spirit flights and get the fourth for free.
The problem with this was most people don't fly Spirit more than once.
Spirit Airline trying to fix their rep for no frills flying, opens their
first passenger lounge in a tent outside the airport. Your next story of improving an image
comes from Maeve Higgins. Heard the latest buzz? Bees are taking back the narrative. They are sick
of being busy and determined to end their workaholic ways.
Guess what?
One worker bee stated in the Wall Street Journal.
I'm more than just a worker bee.
I'm also, uh, well, oh man, what?
He was interrupted by his queen.
Listen, I'm a wellness girly and I've never worked a day in my life.
And look how many boyfriends I have.
Ha, I can't even
tell them apart. Bees have started a slowdown at work with Manny now napping in flowers and kicking
a tiny ball around the hive instead of collecting pollen. Stores are worried about dwindling honey
supplies with one irate store owner reporting that whenever he called his usual supplier, he was told to mind his own beeswax.
The worst part is, he said on MSNBC,
that's exactly what I'm trying to do.
But with these GD lazy bees, it's impossible.
Bees telling the Wall Street Journal they no longer want to be seen.
Quiet quitting.
Exactly.
As workaholics, you know, as in busy bees.
Yeah, that's definitely the real one.
Thank you.
Your last story of reputation rehab comes from Roy Blunt Jr.
Big chicken, that is to say, major chicken processors,
are widely accused of treating chickens inhumanely
and also of stuffing them with antibiotics.
From Purdue chicken comes an inspired response,
a new product that brings chickens and folks closer together while making
a PR point. Purdue will be selling its chicken feed, slightly adapted as Chick's Mix, for people.
Chick's Mix does contain a dash of human-friendly spices, but no antibiotics. This enables Purdue to publicize its pledge that its chicken
feed, unlike that of its rivals, also contains no antibiotics. Don't you feel the food chain getting
cozier?
Chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, All right.
So here are your choices.
Which is the real story of somebody trying to improve a reputation?
Was it from Hari Kondabulu, Spirit Airlines setting up their first passenger's lounge,
a tent outside the airport?
From Maeve Higgins, bees tired of that busy stereotype go on a work stoppage.
Or from Ry Blunt Jr., how Purdue proves their chicken feed is perfectly healthy
by making a version for people.
Okay, well, I hate Spirit Airlines. You hate Spirit Airlines. is perfectly healthy by making a version for people. Okay.
Well, I hate Spirit Airlines.
You hate Spirit Airlines.
I'm going to go with make.
Oh, boy.
I am required by law to have you confirmed that.
She said what she said, Peter.
She said what she said.
You're going to choose Maeve's story of how bees themselves...
It's very well sourced.
...are protesting the stereotype that they're busy all the time.
And they've related this in interviews to major media outlets.
MSNBC. MSNBC.
MSNBC.
Just confirming.
That's what you're choosing.
It can't be Spirit.
Okay, let's go with the chicken.
Oh.
I don't know.
Okay.
All right.
Your choice, then, is Roy's story, the chicken, about the chicken feed.
All right.
To bring you the real story, we spoke to a reporter covering it.
To the Purdue Chicks Mix, it's essentially chicken feed made from corn, wheat, puffs, and all these spices.
That's right.
Chicken Feed made from corn, wheat, puffs, and all three spices.
That's right.
That was Jordan Valensky, a writer for CNN,
talking about Chicks Mix,
Purdue's chicken feed for people.
Congratulations, Amy.
You got it right, but I want you to know I will spend the rest of my life regretting
talking you out of Maeve's story
because it would have been a glorious moment.
But you have won.
You've earned a point for Roy, and of course you have
won our prize, the voice of anyone you might
choose in your voicemail. Congratulations, Amy.
Thank you, Jason.
And now the game we like to call
Not My Job. You can live in Maine
for years and never be accepted
as a true Mainer, but you can
dress like one. For that, you need to go to the legendary outfitter L.L. Bean, founded by one
Leon Leonwood Bean in 1912 up the coast a ways in Freeport, where it is still based.
Stephen Smith is the company's CEO. We are delighted to have him here. Stephen Smith is the company's CEO.
We are delighted to have him here.
Stephen Smith, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you very much, Peter.
Okay.
Now, you are, if I'm not mistaken, only the fourth CEO of the company?
That's correct.
Is that right?
