Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Tara Dower
Episode Date: November 9, 2024This week, record-breaking ultrarunner Tara Dower talks speed-hiking the Appalachian Trail with Negin Farsad, Faith Salie, and Peter GroszLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/a...dchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Find the unforgettable at autographcollection.com. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me!
The NPR News Quiz.
I'm Joshua Johnson filling in for Bill Curtis.
And here's your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois,
Peter Segel!
Thank you, Joshua.
Wow.
Thank you.
I appreciate that. Thank you, Joshua! Wow! Thank you!
I appreciate that.
We really do have a very fine show for you today.
Later on, we're going to be talking to Tara Dower,
the Ultrarunner, who just set the record
for running the entire Appalachian Trail.
But first, we want to welcome
Joshua Johnson, filling in for Bill Curtis this week.
Joshua, you were, of course, with NPR for a while,
the original host of 1A. So, what is it like coming back to NPR just for the day? Did you miss us?
It is fantastic. Some of you know I went over to television for a while and it's just, it's
not the same. They don't give away tote bags. They can't do an 11 minute interview to save
their lives. Amateurs, it's amateur hour over there. This is where I'd really rather dance. Yeah.
We're glad to have you back.
You out there are always welcome on our air, wherever you have gone off to.
The number to call 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, Peter.
How are you?
I'm well.
Who's this? This is Molly Prospect from West Hartford, Connecticut.
West Hartford, Connecticut.
I know where that is.
It's just west of Hartford.
Very clever.
What do you do there?
I am a stay-at-home mom.
You are?
How many?
Two boys.
Two boys.
You have two boys.
How old are you two boys?
So Patrick is 2 and 1 half, and Connor is 11 months.
Oh, wow.
You're just a little bit behind me.
Peter is a thousand months?
I am, I am, I am.
More than that, Peter, actually.
Well, anyway, Molly, welcome to the show.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First up, it's a contributor to CBS Sunday Morning.
It's Faith Salie.
Hey, Molly.
Hi, Faith.
Next, the comedian and host of the podcast, Fake the Nation, it's Nagin Farsad.
Hey.
And finally, an actor and writer who can be seen in the acclaimed improv show, Two Square
at the UCB Theater in New York on November 20th, it's Peter Gross.
Hi.
So, Molly, we've got everybody assembled here for you to play Who's Joshua this time?
Joshua Johnson filling in for Bill Curtis.
He's going to read you three quotations from the week's news.
If you can correctly identify or explain two of them, you will win our prize.
Any voice from our show you might choose on your voicemail.
Are you ready to go?
I'm ready.
Okay.
Now, your first quote is a one-word headline from the German news site Zeit Online on Wednesday.
That was, in fact, the English word, you know it, it starts with an F,
that they use to describe what event.
The results of the election?
Yes, indeed.
Yes.
It's all done.
It's all over, including the counting.
It's fair to say that the whole electoral process that we went
through was incredibly traumatic for Americans
of every side of the aisle.
Well, good news, we won't ever have to do this again.
every side of the aisle. Well, good news, we won't ever have to do this again. Kamala Harris, her last moment of grace and patriotism, she of course conceded
on Wednesday, but of course she's still vice president and she has a job to do,
including of course presiding over the certification of electoral votes on
January 6th. And you know what would be really funny?
This is so fun.
You know what my first feeling was when I found out the news?
I was, like, my literal first feeling was like that same feeling you get
when you see an ex-boyfriend who's doing well, and you're like,
oh, no, I'm going
to get, I'm going to start eating broccoli and exercising and I'm going to get six pack
abs. This guy does not get to be president and I'm not going to be hot. No, thank you.
It's like having a revenge body but like a revenge democracy. That's how I, that was
my first reaction.
Wait a minute. Hold on. Wait a minute. Wait a minute, I'm a little confused about the metaphor are the ABS actual ABS or the ABS represent like a committed
They're like a civic commitment
Being on like a local school
My thought was about self-care I was like, I'm just go get some manny petties and some abortions and just do it all right now.
While you can, you know?
Can I say something that I feel is that I remembered that made me feel very hopeful?
Which is that like he totally responds to flattery.
Like he'll be like, I'm racist and xenophobic.
And then you'll flatter him and then he'll be like, well, I guess you can have that funding.
You know what I mean?
He's just sort of easy to manipulate.
That's fun.
That is fun.
Right guys?
Right?
Right guys?
You know what we have to do?
If he divorces Melania and like a super young very pretty young liberal
Yeah marries him a falls for her and they'll be like I was listening to Stephanie and everything she says
About trans rights is exactly how I feel
Possible. Yeah. All right, Molly. Here is your next quote. It is from the musician jelly roll
Marijuana and I'll have a cocktail every now and then.
He is part of a trend that was outlined
in the Washington Post this week.
He's one of the many people who say
that they enjoy certain drugs and alcohol,
but they still say they are what?
