Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
Episode Date: January 27, 2024This week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen joins Dulcé Sloan, Tom Papa, and Shane O'Neill to talk the economy, how she prepared to smoke weed for the first time, and her Candy Crush score. ... Get access to bonus episodes, sponsor-free listening, and the chance to participate in a quiz with Peter Sagal when you sign up for Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!+ at plus.npr.org/waitwait.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Discussion (0)
Planet Money helps you understand the economy.
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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 the man who's been making the NPR Wine Club sound cool since 2022,
Chioki Iansi. And here's your host at the Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts Building in downtown Chicago, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Chioki!
Thanks, everybody!
Thank you so much!
We have a fabulous show
planned for you today. It's a special one
because later on, we are going to be joined
on stage by the
Secretary of the Treasury,
Janet Yellen.
Very excited.
Yay!
It's an important day for us.
As you know, anything she says can move the market, so I would suggest in the 20 minutes
or so before we get to ask her questions, convert all of your assets into gold.
But why not multitask and do that while you call in to play our games? The
number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Caroline calling from Queens, New York.
Hey, how are things in Queens?
Oh, you know, foggy, rainy, much like it is elsewhere.
I am told that Queens is now the hip new borough to be in. Is that the case?
I hope so, because I've been here for about 10 years,
so that would make me kind of cool.
Do you want to go outside and see if it's hip yet?
We'll wait.
They're closing stuff on my block that's been here for 70 years,
so I think it's probably cool, but no longer cool.
I see.
Well, welcome to the show, Carolyn.
Let me introduce you to our panel this week.
First, he is the writer of the style memo for the Washington Post.
It's Shane O'Neill.
Hi, and thanks.
Hello.
Next, it's a correspondent for The Daily Show and author of the new book, Hello Friends,
stories of dating, destiny, and day jobs.
It's Dulce Sloan.
Yay!
Hello, friends.
And he is a comedian performing at the Netflix is a Joke Festival in Los Angeles on May 3rd.
It's Tom Papa.
Hello.
Welcome to the show, Carolyn.
You're going to play Who's Chioki this time?
Chioki Ianson filling in for Bill Curtis
is going to read you three quotations in this week's news.
If you can correctly identify or explain just two of them,
you will win our prize.
Any voice from our show, you might choose for your voicemail.
You ready to go?
God, I hope so.
So do we all.
Your first quote is from Ryan Gosling,
who is star of last year's Barbie movie.
There's no Ken without Barbie.
Gosling was defending the movie's director, Greta Gerwig,
and its star, Margot Robbie, who were snubbed by whom?
I believe that would be the Academy.
Yes, the Academy, the Motion Picture Academy, the Oscars.
So Ken got an Oscar nomination, Barbie did not, and everybody is furious.
Plus, Greta Gerwig, who, by the way,
is the first female director of a billion-dollar grossing movie,
she didn't get nominated for Best Director.
The Oscars say, no, no, it's not sexism,
but it's weird how they keep referring to her as a directress.
Ken has been suffering for a long time.
And when I was a little boy and I had my Ken doll
everyone laughed at me
and they're like oh why isn't his name on the trailer
why isn't his name on the car
and I was like I don't know
I guess because there's no respect for Ken
and finally in 2024 things have been made right
I just thought it was funny that y'all thought this movie was going to get Oscar nominated respect for Ken. And finally, in 2024, things have been made right.
I just thought it was funny that y'all thought this movie was going to get Oscar nominated.
I take it then you're not
too concerned about the snub, it'll say.
Listen, comedies aren't usually
nominated for Oscars.
So since comedies aren't usually nominated for Oscars,
the people in comedies don't get nominated
for Oscars. I've always beenies don't get nominated for Oscars.
I've always been surprised at Ryan Gosling as an actor because his face doesn't move.
That's the thing that I've always been...
Well, doesn't that mean that his achievement as an actor
is even that more impressive?
Because he does it all with a completely still face.
Think about that.
Still or dead, whatever you want to call it.
I mean, it really is a shame, this whole thing.
And it's fine.
Margot Robbie, who also will be up for an Oscar
for producing the film,
she didn't get nominated for acting.
But did they have to put her in the In Memoriam reel, too?
I mean, no one's asking this question.
How come Margot Robbie wasn't nominated for Oppenheimer?
Well, just...
Ha ha ha!
Just guessing. Huh?
Could it be that she's not in that movie?
I didn't see it, so I don't know. There you are.
Alright,
Caroline, we have another quote for you.
This is the CEO of a
mega yacht company saying
that their newest offering, no, it's not just for
billionaires. It's for
visionary billionaires with extraordinary demands for adventure. Their new yacht is very different
than the mega yachts we're used to seeing the billionaires have because this yacht is a what?