And you're the second one who was not a member of the family.
That is all correct.
Right.
How did you convince them to accept you coming as you were
from the outside? Yeah. So I never expected to get the job and the job was, I was recruited. I was
working, actually living in China at the time in Shanghai and was recruited through about a year
long interviewing process. And they kept asking me to come back through that those sort of I guess
nine months of interviewing and and I made it through the process and I yeah if I were you in
your position I had a chance to interview for the head job at L.L. Bean I would of course dress head
to toe in L.L. Bean and show up which I did that was the thing but but I was gonna say I'm a clumsy
suck-up,
and of course a professional like you would never do that,
but you did that.
I definitely did that.
I was a suit-wearing person in my other job,
and I actually would get here a day or two early,
and I'd go up to the store, and I'm a freakish size,
so I'd have to go and buy, make sure I had stuff that fit.
Just because it's radio, maybe you should describe your body.
Thank you for that.
Yeah.
Or rather than describing your body, let's do something much more straightforward and say, what are you wearing?
Yeah.
I'm wearing 100% L.O. Bean, but I have, you know, 36 inch inseam.
So like, I got to go ahead.
Okay, Julia Roberts
whoop
so you said
when you came out here
to interview
you went to the L.L. Bean store
and you bought
L.L. Bean clothes
I made sure that I always
had something new
when I came through
the interview
really
for sure
and of course
you always made sure
to remove the tag
because that would
have been embarrassing
always always
and I never returned it
really
and I never returned it
to I always kept it
oh
that's important.
Yeah, that would have been, they were watching for that.
Absolutely.
I'm sure all the other unsuccessful candidates.
Ari, Ari.
Well, okay, about that.
So, as some of you might know, I'm a Bowdoin College graduate, right?
Right, okay.
And so, because of the policy where you can take something you bought at L.L. Bean and at any point return it and you can get a new one,
we would go to thrift stores and get as much L.L. Bean as possible.
Yeah, we're not from here.
We used you.
We took your natural resources, L.L. Bean.
And we'd get all this new stuff.
Did you know we were doing that?
Yes, and we have you on film.
For sure.
I actually understood that L.L. Bean was famous.
No matter how long you had your boots or your shirt,
whatever, if it popped a seam, if it leaked, whatever,
you could return it for a new one.
And you had to stop that because,
and I think I can say this, of Hari Kondabolu.
Yes.
Wait, you stopped that? We did stop that. You're telling me I have a suitcase full of Hari Kondabolu. Yes. Wait, you stopped that?
We did stop that.
You're telling me I have a suitcase full of youth's LB-ing clothes
for no clear reason, right?
If you have a proof of transaction, we would accept it.
If you came with a proof of transaction.
What if you maybe just forgot in the self-service checkout,
you forgot to pay for it, but you did use it for many years
and it did get damaged through wear
and tear, then what are you supposed to do?
If you've yelled at the machine enough.
I guess I'll have to
take my business to REI then.
Oh.
Brutal.
I don't
go outside to do stuff.
I'm not wearing REI.
Can you see me hiking?
One last question. I don't go outside to do stuff. I'm not wearing REI. Can you see me hiking? All right.
One last question.
Okay.
Because you guys, obviously, you're a clothing business.
Even though you're established traditional look, you must be coming up with new stuff to try to put out there.
Have you been ever presented with an idea by one of your employees, one of your designers, that was just an obvious
disaster?
Two answers for that, sorry.
So first is no.
From anybody inside the company, no.
Because they're really good and really serious.
But I get tons of customer recommendations of products all the time.
And what are they like? So I get, I mean, probably the weirdest one. I do think it's a product now.
So, but a woman sent me, um, architectural drawings, specs, and a mock-up of an item
that a woman could use to stand up and pee on the hiking trail.
Oh, a SheWeek.
But it was before that existed.
You're telling me.
So this is, Mae's right.
This product, known as a SheWeek.
And it made it through our mailroom.
Did it really?
Made it through the mailroom.
And it got to your desk.
It got to my desk.
Right.
And you said, are you crazy?
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean, Beth. And now that these products are out there everywhere
and women are happily peeing all over the place.
Right. Right. Right.
Free as a bird. Yeah. Do you regret your choice?
I don't. No. I don't. I don't.
Well, it seems it was a pleasure to talk
to you about your remarkable business,
but in fact, we have asked you here to play a game
we're calling...