Sober.
Yes, sober.
According to the Washington Post,
more and more people are describing themselves as sober
even though they drink regularly or even use some drugs, making sober the new vegetarian.
So some of them you might be familiar with.
There's California sober.
That means you only smoke weed.
And then there's Florida sober, meth only.
This one is real apparently.
Nose sober. You just abstain from any drug you
snort, right? What?
What? Really?
Yeah, that's a thing. Oh yeah, no, I'm nose snobber. No cocaine as you take another shot.
Yeah, I mean, at a certain point- As you take cocaine and rub it all over your
tongue. Exactly. At a certain point, it just gets ridiculous. You're not nighttime sober.
You're just sleeping. So this is like a sober, curious movement?
Well, yeah, there are people who I think want to identify as being sober because what it
says about your commitment to self-improvement, but they also like to smoke a little weed.
So they're California sober.
And then there's dry January, right?
There's dry January or sober October where you don't drink for that month, give it a
try.
But then there's also, and this is true, damp January where you drink just not so much,
right?
And you do not get credit for that.
You can't be like, I only cheated my wife a little bit.
I'm damp faithful.
October sober is one.
October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one.
October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is one. October is through. Finally got there. Wait, but I also just think this is how everybody's been living for like centuries and now we
just name things more.
We're like naming obsessed.
I mean, there's different kinds of sober.
Apparently there's also different kinds of drunk.
For instance, right now I'm NPR drunk.
That's where I can't get completely lit without your support. Call now.
All right.
Your last quote, Molly, is from the AP.
It's bigger than a king-size bed.
Forget your puny 55-inch.
A new report says there's a tenfold increase in the number of people who are planning to
buy extra-large watts starting on Black Friday.
Television.
Yes, TVs.
They are bigger than ever and American consumers are snapping up.
They've given up on the little 55-inch TVs now they want 80-inch, 90-inch, 97-inch wide
TVs.
That's about eight feet.
A TV can be too big.
If you have to walk several steps to the side to see which
friend Chandler is talking to, that's too big.
Yeah, any head movement, I feel like, makes a TV too big.
If you don't want to spend all this money on this enormous TV, you don't have to. They're
actually available secondhand this very week. CNN is selling three 500-inch touch screens
on Facebook.
But they all come with John King.
Exactly.
Joshua, how did Molly do on our quiz?
She could not have done any better.
Three for three, way to go.
Congratulations.
Very good, Molly.
Thank you so much for playing.
Good luck with those boys.
Took myself down to the TV store,
replaced the set I'd smashed on the floor
Like a lover's quarrel, guess I lost my head I potted on that sucker till I knew it was
dead We had a little fight Me and my TV I could watch you every night
Right now panel it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news Peter
Hotels are always adding new amenities for clients
But now some modern designed hotels are removing something from rooms to create what they say is a more intimate guest experience
What is it beds? No
Turrets.
You're getting closer.
Am I?
It's actually usually between the bed and the toilet.
The bed and the toilet.
You're in the toilet.
The ironing board in the closet.
No.
The little thing you put your luggage on in the closet.
It's sort of like an open concept.
The wall.
What's in the wall that you usually...
Dry wall. The door?
The door, yes, the bathroom door. Oh, okay, sorry.
More and more modern hotels are doing what they say saves money and space by designing
rooms without bathroom doors, right? It began when a designer said, what do people staying
in a hotel room really want?
To be able to see from the bed straight to the toilet.
And no one else was in the office that day.
So, they're facing criticism because it turns out some couples strangely do not want to
watch each other poop.
I'm in a strictly, we don't even admit to, after like ten years, we still don't admit
to each other that we either poop or fart. I'm very proud of that. Wow. Yeah well not to be
competitive but my husband is so thoughtful that when we stay in a hotel
and he I suppose has to do that he says I'm gonna go off campus and he goes to
the lobby bathroom. That's how loving my husband is.
I don't want to steal your thunder, but I've been dating this woman for three years.
I have not pooped once.
Not once.
Out of respect for her.
That's a horrible idea.
It's disgusting.
Yeah, that's ridiculous.
But one designer of these rooms explained that given space and budget constraints in modern
construction, quote, sometimes privacy is just not going to happen, adding, you got
eyelids, use them.
That's the door.
God gave you two doors on your eyes.
Close the doors.
Close your eye doors.
Coming up, the truth is out there.
It's our bluff the listener game called 1-triple-8-wait-wait to play.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Joshua Johnson.
We're playing this week with Nagin Farsad, Faith Salie, and Peter Gross. Here again is
your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segal.
Thank you, Joshua. Thank you all so much. Right now it is time for the Wait Wait Don't Tell Me Bluff the
Listener game call 1-888-WAITWAIT to play our game on the air. You can also check out
the pinned post on our Instagram page which is at WaitWaitNPR. All the info is there.
