Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Brian Jordan Alvarez

Episode Date: November 2, 2024

This week, Brain Jordan Alvarez, the creator and star of English Teacher, plays our game with Brian Babylon, Luke Burbank, and Emmy BlotnickLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com.../adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 So, if you're a regular listener of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, then you probably enjoy some other NPR podcasts, too, even though they're obviously not as good. But with NPR+, you get perks like sponsor-free listening, bonus episodes, early access, shop discounts, and more for over 20 different NPR podcasts like this one, the best one. So start supporting what you love and stop hearing promos like this one at plus dot npr dot org from npr and wbec chicago this is wait wait don't tell me the npr news quiz i'm not just eye candy i'm also ear candy. I'm Bill Curtis and here is your host at the Sudah Baker Theater and the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segal.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Thank you, Bill. Thanks, everybody. Thanks, everybody. It's good to be back with you. We were all excited to do a special Halloween show for everybody, but we realized we were just going to miss it by a couple of days. So, taking inspiration from the local Walgreens, this is now a Christmas show. So, later on we're gonna be talking to the amazing Brian Jordan Alvarez, he's the star of English Teacher
Starting point is 00:01:18 on Hulu, but first get on our nice list, call in, play our games, give us a call at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT, That's 1-888-924-8924. Let's welcome our first listener contestant. How you run? Wait, wait, don't tell me. Hi, Peter. How are you? I'm well. Who's this? This is Megan Kane from Westfield, Massachusetts. I know Westfield. What do you do there? Well, I was a stay at home mom for a while. Now I work part time. I'm a mentor for fifth and sixth graders at one of our public elementary schools. And coming up soon, I'll be working at the polls for election day on Tuesday.
Starting point is 00:01:51 Well, good for you. That is important and patriotic work. And I appreciate it. I'm also interested in the fact that you were stuck at home with your own children and you couldn't take it anymore, so you decided to go get stuck with other people's children. A glutton for punishment, I guess. Exactly. Well, Megan, let me introduce you to our panel this week.
Starting point is 00:02:10 First up, it's the comedian and fashion designer, really, whose latest project you can see at bbspoke.shop. It's Brian Babylon. Next, it's the comedian you can see at Union Hall in Brooklyn, New York on November 23rd. It's Emmy Blotnick. Hi, Emmy. And he's the host of the daily podcast TBTL and the public radio variety show Live Wire live this weekend at the Alberta Rose Theater as part of the Portland Book Festival.
Starting point is 00:02:41 It's Luke Burbank. Hey, Megan. Megan, welcome to the show. You're of course going to play Who's Bill this time. Bill Curtis is going to read you three quotations from this week's news. If you can correctly identify or explain just two of them, you will win our prize. Any voice from our show you might choose for your voicemail. Are you ready to go? I'm ready.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Now, your first quote is the one word that everybody seems to be using to summarize something that's been going on but will finally end on Tuesday. Here is that word. Garbage. That was used by both candidates and many other people in the final days of what? The election cycle. The election, yes. We're only a few days away in the remaining hours really before election day. Both candidates are making their final push to voters.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Harris's closing argument was that Trump represents a fundamental threat to democracy, while Trump's closing argument was, Puerto Rico, am I right? Of course, we have to be aware of this. Tuesday will not be the end. We might not know the result of the election for weeks. Arizona campaign officials say it could take until Donald Trump is president to count all the ballots. On the plus side, I have made text friends
Starting point is 00:04:00 with some very important people. Really? If you saw the people that have been texting me, Luke Burbank, it's wild. Are they counting on you, Luke? I mean, I assumed I played a fairly significant role in this election, but I had no idea. Now, of course, I mean, it doesn't seem, it seems like this always happens. Kamala Harris had this amazing rally on the ellipse and Joe Biden kind of stepped on it by when he seemed to call Trump supporters garbage. His aides say that's ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:04:33 He would never say that in public. The, and the Trump campaign because they love this, they immediately embraced Biden's gaffe about garbage in Wisconsin. The very next day, Donald Trump dressed as a garbage man and drove around in a garbage truck and get this, he picked JD Vance as his running mate. But you know the funny thing I saw when he put on that orange garbage thing, he looked like a candy corn. Did you see that? I think someone posted from the orange vest to his face to that hair. It was straight candy corn land. It was... See that?