You can't spell jelly bean without L.L. Bean.
Oh, clever.
It's true.
So you are, as we have established, the CEO of L.L. Bean.
So we're asking you three questions about the tastier but far less cozy jelly beans.
Get two out of three right, you'll win a prize for one of our listeners.
Bill, who is Steve Smith playing for? Amy Ruzero of South Portland, Maine. There you go. Awesome.
Ready to do this? I think so. Okay, why not? Yeah. Yeah. You told me I have to.
I did. You did. Here's your first question. Years ago, Jelly Belly, the company that makes most jelly beans these days,
tried to develop a pizza-flavored jelly bean, but it was terrible.
They eventually, though, found a use for that flavor.
What was it?
A, job applicants at Jelly Belly have to taste one,
and if they can guess what it is supposed to be, they're hired.
B, they were making a special gross series of jelly beans
and needed a barf flavor, and it was perfect.
Or C, they just used thousands of them as gravel for the CEO's driveway.
Number two.
You're right.
That's exactly right.
They, Jelly Belly, came up.
In fact, that's right. Jelly Belly came up. In fact, that's right.
In fact, this was for a line of prank jelly beans
that they called Bean Boozled, right?
The company faced a big problem
when working on another flavor in that line
known as Stinky Socks.
What was the problem as they worked on the stinky sock flavor?
Was it A, the stinky sock smell permeated everything the scientist was wearing
and it didn't even come out in the laundry?
Or B, the smell went through an open window and ruined a company-wide picnic?
Or C, the scientist kept getting distracted thinking her 16-year-old son
had showed up at her work?
I think it's two again.
You think it's...
The wafting smell that ruined the picnic?
It ruined the picnic.
Actually, it was A.
The smell got on everything she was wearing.
She even had to throw out her leather boots.
All right.
Here's your last question.
If you get this right, you win.
Uh-oh.
And depending on who's listening, you get to keep your job.
The Brax Candy Company is responsible for one of the worst reviewed jelly beans of all time.
I guess in passing, we should note there are jelly bean reviewers.
Which of these was this terrible failed jelly bean?
Was it A, beef taco from a late night taco truck flavor?
B, an Avengers tie-in called Captain America's Morning Breath?
Or C, a limited edition clam chowder bean?
Oh, God.
I'm going to choose A.
A is the answer, yes.
Apparently they had an entire
late night taco truck collection
of jelly bean flavors
and one reviewer, again, jelly bean reviewers,
described it as, quote,
what it would taste like if you put Mexican seasoning
on a can of dog food.
Oh.
Bill, how did Steve Smith do in our quiz?
Well, he won.
Two out of three, Steve.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Stephen Smith is the CEO of Maine's own L.L. Bean, founded and still based in Freeport, Maine.
Stephen Smith, thank you so much for joining us on Weatherly Transformation.
Stephen Smith, everybody.
Report Maine. Stephen Smith, thank you so much for joining us on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Stephen Smith, everybody.
In just a minute, a filthy, disgusting solution to your Wi-Fi problems in our listener limerick challenge. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air. We will be back in a minute with more of
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Hi, I'm Jen White from 1A. I host a news show for those who need to know what's happening
and why it matters, but we get it. The news can weigh you down. It's why we also make time for
stories, guests, and surprises that'll lift you up. 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're playing this week with Roy Blunt Jr., Hari Kondabolu, and Maeve Higgins.
And here again is your host at the Merrill Auditorium
in Portland, Maine, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
In just a minute, it's our weekly excuse
to just all sit back for a minute
and listen to Bill Curtis in tone some verse. It's our listener limerick challenge. back for a minute and listen to Bill Curtis in tone
some verse. It's 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. But right now, panel, some more questions for you from the week's news. Roy,
President Joe Biden's summit with President Xi Jinping of China in San Francisco this week got off to a great start when
Biden gave Xi some important
intelligence that
what was happening
next week?
Oh.
Something, in fact, that Xi
should have known himself. Thanksgiving. No.
That may not be celebrated
in China. I don't know.
I think it's a global holiday.
Yeah, probably.
Anyway, it wasn't that.
I'll give you a hint.
It was, this is true, one of the real headlines about this was quick, buy her flowers.
Buy her flowers.
Buy her flowers.
Anniversary.
Close.