Hi, you're on Wait Wait Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Dahlia calling from Waltham, Massachusetts.
Waltham, I know it well. Waltham, what do you do there?
I'm a politics and
psychology student at Brandeis University. Brandeis University, a famous
institution of higher learning there, the alma mater of our friend Josh
Gondelman. Well, that's cool. What kind of career do you look for when you have
that degree? I don't know. We'll see. There you are. There you are. Classic
college student. I think that's great. Well, Dahlia, welcome to the show.
You're gonna play the game in which you must try
to tell truth from fiction.
Joshua, what is Dahlia's topic?
I want to believe.
Certain things defy our understanding.
UFOs, psychic powers, people who clap when the plane lands.
This week we heard about something new
in the paranormal world.
Our panelists are gonna tell you about it.
Pick the one who's telling the truth
and you will win our prize,
the weight weighter of your choice on your voicemail.
Are you ready to play?
Yes I am.
First let's hear from Faith Salie.
Alexis Mulvihill is an Albuquerque based medium.
People pay her to place her fingertips on her Ouija board
and receive occult messages.
But it turns out spirits prefer palms to fingers.
During a recent deep clean of her home,
Alexis came across her old palm pilot from 1999.
You know those handheld personal digital assistants
that helped you schedule when to buy
your Livin' La Vida Loca tour tickets?
Well, Alexis happened to place her PDA near her Ouija board
and that during her next reading,
it turned on spontaneously.
Alexis's right hand was forced to grasp the stylus, which then told her client that the
client's dead father needed her to vote for Al Gore before it was too late.
Paranormal researcher Violet Cogs-Rubin explains the spirit's preference
for the Palm Pilot. In today's world, the dead have shorter attention spans. Letter
by letter on a Ouija board is lame. Spirits don't want smartphones, though. They like
the turn-of-the-century technology to hang onto a retro vibe. Alexis now has a six month waiting list for her palm readings.
A medium goes from a Ouija board to reading palms, palm pilots that is. Your next X file
comes from Nagin Farsad. The Loch Ness Monster has long been sighted
in the Scottish Highlands. The fact that the Scottish people also have the highest reported level of drunkenness
is unrelated.
Loch Ness Monsters are big, they're slimy, and they've got incredibly long necks.
But in a recent report from paranormal experts who specialize in maritime creatures, it turns
out they have a horrible anatomy.
Years of inbreeding have left them with genetic problems. You know like
how pugs can't breathe because of their short flat faces or how chihuahuas
shiver when it's 80 degrees out or how cats behave like cats. The Loch Ness has
a trove of weird inbred ailments including hip dysplasia, elbow dysplasia
and most painfully Loch Ness monsters can't
really lift their necks because they're missing the necessary number of vertebrae to make
it comfortable. You thought it was because they were being tactical, staying hidden underwater,
but no, it's because they literally can't lift their heads. If you're ever drunk in
the Scottish Highlands, in the distance, you'll hear a Loch Ness monster say, ah my neck, my
sciatica is acting up, if any of these people knew I could barely keep my head up I
would lose all my monster credibility. And that's how they talk.
The Loch Ness monster is discovered to be suffering from centuries of inbreeding.
Of course, it's stuck in a lake.
Your last paranormal parable comes from Peter Gross.
If you live in a haunted house, great news.
Your ghost could die soon.
That's right, the dead are dying twice.
Brian Sterling Vett, who heads up a research organization called Project Half-Life, told
the Daily Star, quote, many of our once famous ghosts could be literally dying, unquote. He claims ghosts are
subject to the second law of thermodynamics which says that energy
will disperse and degrade over time so they're essentially dying again. They're
being cooked twice like a paranormal baked potato. He also believes that the
ghosts currently haunting us are likely under a hundred years old, Which is good, because nobody wants a hundred year old ghost.
By the time ghosts turn forty, they're just complaining about how lugging their chains around is aggregating their herniated discs.
And then when they hit seventy, they can't stop talking about the show Yellowstone.
It's Costner's best performance since Dances with Wouuuuulds!
At eighty, they lose their hearing, and at 90,
every other word out of their mouths is some kind of slur.
So maybe them dying before 100 is just for the best.
All right.
So we heard some interesting news from the world's beyond,
sort of.
Was it from Faith Salie, a medium who
found that her palm pilot was in fact an even better
medium for communicating with the spirits?
From Nagin Farsad, the discovery that the Loch Ness Monster Nessie is suffering from
inbreeding?
Or from Peter Gross, a discovery by a prominent paranormal researcher that the ghosts who
are already dead are dying?
Which of these is the real discovery from the world of the unusual?
I think I'm going to go with Peter's story about the ghosts who are dying again.
The ghosts who are dying again.
All right, so your choice is Peter's story about ghosts dying again.
To bring you the correct answer, we spoke to someone involved with that real story.