Oh God, I have no idea. Submarine? Yes, submarine! You did have an idea. Yay!
The super yacht company Migaloo is offering for just $2 billion
the M5, the world's first ever luxury submarine.
It's being called the future of yachting.
But come on.
You can make any yacht go underwater
if you annoy the right orcas.
It is the perfect gift for the very, very rich man who saw what happened with that submersible
that went down to the Titanic and says, hey, what are the chances of that happening twice?
Does he have a son?
Does the guy with the submarine have a son?
If he's selling billionaire submarines, he got long money.
You think?
I want to know if he has a son who wants to piss him off.
Yeah.
I love that among your ambitions is being an alienated rich boy's vengeance.
Listen, if he's the black sheep, he needs a black queen.
Here's the problem, though.
As far as we know, they've announced this.
They've put out pictures of it.
I say pictures in quotes because I think they're computer-generated images.
But as far as we know, no one has yet bought one.
You don't build it before they buy it.
It's like a Rolls Royce.
Exactly right, yeah.
But you can, if you're interested,
you can go to the website and
get the specs for this luxury
submarine. For example, it's
541 feet long,
it has a 15,000
kilometer range, and will stay
underwater, quote, until this whole
Epstein thing blows over.
We should really ask Janet Yellen.
Her whole life
is money. It obviously does
not buy happiness because all of
these billionaires, they've got
all the money in the world
and they're like, let's go visit those folks
at the Titanic.
I think
if you don't make a lot of money and
you're frustrated, you should not be
because you're alive and you could go get a PlayStation for $500 and get a submarine game.
Yeah. And at the end of it, you'll still be in your living room.
Okay. Carolyn, here is your last quote.
It's going to be my eat, pray, love trip.
But by love, I mean self-love.
That was somebody in the Wall Street Journal talking about the new trend,
apparently, they say, of couples vacationing without what?
The other person.
Exactly right.
The new trend among married couples is vacationing without their spouse.
Last year, there was a 43% in people vacationing separately from their significant others,
or as it was previously known, divorce.
Separate vacations, no.
According to the article and the people who do it, it can be great for couples who have
different interests, right?
Like if one of you loves hiking in the Alps
and the other loves staying home to sleep with other people.
Ooh.
Softie.
Well, when you're gay, you can have your cake and bang on the Alps, too.
There you are. I guess so.
Do you guys, I mean...
I think it's a great idea. I love it.
Ru Paul, he said that the secret to a good marriage is separate bedrooms and separate
bathrooms.
Wow.
So that's just taking it, like separate bedrooms and a bathroom in a separate hotel a continental
way.
Why not?
Exactly.
Why not?
Yeah.
I've been married 23 years, and just this year, I have been allowed to sleep in the
guest room when my wife is snoring
without her coming to breakfast and wanting to kill me.
Really, your wife finds that so threatening and upsetting?
She thinks it's a huge insult.
Really?
Yeah.
You said till death do us part, Tom, not till snoring.
Right, exactly.
We spend every morning, not like,
we sleep with each other, and then it's not like you
meet up and like coffee and you're like hey good to see you and this was so nice
you just spend all of breakfast blaming each other for who ruined the sleep last night
really and that's and that's the kind of intimacy and trust experience that your wife didn't want
to give up right exactly she wants if i said my wife, I'm going on vacation without you, she would say, don't
come back.
Junkie, how did Carolyn do in our quiz?
With all three right, Carolyn is the queen of queens.
There you are.
Well done.
Yay!
They needed one.
Thank you so much for playing, Carolyn.
Take care.
Yeah. Thank you so much for having me. Thank you so much for playing, Carolyn. Take care. Yeah, thank you so much for having me.
Thank you.
Panel, it's time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Dulce, this week the New York Times reported on a special group of rats that have been trained to do what?
Yo man, what news are you reading? I went through
all of the news.
I ain't seen nothing about no rats. Yeah, this is
in there though. It was in the New York Times.
I'll give you a hint. Please.
It's amazing they can do this because it's
very hard for rats to do duck face.
Pose? Pose
for? Pictures? Yes.
Selfies. What? The rats have been trained to take selfies
this photographer yeah this protection this professional photographer rigged up this
contraption that gave these rats a sugar pellet and took their picture whenever they pushed a
button to get it even more amazing the rats then posted these selfies to Instagram,
tagged Everlane,
hashtag ad, hashtag grateful.
See?
This is why people's parents don't want them to
get into the arts.
This is like, we paid for this
expensive education, you could have been a lawyer, and now
you're just training. Somebody got a grant
to be like, yo, what
if rats could take their own photo?
But they got a sugar pellet for doing it?
They got a sugar pellet for doing it, right?
What's my excuse?
Coming up, our panelists come out of retirement and are bluffed a listener game.
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The Planet Money Podcast from NPR.