Starting point is 00:05:08 No one told him, hey, hey, hey, man, don't... Nah, go ahead. The tension between Trump's political instincts and his team and his handlers and their sort of political instincts was in its most stark when he got into that garbage truck. Cause you could tell that four people tried to say, sir, do not get in that garbage truck. This is not a good look for you.
Starting point is 00:05:28 It was touch and go. He was trying to kind of, first he couldn't get the door open, then he was trying to reach up onto these handles. There's like four Secret Service dudes that are like, do we help him? Are presidents compostable? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:43 You're just standing there, which bin do I throw him in? Is he litter or? All right, Megan, here is your next quote. Lions and tigers and bears. That was a scientific journal summing up a new finding that what is much more common in the animal kingdom than we thought? Drinking?
Starting point is 00:06:05 Yes, drinking alcohol. A new study finds that deliberate alcohol use among animals of all kinds is far more widespread than we thought. From chimpanzees to fruit flies, apparently they are also watching this election. I mean, we've known that they do this, but this new study says that they do it much more than we thought, and even more than that, they do it apparently for the same reasons we do. For example, this is true.
Starting point is 00:06:34 They found male fruit flies turned to alcohol after they were rejected by a potential mate. That's true. And the bartender's like, don't worry pal, you only live a week. You should see them when there's a round of layoffs. Like fruit flies that have just been fired really go after it. You should see them drop. And also, this is true, I want to share this with you. The more alcohol they consume, the less discerning female fruit
Starting point is 00:07:05 flies become about potential mates. What kind of, first of all, high-powered microscope was this scientist using and what drugs was he on? To be like, yeah, you know what? His feelings are hurt right now. I like the idea of the scientist looking at what seems to be a regular petri dish and it's just you know organs and just keeps enhancing and then it's just like a bar. Inside the bar and then just like one fruit fly that can't get laid. In this little world of these animals. You know who can hold their liquor? Hornets.
Starting point is 00:07:41 Hornets apparently can ingest an 80% ethanol solution with no effect on their behavior unless, of course, you count their yelling, no, I'm okay to drive. Now, of course, I should say these animals and insects are not like downing shots of vodka. It's rather they're getting drunk on fermented fruits and fruit juice, right? It's more of a brunch thing. Bottomless plums. So this is really just bugs, not people's household pets are sneaking, hey, I thought I had some pinot in this fridge. Let bugs be bugs, bro. All right, Megan, here is your last quote.
Starting point is 00:08:17 If you do see anybody selling some cheap cheddar, can you let us know? That was a cheese maker in the UK pleading for help after what happened to his cheese. Oh, I might need a hint. Was it stolen? It was stolen. You didn't need a hint. That's right. It's being called the quote great cheese heist of 2024.
Starting point is 00:08:44 $400,000 worth of cheddar cheese was stolen. That's 22 tons. They are going to have to steal so much lactate. Yeah. Sounds like some sabre-faire. A group of old-fashioned cheese makers, the guys who do the stuff by hand, make the good stuff, say they were contacted by a man who said he
Starting point is 00:09:05 represented this big French grocery chain and he wanted to place a huge order and they were so convinced he was real he said so anyways I'm looking for some fromage and they shipped off the cheese and when they didn't get paid they realized they've been ripped off and they were heartbroken. One cheese maker said of his stolen cheeses quote and this is real, I feel like I knew each one individually. So you know what? And if I was the detective for this, you start at the charcuterie boards and go back.
Starting point is 00:09:35 You know what I'm saying? Wherever there's an explosion in charcuterie boards, usually hot cheese right after that. Right. But I would say to Brian's point, look for the criminal gang that hasn't taken a number two in a while. Yeah. Yeah, that's how they found him. There's your guys.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Actually, they did catch a guy that somebody is in custody as of showtime, and all they needed to do was wait for someone to buy 4,000 cases of Triscuits. Bill, how did Megan do in our quiz? to do is wait for someone to buy 4,000 cases of Triscuits. Bill, how did Megan do in our quiz? Fantastic. She was really hot and gets us off to a good start. Well done, Megan. Congratulations.