This begs the question, what is a year of ghost time compared to a year of human time?
If ghosts have a lifespan, what is their afterlife?
That was Brian Sterling Vite, founder of Paranormal Rescue, the first ever paranormal emergency
rescue service, who was the guy who has determined that the ghosts are dying out.
Congratulations, Dahlia, you got it right.
Thank you.
And now the game where we ask people about things they just don't know anything about,
it's called Not My Job.
The Appalachian Trail is about 2,200 miles long.
And every now and then, people see how fast they can run the whole thing. This September Tara Dower set a new record
for men or women of 40 days 18 hours and 5 minutes breaking the old record by 13
hours. We are grateful, it's quite a thing, and we are grateful that after doing that, she was still able to stay awake long enough
to join us now.
Tara Dower, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thanks.
I'm so excited to be here.
We're very excited to have you.
Speaking as a runner myself, I am not nearly of that achievement.
I'm extremely impressed.
First question, did we get the numbers right?
About 2,200 miles end to end, main to Georgia,
and you did it in 40 days, 18 hours, five minutes.
Is that right?
Six minutes.
Oh, excuse me.
Oh, you are frivolous.
So break that down.
To travel that far in that period of time,
how far did you have to travel per day
and how much time did it take to travel, to run every day?
The least amount of miles I did in a day was about 35 and the most I ever did was 62 in
a day and every day I was moving for about on average like 17 and a half hours a day.
17 and a half hours, okay.
That's kind of amazing.
And how much were you able to sleep?
On average about five hours.
And at what point, I mean, I guess you ran from Maine
to Georgia, so were you starting to hallucinate
by the time you were in New York, say?
Yeah, well, the compounding exhaustion came around,
I'd say Maryland, it got pretty bad.
I remember some like little hallucinations
I had, like little devils sitting on logs and I saw a white cat and a lion and I saw my friends sitting
on a log so the hallucinations were getting pretty bad around like the
middle of the trail. Maryland is about halfway through.
I wonder if there's people who have hiked it and they're like no that's just
Maryland. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
What do you do when you know you're hallucinating?
What do you do about it?
You just kind of go with it.
You got to just go with it.
You talk to the devil.
There's nothing else you can do.
Just keep going.
Right.
Well, it must be comforting knowing that's not real.
There's not a cat and a devil here.
I might as well just keep running.
There's no threat.
I've had hallucinations during 100 mile races that I've done,
and some of those have been really concerning.
Give us an example.
I'm lucky.
There was a hunter with a huge, huge, ginormous gun,
and he was asking me where I was going and what I was doing.
And I was like, oh crap, like, is this real?
And it was in the middle of the night.
It was at 2 AM on a trail by myself.
You know, if you ask a hallucination, if they're hallucination, they have to tell you.
That's a rule.
Do you eat while you run?
Yes.
Yeah.
I mean, that's you have to like be utilizing. You have to eat wherever you can. I mean, I'm eating. Oh, I think I mean that's you have to like be utilizing you have to eat wherever you
can I mean I'm eating oh I think it was like eight to ten thousand calories a day so I
mean you just have to like eat and run you have to do as much as you can when you run.
And do people bring you- The only time I stopped during the day was
to use the bathroom.
Yeah.
They have bathrooms in the trail that's nice and so so when you say're eating, so you're just like, she thought it was a bathroom.
You may have been hallucinating about someone's car.
You can't guarantee that was a bathroom.
There is a bear in Virginia that is off.
So you're so I'm trying to feel that you're running along and like your friends with you.
You have a lot of support I know in order to do this. And they run up to you and they give you, hand you a banana or whatever it is you're eating
and you just stuff it in your face as you keep running.
Yep, yep. That's about it.
Just keep moving, eat.
My favorite was gummies and I like Rice Krispie treats and Goldfish.
I loved Goldfish.
Right.
Wow, that's so unhealthy. Yeah.
It's the calories though, right?
I was just like, I was expecting you to be like broccoli and then other forms of broccoli.
Let's back up a little bit.
So this is, this was, as we've said, quite an accomplishment, 40 days of running whatever
18, 19 hours a day.
Why in the world did you decide you wanted to do this
in the first place?
Yeah, I through-hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2019.
And that's just like five months and 10 days.
I was just, I just look at that experience
and I just, I love that experience on the Appalachian Trail.
So you took five months and you through-hiked the trail.
You went from one end to the other.
Five months, amazing experience out there in the woods, in the
wilderness, in the towns, in the people. And you said, what if this, but with nothing enjoyable?
What if I were to do this whole thing, but doing it so fast I couldn't meet anybody,
stop anywhere, see anything or eat anything other
than handfuls of garbage. You said what is that? Yeah, yeah, yeah, that was kind of the experience
I was looking for. It's COVID. A couple more questions. First of all, I understand that you
said once that you are, you have decided after lots of experiences, positive but you've just decided that you're done with toenails oh yeah I got my I got four toenails
permanently removed before I went out on the trail and that was the best decision
ever made Wow you just you were done with them you're like you're tired of
them getting bloody and coming off yeah Oh yeah. How did you choose? They would fall off all the time. Well, usually- Were you playing this little piggy?