From NPR in WBEZ Chicago,
this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Chioki Ianson, filling in for Bill Curtis.
We're playing this week with Tom Papa, Shane O'Neill, and Dulce Sloan.
And here again is your host, at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you so much, Chioki.
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 on the air
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That's right, we're cool now.
At Wait, Wait NPR is the handle.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, Peter, this is Anya, and I'm calling in from Durham, New Hampshire.
Hey, from New Hampshire, oh my goodness.
I was about to say it's been an exciting time in New Hampshire,
but let's face it, it really wasn't.
It's been a little snowy.
Yeah, a little snowy.
What do you do there?
I'm a student at the University of New Hampshire
studying applied math and computer science.
You're studying applied mathematics.
What do you want to do with that degree?
I have no idea yet.
I hope to figure that out soon.
So you're studying applied mathematics for the joy of it?
Yeah, kind of.
I kind of love that. Well, there you go.
Well, Anya, welcome to the show.
You're going to play our game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Chioki, what is Anya's topic?
One last hurrah.
So no one wants to come out of retirement.
It's like putting a pair of heels back on after you've already changed into your Crocs. Am I right, Ron DeSantis? But this week, we heard a rather
unusual story of someone coming out of retirement for one last job. Our panelists are going to tell
you about it. Pick the one who's telling the truth, and you will win our prize, the weight
of your choice on your voicemail. You ready to play? Yeah. All right. First, let's hear from Tom Papa. When Francisco Geraldo's family gathered around his birthday
cake to celebrate his 90th birthday, the one thing they didn't expect to hear was that he was coming
out of retirement. But just before he blew out the candles, Francisco announced that he was going to run with the bulls in Pamplona
one more time. As a young Spaniard, he had run with the bulls 12 years in a row, but the last
time he ran down those narrow streets trying not to be gorged by a bull's horn was over 40 years
ago when he was still capable of running. We didn't believe him at first, said his grandson.
Around that time, he was saying a lot of goofy things, but he took the running with the Bulls
very seriously and started training almost immediately.
Francisco dusted off his lucky uniform, repaired his worn-out shoes, and even started doing
two push-ups every day. And on July 14th of last year,
Francisco, at age 91, lined up to run with the Bulls as he had done years ago as a younger man.
We're so proud of him, Mr. Geraldo said, but we're really going to miss him.
going to miss him. A man decides to rum with the bulls one more time, and I mean one more time.
Your next story of a retirement relapse comes from Dulce Sloan. Dr. Dwight Henderson retired from Frito-Lay in 2022 after 43 years as a food scientist. He helped create iconic flavors like
Cool Ranch, Pizza Craver,
and the interesting Last Call Kebab, just to name a few. When the flaming hot craze started a few
years ago, that's when he knew it was time to hang up his lab coat. My tongue is clapped out.
How do you kids eat this every day? My lips are always slightly tingling and my fingers are always red.
After just 18 months, the call came. Robert Francis, head of flavor development, called Dr.
Henderson because they needed serious help. Look, there's only so many things you can make flaming
hot, okay? Some people just want a fun flavored tortilla chip and Dwight has the mouth for the job.
Some people just want a fun-flavored tortilla chip,
and Dwight has the mouth for the job.
We need that mouth.
Dr. Henderson wasn't sure if he wanted to go back to the high-pressure world of food chemistry,
so he pondered on it for a month.
Upon making his decision to return, he said,
once again, I'm going to show them what this mouth do.
A flavor scientist comes out of retirement
to make one more flavor of Doritos.
Your last story of one last time comes from Shane O'Neill.
Terry Martin had left his criminal past behind until temptation took him back down the road to perdition.
The yellow brick road, specifically.
down the road to perdition. The yellow brick road, specifically. Martin recently confessed that in 2005, the 76-year-old retired thief was lured back into his old habits by a client who wanted him to
steal one of the four remaining pairs of ruby slippers used in the shooting of The Wizard of
Oz. The slippers had disappeared from the Judy Garland Museum in Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Police
determined that they had been stolen after
ruling out the possibility that they had clicked together three times and returned to Kansas.
Now, why would a man want to steal the ruby slippers, you may ask, if you're heterosexual?
According to him, he thought the ruby slippers were literally made of rubies.
Just wait until he hears about the untold treasures that await him if he decides to rob a golden corral or a family dollar.
All right, one of these stories is about somebody who decided
to just come out of retirement to do one last job.
Was it from Tom, a man who used to run with the bulls,
who decided to try it again and did,
but that'll be it.
From Dulce Sloan, a flavor chemist
who came back out of retirement
because there just had to be more flavors of Doritos.
Or from Shane, a retired mobster
who came out to do the one last job
of stealing a genuine pair of ruby slippers
from the Wizard of Oz.