His wife's birthday.
His wife's birthday.
President Biden reminded Xi that it is Mrs. Xi's birthday next week.
That's kind of intrusive, I think.
I wouldn't...
Well...
I know, I know.
Well, he was...
Appropriately, he was very diplomatic about it.
This happened at the APEC Leaders Summit.
And Biden told Xi to say happy birthday to his wife next week, and he noted that he himself
and Mrs. Xi shared the same birthday. That's how we knew. Now, of course, it was a terrible mistake
for Joe Biden to remind anyone that he is about to age again. But it turns out that she had totally forgotten about it.
So Biden saved the day. And we are sure that she's wife is going to love her present.
A genuine 2023 APEC Leaders Summit name tag.
If he did that wrong, that could be offensive.
Yeah.
It's your wife's birthday next week.
Tell her I said hi.
It just feels...
I bought her this bra.
I gastricized.
Interestingly, this was a mutual exchange of information
because she told Biden that Jill Biden
was planning a surprise party for him next week.
And when the president asked she how he knew that,
she just said, spy balloons.
Those were the birthday balloons.
Maeve, as I'm sure you know,
Taylor Swift and the football player Travis Kelsey are dating.
They seem like a serious item.
But this week, some of Taylor's fans, a little worried,
they did a deep dive on Travis's Twitter feed.
They went back years.
And they found out that a decade ago, quite shockingly,
he said certain things that were what?
Misspelled?
No.
Although, yes, actually, I'm going to give it to you.
They were completely lame.
Yeah, they were totally fine.
Doing a deep dive on an athlete's old tweets is always dangerous.
You could always end up thinking, I didn't know you could be racist to Elmo.
But this week, Concerned Swifty searched through Travis Kelsey's tweets,
and they found that before he was really famous, he was just a dork.
In 2011, he tweeted,
I just gave a squirrel
a piece of bread and it straight
smashed all of it. I had
no idea they ate bread like
that. Ha ha, hashtag crazy.
Aww.
He was probably nine years old.
No, he was young. He was 24
and he had never seen
a squirrel eat.
That's hashtag craziness.
It was kind of refreshing to go that deep into someone's past and not find anything bad.
He's really nice.
And this next one, again, entirely real.
Happy Easter to all.
Hashtag shout out to Jesus for taking one for the team.
That's great.
That is great. That's great. That is great.
That's literally what Jesus did.
It's true.
He was like, I die so you can live.
Yeah.
I'm a squirrel.
Yeah, I don't think that was the squirrel one, but yeah, you know.
Oh, this is a different tweet.
Yeah.
Imagine his reaction if he got to see Jesus eat a piece of bread.
He would have gone nuts.
Hashtag wild.
Coming up,
it's lightning fell on 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 see us live
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Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, my name is Matthew, and I'm from Basalt, Colorado.
Basalt, Colorado.
I know that place.
It's gorgeous.
What do you do there?
I am the food services director for a local elementary school.
Well, there you go.
That's great.
You feed kids all day.
What's wrong with that?
I enjoy that work so much.
It's the best job anybody could ever have.
I believe you, Matthew.
Well, 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
to the limericks, you'll be a winner. Here is your first limericks with the last word or phrase missing from each. If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly to the limericks, you'll be a winner. Here is your first limerick.
I've got news, but I'll wait till I leak it. I feel bubbly inside while I keep it.
Only I'm in the know, so I've got a nice glow. I feel great when I'm keeping a...
Secret?
Secret, yes.
When I'm keeping a... Secret?
Secret, yes!
Very good.
According to a new study from Columbia University,
secret keeping is a huge mood booster,
so grab your sister's diary and get to reading.
So, it's your own secret,
or somebody else's secret makes you feel good?
Well, I'm not quite sure,
but it has to be a secret that you can't tell.
And since these people were just told this secret,
presumably pertaining to somebody.
Oh, so like if you knew that like a bunch of kids
were going to Disney World,
but you didn't tell them,
but just you knew they were going to go.
Right, that's a good example.
That's a nice one.
And you'd feel like so glad.
And then, but if you told them, that's bad?
Well, if you told them, presumably you wouldn't feel quite as energized and up.
And what if you told them, but you had made it up?
And you felt like, well, it's pretty funny.
Yeah.
Wouldn't that be a lie?
Right.
That's the word.
That's the thing.