And you were like, this little piggy goes and goes.
This little piggy gets slaughtered.
Yeah, that was it.
We just did Eenie Meenie Minie Mo.
No.
So my big toenails are always the ones during these feats, they always like fall off.
And it's very painful and they get infected.
And so I was like, that one's coming off. And then and then you know I asked the podiatrist if we could take
them all off and he was like no but we can do we can do two at a time so I
decided it's like Sophie's choice with toes. What's next what's what's the next
achievement and when are you gonna be ready to do it? Yeah, I guess tonight and to see how fast I can get through, you know, a pint of ice
cream.
There you go.
Now we're talking.
Now we're talking.
Well, Tara, we are delighted to talk to you and we have asked you here to play a game
that this time we are calling.
Try a stroll down these Appalachian tales. So you ran the whole
Appalachian trail but you went through it too fast this last time to hear any
of the myths and legends of that particular region. So we're gonna ask
you three questions about folktales from the places you ran through and if you get
two right you'll win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone they
like on their voicemail. So Joshua who who is Tara playing for? Sarah O'Dell of Redmond, Washington.
Okay. Here we go. Here's your first question about Appalachian tails.
In West Virginia, they still celebrate the Mothman, that's the mysterious creature
that first appeared
in 1966 near Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
What was the headline in the Point Pleasant Register newspaper the day after the Mothman's
first sighting?
Was it A, insects seem to be rather large this year?
B, couples see man-sized bird, creature, something?
Or C, annual rummage sale draws record crowds?
Oh, I'm going gonna have to say B.
You're gonna go B, couple C, man-sized bird, creature,
something, you're right.
Yeah.
Yes.
To be fair, it was something, and there is now an annual
Mothman Festival in Point Pleasant, if you want to go
down there and find out all about it.
Oh, so cool.
She's like, it's a hallucination.
All right, here's your next question.
Now while Mothman is probably the most famous Appalachian cryptid, he's not the only one
out there, next time you run the trail you might also run into which of these?
A, the phantom trucker who stopped to use the bathroom at south of the border and never
returned.
B, the lost hiker and angry ghost who died of starvation and demands trail mix from every
passerby or see a Bigfoot-like creature called Wood Booger.
Oh, oh man.
I'm going to have to say be.
You're going to go for the lost hiker, the ghost that demands trail mix from every passerby?
No, it was the wood booger. Yeah.
Yeah, he's called the wood booger because he's like the boogeyman.
Not because of his texture.
He's the boogeyman.
Okay.
Last question.
If you get this one right, you win.
You've heard of Sasquatch, right?
There are stories of Sasquatch in the area.
But in West Virginia, there is a terrifying
beast that, unlike Sasquatch, walks on all fours.
Sasquatch stands up.
What do they call this mysterious creature?
A, the Sheep Squatch.
B, Big Feet.
Or C, Independent Senator Joe Manchin. What were the first?
The first one was a...
Squatch, big feet.
Seep Squatch, big feet, or independent senator Joe Manchin.
I would say A.
You're going to go for A, Sheep Squatch.
That's right, Tara.
Yay!
It's called the Seep, it's called Sheep sheep squat because of its thick white fur or so they say.
Joshua, how did Tara Dower do in our quiz?
Well normally she just got the two points but every one of the toes that she sacrificed
is actually worth a quarter point so we're just going to give you a perfect score.
Nicely done.
Yay.
Tara Dower is the fastest person ever to complete the Appalachian Trail.
Tyra Dower, thank you so much for joining us on Wayway.Globe.
Yeah.
And get some rest.
Take care.
Bye-bye.
In just a minute, find out what your houseplants really think of you in our listener limerick
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. Filling in for
Bill Curtis, I'm Joshua Johnson. We're playing this week with Peter Gross, Nagin Farsad,
and Faith Salie.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Joshua.
In just a minute, it's a classic man versus poem showdown in our listener limerick challenge.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at one triple eight wait wait that's one eight eight eight nine two
four eight nine two four but right now panel some more questions for you from
the week's news Nagin there is a new trend in parenting if your kids are
nervous about going to a sleepover you just have them bring along what oh is
this like Florida parenting and you have them bring some meth
Florida parenting and you have them bring some meth. That doesn't sound right.
It does not sound right, no.
You have them bring like a stuffy.
Like a little stuffy.
No, that's old school.
This is the new thing.
Stuffy's not going to help.
Oh, so you have them bring their little at home robot.
No, I'll give you a hint.