Which of these is the real story of one last gig?
These are all kind of ridiculous,
but I think I'm going to go with Dulce's story about the flavor scientist.
You're going to choose Dulce's story?
Yes.
Well, to bring you the correct answer,
we spoke to someone familiar with the real story.
Turns out that Mob Associate thought that the rubies on the slippers were real,
and he thought that he could fence the gems.
That was Andy Rose.
He's a reporter from CNN who covered the real story
of the ruby slipper heist gone wrong.
I'm so sorry, Anya, but Shane had the real answer.
You didn't win, but you earned a point for Dulce.
Thank you so much for playing, Anya.
Take care.
Thank you. Bye.
Bye-bye.
And now the game we call Not My Job.
Janet Yellen is a preeminent economist,
a former chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisers
and chair of the Federal Reserve,
and is now the 78th Treasury
Secretary of the United States. That means she signs all of your dollar bills, and fun fact,
she gets to read all your Venmo receipts. Secretary Yellen, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you. Thank you, Peter. Thank you very much.
So it's a great honor to have you here.
I know you were in Chicago to speak to the Economic Club,
but we have some questions that I don't think those business leaders might have had for you,
such as what is it exactly that you do?
Because honestly, I don't know.
We just assume that you write the checks, like when we buy a missile.
I honestly don't know.
That is one of our responsibilities. Really? And we've borrowed now $34 trillion, and it's
our job at Treasury to finance those cumulative deficits and to make sure that our debt is safe
and liquid and attractive to Americans and all around the world.
All right. More questions about your job. Inflation. Was that you?
Not me. Are you kidding? Not my fault.
No, no, not you. That's the Fed's job.
That used to be you. Interestingly enough, I was watching an interview you did about a year ago where you were asked about all the predictions at that time of a recession.
And you said in that interview that you did not think that would happen by this time.
You, of course, were correct.
So, would you like to take this opportunity to spike the ball?
Well, I said I've told you so. Exactly, for example. And it was right.
Listen to her, Larry Summers. Yay, we did it!
Now, we wanted to get a little bit back into your background. We were told that one of your secrets to your success
is that you always over-prepare, including a story we heard about how you prepared to smoke
dope for the first time in college. Can you please inform us how you prepared for that
particular challenge? Well, you know, I had never smoked marijuana before.
It was the summer before I was going to college, and my roommate said she hid some marijuana and
we should have a party and smoke marijuana. This, of course, was this renowned party school, Yale.
party school Yale. Well, you know, I worried about that because I had never smoked anything in my life. You know, as you said, I like to be prepared. I always try to prepare when I can. And I thought,
how can I prepare for this experience? Well, why don't I buy a pack of cigarettes and try to smoke them and see if I can inhale?
Because I was told you can't really enjoy marijuana unless you inhale.
So I bought a pack of cigarettes.
I started smoking them.
Oh, horrible.
It was a horrible experience.
I couldn't inhale.
I was coughing.
I thought, well, I'm not prepared.
I have to work harder at this.
So I bought some more cigarettes.
And all week, preparing for this party, I smoked cigarettes.
Well, then I went to the party, had some, smoked a couple of marijuana cigarettes.
Well, I never did that again.
But you know, what happened to me was within a couple of months,
I was up to three packs a day as a smoker.
Really?
Wow.
It took me a decade to quit.
Is that why President Obama invited you to join his Council of Economic Divisions?
He had someone to sneak out back of the Oval Office and, you know.
Well, I quit.
He can quit.
So we are also reliably informed that among your enthusiasms,
in addition to macroeconomic policy, is mobile games.
There is some truth in that.
There is some truth in that.
Okay.
Specifically, in case everybody wants to know, Candy Crush.
I know.
Yes.
Well, Candy Crush is a new game I've taken up only a year or so ago.
Right.
It started when I had a Blackberry, if anybody still remembers what they are.
Yes.
And they had a game called Brick Breaker, and I'd never really used my phone to play games,
but I started becoming addicted to Brick Breaker on my Blackberry. And actually, somebody
was writing a book about me, and they heard that I was interested in games, and had played a game,
and they said, did you play Candy Crush? And I go, Candy Crush? Are you kidding? I wouldn't play a
game like Candy Crush. I played Brick Breaker, and I won. Well, maybe you were like, a woman of my
distinction played Candy Crush?
Oh no, Brick Breaker is the
only game that we've talked about.
Something as silly as Candy Crush.
Please, please, don't you know who I am?
And then, exactly.
And then I thought, well,
you know,
maybe I should just look and see what the thing is
that you thought that I was. Have a puff. You're not going to get addicted. I didn't get addicted. Well, you know, maybe I should just look and see what the thing is. Sure, what's the harm?
Have a puff.
You're not going to get addicted.