I'll ask Columbia and we'll get back to you.
All right, Matthew, here is your next limerick.
Once the filling amount was a dream.
Now my Oreos ain't what they seem.
Their cookie shrink inflation is causing frustration.
The company's skimping on...
Green!
Green, yes!
According to the Wall Street Journal,
Oreo fans around the country suspect
the Nabisco company is trying to cut corners
by putting less cream filling in each cookie.
Less cream?
What are my teeth supposed to latch on to
as I scrape them down to the bone?
Imagine trying to cut corners on a round cookie.
Yeah.
That's low.
All right, Oreos may or may not be skimping on cream.
But meanwhile, the other company has gotten away completely with changing Chips Ahoy to Chip Ahoy.
What?
All right.
Here is your last limerick.
With my files, I can't be a bridgen.
And my Wi-Fi starts lagging a smidgen.
I tie hard drives to birds.
Though the choice seems absurd.
They go faster by carrier.
Pigeon? Pigeon! Yay! though the choice seems absurd they go faster by carrier pigeon if you are
complaining about your wifi
the Washington Post has advice for you
in some places and in some situations
it is actually faster to send
data by carrier
pigeon. It's true. So going forward, please do not text me. I would much prefer to be
pigeoned.
That's actually what Spirit Airlines is doing for the internet now.
By the way, and here's a fun hack. If you are, you know, reduced to using pigeon to
send files, you can double the speed of your Pigeon transfer by releasing a falcon right after.
Bill, how did Matthew do in our quiz?
I didn't think he could do it.
But he got all three right!
Congratulations, Matthew!
Matthew, well done.
Congratulations, and good on you for the good work you do.
Thank you!
Take care, Matthew!
Bye-bye. Thank you. Take care, Matthew. Bye-bye.
Thank you.
You too.
Planet Money helps you understand the economy.
We find the people at the center of the story.
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We show you how money influences everything.
Tell me what you like by telling me how you spend your money.
And we dig until we get answers.
I had a bad feeling you were going to bring that up.
Planet Money finds out.
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The Planet Money Podcast from NPR.
At the Planet Money Podcast, we talk to anyone who can help us understand the economy.
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Obscure government bureaucrats.
Oh, the obscure ones are the best.
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And of course, we talk to the smartest economists to explain everything from inflation and disinflation to how manatees got addicted to fossil fuel.
That is Planet Money from NPR.
Now on to our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank.
Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill in the blank questions as they can.
Each correct answer is worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores?
Roy has four.
Maeve has two.
Hari has one.
All right.
I'm not quite sure how that happened, but nonetheless.
Hari, you are in third place.
That means you have to go first.
The clock will start when I begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
Though he called their meeting a success,
President Biden was quick to point out
he still considered blank to be a dictator.
What is the Prime Minister of China?
Yes, Xi Jinping.
This week, the fifth national climate assessment
said the U.S. faces substantial economic
costs from blank. Climate change.
Yes. Shortly after the second
GOP debate, South Carolina Senator
blank dropped out of the presidential
race. Tim Scott.
Yes. We also would have accepted
who?
This week, a Scottish ultramarathon
runner was banned for 12 months
after she was proved to have blanked during a recent race.
Done cocaine.
No.
Used a car.
On Thursday, it was confirmed that Jimmy Kimmel would once again host the blank.
Oscars.
Yes.
This week, a Florida family was shocked when their ring camera caught a bear
stealing their Taco Bell delivery off their front porch and then blanking. Vomiting. No, coming back a few minutes later to steal the sodas too.
According to the family, their ring camera, this was in Florida by the way, caught the bear walking
up to their front porch, putting the bag of food in its mouth and leaving. Then a few minutes later,
the bear came back and took the sodas. Remember, the first rule of hiking, do not get between a mama grizzly and her crunch wrap.
Bill, how did Hari do on our quiz?
He got four right.
That's eight more points for him.
A total of nine puts him in the lead.
All right.
Maeve, you are up next.
Fill in the blank.
After an investigation found evidence that he had misused campaign funds,
Blank said he would not seek re-election.
Eric Adams.
No, you wish. George Santos.
This week, the state of New Hampshire defied the DNC and scheduled...
Trick question. There is no state of New Hampshire.
I'm just going to tell you it's the presidential primary.
The primary.
Yes.