You can bring matching Kenga and Roo sleeping bags. Oh, so you bring your parents? No, you a hint. You can bring matching Kanga and Rue sleeping bags.
Oh, so you bring your parents?
No, you bring you.
Right, the parents?
Exactly, you bring the parent.
Yes, goes to the sleepover, right?
So you're nervous about what kind of environment you're sending your kid into at their friend's
house?
Well, pack your pajamas, your favorite stuff, and go do some reconnaissance.
It's called a mommy and me sleepover.
Oh, thank God.
This is why the surgeon general said that parenting is a health crisis.
It really is.
Because of stuff like this.
It's not bad. It's not bad because it's a good time because you're friends with the
parents, the kids play, the parents chat and have cocktails.
The parents need to be child sober. That's what they need to be.
There's no children at all.
I would also dispute that you're friends with the parents.
I don't think that everybody, parents here and across America, are you friends with all
of your kids' friends' parents?
No.
Like friends' friends?
Not really.
And all the people who know me, I love you, you're great.
But like, you're not like sleepover, you don't want to go like sleep over at the house of
all these people. Is this, do you actually spend the night or do you come not like sleepover. You don't want to go like sleep over at the house of all these people
Is this do you actually spend the night or do you do?
Oh, no, no, no, you know, you do this is no it's great
If you're gonna do this if you're gonna go with your kid to a sleepover
Let me just word of the wise remember to ask the other parents first
You don't want to show up at the house and say thanks for inviting Arlo
He's allergic to peanuts and I cannot abide domestic wines.
The game to accommodate aging millennials and Gen Xers, some nightclubs in New York
are introducing what?
Oh, cots.
Close.
They're actually introducing, I'm going to give it to you, they're introducing bedtimes.
Yeah.
Bedtimes like they...
The people who used to go clubbing back in the 90s, they loved staying up all night to
party.
But on the other hand, have you heard about this new show, Matlock, with Kathy Bates?
That's great.
So to lure these people back in, some clubs are offering evenings of music and dancing
that absolutely end at 10 p.m. sharp so you can go home. One such party promised 90s
music and they told people to come in 90s era costumes and all the attendees
said hey people back in the 90s wore flannel pajama pants and stained t-shirts
right? That's a look. Are they selling out like crazy? Yeah people love to go at
them. Also it helps because they're starting to offer early bird specials
come at 430 p.m.
and your molly is half off.
I feel like I would have loved this at every age.
I mean, you know what I mean?
Who doesn't want to go out, get messed up, and make out with a stranger, but then have
a good night's rest and wake up and go to work feeling good?
Another reason to do this, to have the older people come in early and leave
is so the young people don't have old people at their club.
In fact it's great, right?
The millennials show up, they leave at 10, the young people show up, right, when the
millennials go home to go to bed, and when the young people go home at 4 a.m. the baby
boomers all come in because they had to get up to pee and couldn't go back to sleep.
It's the circle of life.
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 1-888-888-924.
You can see us most weeks right here at the Studebaker Theater in downtown Chicago, or
you can catch us on the road.
We'll be in Detroit November 14th.
That's next week.
And Carnegie Hall in New York City.
We're coming back on December 12th.
For tickets and information, go to nprpresents.org.
You can check out our sister podcast, How to Do Everything, this week, How to Quench
Your Thirst in the Desert.
It's both news you can use and news you cannot unsee.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, how are you? I'm well. Who's this?
Excellent. I'm Luke. I'm from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
What do you do there in the beautiful city of brotherly love? I am an English
teacher. You are? Are you one of those cool English teachers? So I recently came
to the realization that there's no such thing as a cool teacher
Which has been kind of hard to grapple with right?
It's just you was whatever you do. You're just not gonna be cool. They have informed that you're not cool pretty much
Yeah, it's it's really unfortunate
Well Luke welcome to the show
Joshua Johnson is gonna read you three news related limericks with the last word or phrase missing from each if you can
Fill in that last word or phrase correctly into the limericks, you'll be a winner.
Here is your first limerick. I think my hydrangea just cursed me. There's no water here in my nursery.
My AI is so advanced, it is translating plants and they mostly just tell me they're...
Oh gosh, could you read it again?
plants, and they mostly just tell me their... Oh gosh, could you read it again?
You get one for free after this.
Okay, here we go.
I think my hydrangea just cursed me.
There's no water here in my nursery.
My AI is so advanced, it is translating plants, and they mostly just tell me their...
Blanking.
Luke, from one English major to another, it's an approximate rhyme.
Okay, great.
Yeah, I don't know.
I'm coming up with...
It's okay.
It's thirsty.
Thirsty.
Tell me they're thirsty.
This week, we learned about the demonstration of new technology that, if installed everywhere,
will allow your plants to talk to you using AI
In a series of sensors in the soil so right you can ask your plants
How are you and the plant will say I need a bit more water and then you forget about it
And you leave town for a few weeks, and you ignore the text and then you get one last text from your plant that says
last text from your plant that says, murderer. Of course, once you start letting your plants talk to you, it's a slippery slope. I mean, you don't need to get texts every time your
plants are like, dude, I just saw the sexiest bee.