I'm not going to get addicted.
You know, I'll just play a couple of levels.
Sure.
See what it's like, these candies, you know, that you're breaking up with bombs and things like that.
Yeah, this morning I hit level 6,180.
I'm assuming that's good.
Somebody said you're actually internationally ranked,
which I find hilarious.
Is that true?
That is not true.
That's not true, okay.
You're not getting recruited by a professional candy crush.
Do you have a secret for candy crush?
You have marijuana cigarettes.
Yeah.
If he gets stuck, it always helps.
I know.
Yeah.
Well, Secretary Yellen, it is an honor for us to be able to speak to you.
We're very glad you took the time, particularly because we have asked you here to play a game we're calling...
It's not quite treasure, it's treasury.
That sounds like a good game for me.
There you are, yes.
Maybe this will be your next addiction.
You're Secretary of the Treasury, of course,
so we're going to ask you about Antiques Roadshow.
That is, of course, the very popular TV program
where people bring their things that aren't quite treasure,
but they're treasury.
Right? And they get them professionally appraised, and they hope they're worth millions. You ever
watched that show? Many times. Many times. So you know the idea. Okay. You get two of these three
questions right, you will win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone they might
choose for their voicemail. Chioki, who is the Secretary of the Treasury playing for? Joe Sylvester of Merrimack, New Hampshire.
All right.
For people who bring potential treasures onto the roadshow,
nothing is more disappointing than finding out that it is a fake.
But there are many versions of the show around the world,
and on the Chinese version of the show,
what occurs when that happens?
Is it A, the item is used for another separate show
called sell a fake artifact to a Westerner? B, the owner of the item who brought the thing to
the show is arrested on charges of attempted fraud? Or C, the host of the show immediately
smashes the fake item with a hammer.
I would try C.
You're going to try smash it with a hammer?
You are correct.
Yes.
The host of the show roams the set with a hammer,
and when something is discovered to be a fake,
he comes over and bam.
Okay, next question.
Appraisers are not always right on the show, amazingly enough,
which was the case for a glass expert named Andy McConnell,
who on the British version of the show took a sip of what he thought was a 150-year-old port out of an antique bottle,
only to discover later it was what?
A, a solution of opium and cocaine,
B, Diet Dr. Pepper,
or a 150-year-old
mix of human urine and rusty nails?
Can I phone a friend?
You have armed security.
You can do whatever you want.
Am I going to try
to stop you? No.
I'll go with A.
You're going to go with A, the solution of opium and cocaine.
I understand why you would say that.
They used to do that.
Well, given your predilections, I guess.
No, it was actually C.
I knew it.
That's what it was.
I knew it.
The appraiser, he said, well, this 150-year-old port,
it turns out that more than a century before,
someone had filled this antique bottle
with what they hoped was a potion to keep witches away. Nice. There you are. All right. Now, you still haven't lost.
You have one more question. Fans of the program have created an antiques roadshow drinking game
in which you drink every time what happens? A, whenever jewelry expert Jeffrey Munn breathlessly references Fabergé.
B, whenever someone says, well, we'll still enjoy it after finding out their item is worthless.
Or C, whenever an expert tells someone how much more their item would be worth if they hadn't
had it refinished. I will go with C. You're going to go with C again.
You're right, but they are all true. Those are all
genuine Antiques
Roadshow
drinking games.
Enjoy them all at once, why don't you?
Of course.
Shoki, how did the Treasury Secretary do on our quiz?
She candy crushed it.
Janet Yellen is the Secretary of the Treasury
of the United States of America
and among the top 2% of players globally
on Candy Crush.
Secretary Yellen, we are so honored to have you with us.
Thank you so much.
Thank you very much.
Secretary, Janet Yellen, everybody.
In just a minute, Jokey causes another international incident with England involving
tea in our Listener Limerick Challenge. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on air. We'll be
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz.
I'm Shioki Ianson filling in this week for Bill Curtis.
We're playing this week with Shane O'Neill, Tom Papa, and Dulce Sloan.
And here again is your host at the
Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois,
Peter Sagal. Thank you, Chioki.
Thank you so much. In just a minute,
Chioki is nominated
for Best Limericks
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. Shane, the New York Times
recently published an article analyzing why many of the season's most popular movies were trying
to hide that they were actually what? Musical. Yes, musical. According to this article, marketing
for movies like the new version of Mean Girls and The Color Purple
and the prequel Wonka
are hiding the fact that they're musicals
in order to lure people
into theaters who might not be into
musicals and to make sure that none of those people
have to sit next to theater nerds
who will sing along.
Why wouldn't
you want that?
Why wouldn't you want that, Papa?'t know. Why wouldn't you want that, Papa?
You could just watch Oppenheimer instead.
Apparently the movie's been doing well.