According to new pricing data, U.S. blank dropped more than expected last month.
Dollars.
Yes.
I'm going to say yes.
It's inflation.
U.S. dollars.
Close enough.
Same difference, babe.
On Thursday, New York Yankee pitcher Garrett Cole won the 2023 Blank Award.
I want to say baseball.
Again.
Yes.
Yes.
It's a baseball award.
It's called the Cy Young.
During an interview this week, NFL sideline reporter Charissa Thompson admitted she sometimes blanks during games.
Oh, she sometimes gets concussion?
No, she sometimes makes up quotes from coaches.
You know what's hard?
Tracking down a coach to talk on live TV during a game.
You know what isn't hard?
Lying.
live TV during a game.
You know what isn't hard?
Lying.
So this reporter for Fox Sports claims that during her sideline reports when she couldn't talk to the
coach, she would just make up
what they might have said.
I mean, how far away
from the truth could she have been? It's always going to be
execute, game plan, something, control the tempo,
something, something, something, hustle.
I love my players.
They're good boys.
Bill, how did Maeve do in our quiz? She got two. Something, something, something, hustle. I love my players. They're good boys. Yeah.
Bill, how did Maeve do in our quiz?
She got two.
That's good, actually.
She did not get two.
I did.
You did not.
Hari, fair and square.
Which gives her four more and a total of six, but not as many as Hari.
All right.
Then how many does Roy Blunt
need to win? Three to
win. Alright.
Roy Blunt, here we go. I feel my work
is cut out for me.
Fill in the blank. On Tuesday, a Michigan
judge denied a request
to disqualify blank from the state's
primary ballot. Oh, Trump.
Yeah. On Thursday, employees
of Starbucks staged the largest blank in the company's history. Strike. Yeah. On Thursday, employees of Starbucks staged the largest blank
in the company's history. Strike. Yes. On Wednesday, the UN Security Council approved a resolution
calling for humanitarian pauses in combat in blank. In Gaza. Yes. This week, a woman in Tasmania had
to call off of work when her car was blocked by blank. By a devil. You'd wish. No, it was a 600-pound elephant seal named Neil.
Huh.
On Wednesday, the FAA approved a second test launch
for Blank's Starship rocket.
What's his name?
Musk.
Yeah, or SpaceX, the company.
This week, Jim Harbaugh, the head football coach at Blank,
accepted a three-game suspension from the Big Ten.
Michigan.
Yes.
This week, a flight departing from JFK had to turn around and make an emergency landing
after a Blank came loose on the plane.
A pilot.
No, a horse.
Shortly after a takeoff, a horse flying cargo on a flight from JFK got loose from its stall
and started running amok in the hall.
It's a good thing, too.
Otherwise, the horse would have spent the entire flight complaining
about how little legs room
it had.
Bill, did Roy
do well enough to win?
Roy is the
champion this week.
Yay, Roy!
Good job.
In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict, now
that we have perfume for babies,
what will be the next new specialized perfume?
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 writes our limericks.
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shana Donald.
BJ Liederman, composer.
Our theme, our program is produced by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks this week to Vinnie Thomas and Monica Hickey.
Peter Gwynn is founder of the new company PG Bean.
Emma Choi is our vibe curator.
Technical direction is Lorna 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 Michael Danforth.
Now panel, what will be the next
new specialized perfume?
Roy Blunt Jr.
Anti-Cologne perfume.
For when your uncle shows
up at Thanksgiving, reeking of
canoe.
Hari Kondabolu. Try
white cubic zirconia.
It's for singles in their 40s to let the dating pool know
they've lowered their expectations.
And Maeve Higgins.
After the baby perfume, it's going to be perfume for toddlers.
It's called Get to Steppin'.
Well, if it happens, we're going to ask you about it On Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
Thank you, Bill Curtis
Thanks also to Roy Blunt Jr., Maeve Higgins
And Hari Kondabolu
Thanks to the staff and crew
At the Merrill Auditorium in Portland, Maine
A special thanks to Corey Morrissey
Thomas Wilson and the entire staff
At Maine Public Radio for making this all happen
Thanks to our fabulous audience
Here In Portland And thanks to all of you for listening at home Maine Public Radio for making this all happen. Thanks to our fabulous audience here in
Portland.
And thanks to all of you for listening at home.
I'm Peter Zegel. We'll see you next week.
This is NPR.
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