All right, here is your next limerick.
At the airport, I face too much drama.
Good thing Andean beasts remain calmer.
Their soft, fluffy fleece gives passengers peace.
Now I'm fine, because I'm petting a llama.
A llama, yes!
There is now a comfort llama at the Portland, Oregon airport.
That's great for anyone who's afraid of flying, but what about a person who's afraid of flying
and llamas?
Oh, God.
I love this.
This is in Portland?
Of course it's in Portland.
It sounds very Portland.
Yeah, it's very Portland.
Every city should have something that corresponds to it that is in the airport that you can
pet.
In Chicago, it would be a big cow or something like that.
A stockyardy pig.
In New York, it would be a rat.
In Boston, it would be a racist dude.
It's funny.
This is true.
In LaGuardia Airport, a raccoon fell through the ceiling.
The airport was like, no, that's our comfort raccoon.
People who are nervous about flying can come over here and pet the raccoon.
All right, very good.
Here is your last limerick.
We vampire bats fly for fun.
It's the groundwork that gets the job done.
When we drop from the skies, the cows jump in surprise.
So we land nearby, sneak, and then run?
Yes, run!
Exciting slash horrifying news from the New York Times.
Vampire bats can run really fast.
The article is titled, you may not be able to outrun a vampire bat.
Seriously, this was the most alarming headline in the New York Times this whole week.
That's not fair, man.
It really is.
Like, you take another, it'd be like,
and they have guns.
Exactly.
I do hate it though, personally, when I go to the gym
and all the treadmills are being used by bats.
You guys have wings.
Joshua, how did Luke do?
He did well enough to become the very first cool teacher in the history of education.
Two out of three, my friend. Nicely done!
Yeah!
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
That's actually, Luke, that's actually a good point.
Do your students listen to the show and do you think this win might make you cooler in their eyes?
You know, I do think Philadelphia high school students listen to wait wait, don't tell me regularly So yeah, I'm sure I'm sure they'll all get a standing ovation in honor of your win. They're gonna climb up the light poles
Thank you so much for playing take care. Thank you. Bye. Bye That's it. of the world from NPR keep you informed. Each day we transport you to a different point on the globe and introduce you to the people living world events. We don't just tell you
world news, we take you there, and you can make this journey while you're doing the
dishes or driving your car. State of the world podcast from NPR. Vital international stories
every day.
This message comes from Wondery. Kill List is a true story of how one journalist ended stories every day. You can have it all in one place, your pocket. Download the NPR app today.
Well, 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 is worth two points. Joshua, can you give us the scores?
I can indeed. Faith has two points. Nagin and Peter both have three points.
Alright Faith, you are in third place.
That means you're up first.
Fill in the blank.
Following Donald Trump's win, Blank delivered a speech to the nation on Thursday.
Kamala Harris.
No, it was actually President Biden on Thursday.
She was Wednesday.
On Tuesday, Australia announced it would introduce legislation to set a minimum age for using
blank.
Social media.
Right.
Best known for his work on Michael Jackson's Thriller, among many other.
Album super producer Blank passed away at the age of 91. Quincy media. Right. Best known for his work on Michael Jackson's Thriller among many other albums. Super producer blank passed away at the age of
91. Quincy Jones. Right. On Thursday 27 million residents of California were
placed on alert as rescue workers battled blanks. Wildfires. Right. This
week a man was banned from future New York marathons after he brought blank to
this year's race. Oh a llama. An entire camera crew on Wednesday. Oregon, Ohio
State, Georgia and Miami topped the blank playoff rankings.
College football?
Right.
On Tuesday, a business in Taiwan became the first ice cream shop to be awarded a blank.
Oh, a Michelin star.
Right.
This week, a cyclist in Oregon sued an ambulance company, complaining that the ambulance charged
him almost $2,000 to take him to the hospital after he was hit by blank.
An ambulance. that ambulance.
That ambulance, yes. The ambulance made a right turn and hit the cyclist,
fracturing his nose among other injuries, and then offered to take him to the hospital,
which they did, and then they charged him $1,800 for a ride.
This is what happens when you make your EMTs work on commission.
Joshua, how did Faith do in our quiz? She did very nicely.
Six right answers, 12 more points for the moment.
You have the lead with 14 points.
All right, I'm going to arbitrarily pick Peter to go next.
Here we go, Peter, fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, seven states voted to enshrine blank rights in their constitution.
Abortion.
Right.
After he failed to surrender his assets to election workers, blank appeared in court
on Thursday.
Oh, Giuliani.
Right.
According to new reports, as many as 10,000 North Koreans are expected to enter combat
in blank.
Ukraine.