People go in there and they go,
oh, it's a musical.
Okay, fine.
That new Wonka is a musical?
Yeah, the new Wonka is a musical.
Just like the original Wonka movie
with Gene Wilder was. That was a musical?
Come with me and
you'll see. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know, I know. Listen, I love, I know
the man was singing.
I guess never, I just never,
it made sense that they were singing, so I never thought
it was a musical.
Because I'm like, of course, they're in a chocolate
factory, they're going to be singing.
Can you go with me on a journey here, Peter?
Sure.
To a world of pure imagination?
More or less.
So this is people say they don't like musicals.
Right.
But then when no one's looking, they like musicals?
Right.
Did you ever go on the website Craigslist?
I may have.
There's a lot of people who in public aren't saying what they like,
but then they're finding it when people aren't looking,
and then they find out that they really enjoy it quite a lot
and maybe leave their wives.
I see what you mean.
Oh, Grindr.
Yes.
I don't get it.
Well, I'll explain it to you.
It's a closet.
It's a closet.
All right. It's a closet. Tom, a California man having a problem with slow internet at home
was surprised to discover that what was using up
over three and a half gigabytes of data every day?
A raccoon that lived under his porch.
No, not...
I really need this question. I really need this question.
I really need
this one.
It was being used by his refrigerator.
You were very close. It was another major appliance.
It was being used by his washing
machine. It was his washing machine,
yes.
The guy's like, why is my Wi-Fi so
slow? And he started troubleshooting it, and he found
out that his LG brand washing machine
was the fourth highest data user in his house.
So that's where the other sock went.
It was uploaded to the cloud.
Some privacy experts are concerned,
because this means that our appliances
are stealing our personal data and uploading it,
which is devastating if true.
Imagine your washer tweeting,
this guy has not done a single bedding cycle in eight months.
Oh, that's terrifying.
So your wife goes to put in the laundry
and the washing machine whispers,
you should check his history.
Yeah.
What's even worse is sometimes it turns out the guy checked,
the washing machine was itself Googling things like,
quote, how to grab arm and
drag them in.
It's a scary world we're heading into.
I know. Why the hell does a washing machine
need Wi-Fi? I don't know,
although I am told that one of its many
benefits is it will let you know when your
laundry is done. Isn't that what the sound
is for? I would think so, yes.
And then it's like, oh yeah, my drawers are clean. Yeah. your laundry is done. Isn't that what the sound is for? I would think so, yes. He goes, do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do.
And then he's like,
oh yeah, my drawers are clean. Yeah.
And your laundry turns out to be another musical.
Five, six, seven, eight.
Socks, socks,
where are the socks?
That's the dryer song.
Washing machine. Oh, sorry. Wet socks,
wet socks, oh God, wet socks. Oh, God, wet socks.
Tony.
Tony.
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. Catch us most weeks right here at the Studebaker
Theater in Chicago. And you can come see us next week, February 1st, at the Riverside
Theater in Milwaukee. We'll be joined by special guest Kristen Kish, the new host of Top Chef.
For tickets and information to all of our live shows, just go over to nprpresents.org.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Rudy in Culpeper, Virginia. Culpeper,
Virginia. Now, tell me
where Culpeper is. We're at the base of the mountains
right before Shenandoah National Park.
Oh, sure. You're near that beautiful part of the
country. What do you do there? I am the director
of sales at an infectious disease
reference guide.
I'm guessing.
I have so many questions.
Yes.
This has probably been boom times for your business.
We've been busy.
Okay.
Well, welcome to the show, Rudy.
What's going to happen here is Chokya Ianson, filling in for 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,
and two of the limericks will be a winner. You ready to play? I'm ready. Okay. Here is your first
limerick. Before all you Britons find fault, take a sip and your whinging will halt. While sugar is nice, it's not quite the right spice, because your tea needs a wee pinch of...
Salt.
Salt, yes!
An American professor went viral this week with what she says is her science-based perfect tea recipe,
which involved preheating your mug, using loose-leaf tea instead of a teabag,
and adding a pinch of salt, which she says reduces bitterness.
And tea aficionados in the United Kingdom were outraged.
Why would you ever want to reduce your bitterness?
Of course they were upset.
Tea is as much a part of the British national identity as Buckingham Palace
and stealing other countries' things, like, for example, tea.
stealing other countries' things, like, for example, tea.
I should pause here and note that Chioki here, our friend,
is in fact a tea aficionado.
I love it.
Right.
So the question for you, Chioki, since we're lucky enough to have you here,
is what do you think of this theory of adding salt to tea to cut the bitterness?
I don't want to get into a fight.
No.
My degree's in the humanities.
Sure.
But.
Just brew it right in the first place.
That's all I'm saying.
Right. All right.
Here, here is your next limerick.
When I go out at night to go dance, I dress like old knights of romance.
Though people may stare when my legs appear bare, I like to wear tights without pants. Pants, yes.
Apparently the hot look on the runways and red carpets this winter season has been elaborate
tops and constructed jackets and no
pants. Some suggest
it indicates this kind of like fun devil
may care attitude. Others suggest
it's just that the designers ran out of time
to make the pants and said
uh, it's the new look.
This is true. I mean, this has been happening for several
seasons. We're lucky
enough to have a style expert and reporter here.
How do these things catch on?
Like, who starts it?
Donald Duck and Porky Pig.
And Daffy. Daffy and Winnie the Pooh don't get enough credit.
That's true. That's right.
Here's the thing I don't understand.
When Kendall Jenner does it, it starts a trend.
When I do it, I get reported to HR.
You ain't got the right drawers on.
Apparently not.
And you have funny knees.
What a specific burn.
I'm so glad because really at my age,
I thought I had run out of new things to be self-conscious about.
It's like you ran into a black kid on a train.
Like, yo, look at my man's knees.
You're going to think about that tomorrow.
I'm going to wake up my wife tonight, like three in the morning,
and go, honey, what?
Are my knees funny?
All right.
Here is your last limerick.
There's no Bigfoot or Sasquatch out there.
No big creatures to give you a scare.
There's no crypto zoo, just yogi and poo.
All you saw was a large upright.
Bear?
Yes, bear.
The mystery of Bigfoot
has been solved, apparently.
According to new research, if you think you're seeing Bigfoot,
you're just looking at a black bear.
Or maybe a big, hairy,
naked man with big feet.
Either way, run.
This is what they want you to think.
The Bigfoot is smart,
okay? Yeah. The Bigfoot
is like, okay, let me stand behind
one of these bears.
Uh-huh.
Maybe it's a symbiotic relationship.
I should explain that the reason
they think that people
are mistaking these bears for Bigfoot is because
bears often stand up on their hind legs.
But what about the face and the foot?
And the walk.
Or the foot!
I just learned that if you see a bear, there's a rhyme.
So it's like, if it's black, fight back.
If it's brown, lie down.
And if you're black, you should be at home anyway.
Jokey, how did Rudy do in our quiz?
Rudy is a rhyme slayer.
You got all three right.
Congratulations, Rudy.
Thanks so much.
Thank you so much for playing.
Thanks so much for having me. Take care.
On It's Been a Minute, we talk to up-and-comers and icons of culture.
From Barbra Streisand.
You're such a wonderful interviewer.
To Tracee Ellis Ross.
Your questions were so wonderful.
And Christine Baranski.
Oh, thank you for your wonderful questions.
Hear the questions these icons loved to be asked.
Listen every week to It's Been a Minute from NPR.
From your car radio to your smart speaker, NPR meets you where you are in a lot of different ways. Now we're in your pocket. Download the NPR app today.
It is 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 inin-the-blank questions as they can. Each correct answer is now worth two points.
Jokey, can you give us the scores?
Tom has two.
Dulce and Shane have three.
What?
That's what I was going to say.
Don't question it.
Just live with it.
All right.
Tom, you are in third place, so you will go first.
The clock will start when they begin your first question.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, Donald Trump beat Nikki Haley
to win the GOP primary in blank. New Hampshire. Right. On Tuesday, Donald Trump beat Nikki Haley to win the GOP primary in blank.
New Hampshire.
Right.
On Wednesday, Turkish lawmakers backed Sweden's bid to join blank.
NATO.
Right.
This week, the blank closed to record highs three days in a row.
The Dow.
Actually, no, the S&P 500.
Sorry.
This week, drug makers announced price hikes on over 700 medications, including weight
loss drug blank.
Ozempic.
Yeah, now they have you hooked.
In an announcement about new in-store slicing machines, the CEO of Subway described the chain's cold cuts as, quote drug blank. Ozempic. Yeah, now they have you hooked. In an announcement about new in-store slicing machines,
the CEO of Subway described the chain's cold cuts as, quote, blank.
Super thin.
No, quote, nice fluffy meat.
Marketing genius.
According to a new poll, 28% of Americans do not believe in blank.
God.
Right.
On Sunday, Stanford's Tara Vanderveer became the winningest coach in college blank history.
Basketball. Right. This week, an American Airlines flight
was allegedly grounded because a passenger
aggressively and intentionally blanked.
Uh, farted.
Yes.
According to one
eyewitness account, after being disruptive on this flight
from Phoenix to Austin, this disgruntled passenger
stood up and yelled, quote, you thought that was rude?
Well, how about this?
And then proceeded to flood the plane
with toxic gas.
This marked the first time in history that passengers
actually wanted a door to fall
off.
Chioki, how did
Tom Papa do in our quiz? Tom got six
right for 12 more points. He now has
14 points and the lead.