Right.
On Wednesday, Hurricane Rafael made landfall in blank.
Cuba.
Right.
Last week, a passenger on JetBlue to the airline because the ice cream sandwich
they gave her was blank.
It was not a Michelin-starred ice cream sandwich.
No, because it was way too cold.
On Thursday, experts raised concerns that weight loss drugs like blank may lead to muscle
loss.
Ozempic?
Right.
On Wednesday, the first satellite made of blank was finally launched into space. Recycled material.
No, wood. This week a woman in England was confused
after her cat brought a mouse into the house and then blanked.
Um, put on some Barry White and let it go.
Close, the cat fed the mouse dinner.
And then put on some Mary White.
I mean buy me dinner first, baby.
The woman said she was shocked when a cat brought a live mouse inside, set it in front
of its own food dish and let it eat as much cat food as it wanted.
Even weirder was when just before he set the mouse down the cat said, have you ever dined
with us before?
Well, we do things a little differently around here. Or it's sadistic and It was like, yes, I want to fatten you up. Joshua, how
did Peter Gross do in our quiz? Pretty well. He got five right for 10 more points, 13 points,
but faith retains the lead. All right. So how much then does Nagin need to win? Six
right answers will do it. All right. Here you go.
OK. This is for the game, again.
On Thursday, a new study confirmed that 2024 will be the blankest year on record.
Right. On Tuesday, the prime minister of Spain said the country was working to find
those still missing after devastating blanks hit the area.
Floods. Right.
This week, TGI Fridays became the latest chain restaurant to file for blank bankruptcy.
Right. On Thursday, authorities in South Carolina advised residents to close their windows and
lock their doors due to blank.
Fires?
No. Due to dozens of monkeys in the loose after they escaped a research facility.
After breaking into an electric company in France, a group of hackers demanded their
$125,000 rents and be paid in blank.
Quarters.
No. Baguettes.
It's France.
According to a new study, just five minutes of blank a day could help reduce blood pressure.
Squats.
Yeah, exercise.
Thanks to increased solar activity, the blanks can again be seen further south than usual.
Aurora.
Yeah, the Northern Lights.
Right.
This week, police in the UK responded to a report of a 60 year old man with a rusty
machete attacking blank.
A raccoon that fell through the ceiling.
No, an 80 year old man with a pair of nunchucks.
Where was this?
This was in the UK.
According to police, the 80 year old man who had the nunchucks had accidentally knocked
in the other man's door which enraged the other guy, the 60-old, so much that he came at the elderly man with his machete.
Fortunately, as said, the 80-year-old man happened to be out with his Noon Chucks,
so defended himself...
to see the full story. Just watch this week's episode of Geriatric Mutant Ninja Turf.
The UK is like Europe's Florida.
Pretty much.
Apparently.
I love the fact that this 80-year-old guy's like,
well, time to go for a walk.
Got to get my cane, my visor, and my no-jucks.
Joshua, did Nagin do well enough to win?
Nagin got five correct answers for 10 more points
and a final score of 13 points.
So this week with 14 points, your champion is Faith Saling.
Oh!
Oh!
Come from behind victory. Congratulations, Faith.
Thank you.
In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict after 97-inch TVs, what will be
the next giant thing we're all going to buy for our houses.
But first, let me tell you that, wait, wait, don't tell me.
It's a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago in association with Urgent Haircut Productions, Doug of Berman Benevolent Overlord,
Philip Gotica 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 Theater,
BJ Liederman composed our theme,
our program is produced by Jennifer Mills,
Miles Bermbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks to Blythe Roberson,
Binyam Bizin, and Monica Hickey.
Our therapy animal is Peter Gwyn.
Emma Choi is our Vibe Curator.
Technical Directionist from Lorna White, her CFO is Colin Miller. Our production manager is Peter Gwynn. Emma Choi is our Vibe Curator. Technical Directionist from Lorna White.
Her CFO is Colin Miller.
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Our Senior Producer is Ian Chilag.
And the Executive Producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me
is Michael Danforth.
Now, panel, what's the next extra large object
we're all gonna feel we have to buy for our houses?
Faith Sehling.
Really big, long catheters,
so no one needs to miss a moment
of anything they're watching on their giant TV.
Peter Gross.
A giant pool of Xanax for people who are pill sober where you don't drink but you do take
a lot of pills.
And Nagin Farsan.
A massive jumbo sectional couch is not for more people, just a section for each of your
emotions.
Aww.
Well, panelists, if any of that does happen,
we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me!
Thank you, Joshua Johnson!
Thanks to Faith Salie,
Peter Gross, and Nagin Farsad.
Thanks to our fabulous audience who joined us here
at the Studio Bicker Theater.
And thanks to all of you out there
wherever you are for listening.
I'm Peter Sagan. We'll see you next week
in Detroit, Michigan.
This is NPR.
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