Again!
Good will it last.
Tulsa,
you're up next. Here we go.
On Wednesday, it was announced that Jon
Stewart would return to host Blank part
time. Is that a daily show?
Yes. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled
that the U.S. could remove barbed wire put
up by border agents in Blank.
Texas? Right. After dropping out of the presidential race on Sunday,
blank immediately endorsed Donald Trump.
The goofy-ass man from Florida.
I'm going to give it to you, Ron DeSantis.
This week, Florida officials released their annual warning for residents
to watch out for blanks falling from the trees.
Iguanas.
Frozen iguanas, yes.
We also would have accepted, accepted again Ron DeSantis. Only the second
time in the team's history the Blanks secured a spot in the NFC championship. Bills? No. Almost
the Lions, the Detroit Lions. On Monday, Dexter Scott King, one of the children of Blank, passed
away at the age of 62. The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., which is how you should be
referring to the man.
This week, a restaurant in Canada came under fire
for requiring patrons to sign a waiver
if they order blank.
Food.
Specifically, a hamburger.
The restaurant prepares all of their burgers well done,
and if you ask for any other temperature,
they require you to sign a waiver first,
acknowledging that you might get E. coli.
And if you think that's a little overprotective, trust us, you don't want to see the waiver they make you sign on Ringworm Wednesdays.
Joki, how did Dulce do on our quiz?
Dulce got five right for ten more points.
She has 13 points.
So Tom is still in the lead.
No food counted, right?
Well, I think we needed you to be more specific.
But we did give you Ron DeSantis for goofy-ass man.
The question is, then, for Chioki,
how many does Shane O'Neill need to win?
Shane needs six points.
Oh, God.
Oh, God, you can do it, Shane. Here we are.
On Thursday, a deal to offer more aid to blank
came under fire from House Republicans.
Ukraine.
Right.
On Tuesday, New York City announced plans
to eliminate over $2 billion in blank debt for residents.
Housing debt?
Medical debt.
Last week, a man in Indiana was arrested after pulling up to a Buffalo Wild Wings and offering to exchange drugs for blank.
Iguanas.
No, fried pickles.
Fried pickles on Tuesday.
A powerful earthquake hit a remote region in blank.
The world.
China.
China.
You would have accepted that.
The world.
China.
You would have accepted that.
Due to a wave of break-ins and robberies,
California Burger Chain Blank announced their first ever store closing.
In and out?
Yeah, saying the event was unmissable.
Philippine President Bongbong Marcos defended using government funds and security personnel to attend Blank.
American Idol.
No, a Coldplay concert.
Oh, boy.
Critics have called him corrupt and wasteful.
Marcos explained that he's, quote, studied music for years and that the Coldplay concert was,, boy. Critics have called him corrupt and wasteful. Marcos explained that he's, quote,
studied music for years and that
the Coldplay concert was, quote, unmissable.
His head of security said traffic in Manila
left them no choice but to use the presidential
helicopter, and those weren't tears during
Fix You. President Marcos had something in his
eyes, and it really is no one's business.
Jokey, did Shane do well enough
to win? Well...
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha! Shane Jokey, did Shane do well enough to win? Well...
Shane got two right for four more points.
No, girl!
So, with 14 points, Tom Papa is this week's winner.
Coming up, our panelists predict after private luxury submarines,
what will be the next must-have toy for billionaires.
But first, let me tell you that...
Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago
in association with Urgent Aircraft Productions,
Doug Berman, Benevolent Overlord,
Philip Godeka writes our limericks,
our public address announcer is Paul Friedman,
our tour manager is Shane O'Donnell,
thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre,
B.J. Lederman composed our theme,
our program is produced by Jennifer Mills News,
Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King.
Special thanks to Vinnie Thomas and Monica Hickey.
Our Secretary of the Treasury is Peter Gwynn.
Our Vibe Curator is Emma Choi.
Our Technical Director is Lorna White.
Our CFO is Colin Miller.
Our Production Manager is Robert Newhouse.
Our Senior Producer, that's Ian Chilog.
And the Executive Producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mike Danforth.
Now panel, what will be the next hot thing for billionaires
once submarines become passé?
Tom Papa.
Fancy automatic toilet whose bidet shoots your butt into space.
Shane O'Neill.
Wax wings so you can fly to the sun.
And Dulce Sloan.
The return of child labor.
Because all them kids ain't going to college.
And if any of that happens, panel, we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much, Chioki Ianson.
Thanks also to Dulce Sloan, Don Copper, and Shane O'Neill.
Thanks to our fabulous audience at the Cedibaker Theater.
You're the best.
Thanks to all for listening.
We'll see you next week.
From Milwaukee, I am Peter Sagal.
Hooray!
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