Starting point is 00:10:14 Thank you so much. Okay panel, it is time for a brand new game that we are calling, What's Dame Helen Mirren up to this week? So, Luke, you're our player for this inaugural edition. What is Dame Helen Mirren, the legendary British actress, up to this week? Is it A, talking with great emotion about aging her career and how, quote, if you love what you do, it never feels like working, it's playing? Or B, she was talking about aging and how, quote, it's so sad that Kurt Cobain died
Starting point is 00:10:51 when he did because he never saw GPS. I pray to God it's number two. It is, in fact, B, yes. Congratulations. During an interview with the evening standard newspaper, the celebrated actress, completely unprompted, started talking about Kurt Cobain and GPS, something she loves, and she says she regrets that Cobain never got to experience it. Shockingly, this is not the first time that Dame Helen Mirren has talked about Kurt Cobain
Starting point is 00:11:23 and technology. In the past, she mentioned how sad she was that he had never seen a laptop or been on the internet. Somebody needs to check Dame Helen Mirren's Trapper Keeper because I feel like she has written on there, Mrs. Helen Cobain. But over and over again. This is an old school crush. This guy has taken up a lot of real estate
Starting point is 00:11:45 in her brain. No, she's imagining the Insta handle, like at Kurt and Helen. Right. Eat some Dippin' Dots, you think about Kurt. And that he never had them. Coming up, business or pleasure in our Bluff the Listener game called 1-888-WAITWAIT-TO-PLAY. We'll be back in a minute with more of wait wait don't tell me from NPL.
Starting point is 00:12:11 This message comes from Wyse, the app for doing things in other currencies, send, spend or receive money internationally and always get the real time mid market exchange rate with no hidden fees. Download the Wyse app today or visit Wyse.com, T's and C's apply. This message comes from Cook Unity. Treating yourself to dining out nowadays can bring on sticker shock. Cook Unity offers restaurant quality meals created from their roster of all-star chefs sent straight to your door, always fresh, not frozen for a fraction of the price at a
Starting point is 00:12:42 restaurant. Avoid the takeout trauma with Cook Unity, affordable food crafted by award-winning chefs delivered to your door. Go to cookunity.com slash wait and enter code WAIT before checkout for 50% off your first week. I'm Rachel Martin, host of NPR's Wild Card Podcast. I've spent my entire career learning what kinds of questions prompt the most honest answers. What's the biggest sacrifice you've ever made? What's a belief you had to let go of? Oh. What's a goal you're glad you gave up on? Now I'm putting those soul searching questions to guests like Jenny Slate, Bo and Yang and Chris Pine. Follow Wildcard wherever you get your podcasts only from NPR. Some of our favorite
Starting point is 00:13:23 planets aren't even real. But could they be? Here on Shortwave, we journey to other planets, distant galaxies in our universe and in our favorite works of science fiction. Listen now to the Shortwave podcast from NPR and WBEZ Chicago this is, wait, wait, don't tell me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis. We are playing this week with Emmy Blotnick, Luke Burbank, and Brian Babylon. And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segel.
Starting point is 00:14:06 Thank you, Bill. 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 or check out the pinned post on our Instagram page at WaitWaitNPR. Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, Peter.
Starting point is 00:14:22 This is Yvonne in Olympia, Washington. I love Olympia, Washington. One of my favorite places. I have good friends there. What do you do? I am an artist and a middle school art teacher. And I also play in a band called Sticks and Bones. Sticks and Bones.
Starting point is 00:14:37 What kind of band is it? It's a queer women-led honk band. All in cases, all abilities. Yeah. Honk music? Is that like where you just show up and just honk on your instruments? Well that's what I do because I don't know how to play but. Ivana, welcome to the show. You're going to play the game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction. Bill, what is Ivana's topic? Traveling for business? Oh, the work trip. They're so great.
Starting point is 00:15:07 It's a chance to meet colleagues from all over to see new places and finally enjoy anything you want from the mini bar because you're not paying. This week we heard about chaos on a work trip. Our panel is gonna tell you about it. Pick the one who's telling the truth. You'll win the weight-weighter of your choice on your voicemail. Are you ready to play? Yes. All right.
Starting point is 00:15:25 First up, it is Luke Burbank. Robert Baluku, a Ugandan delegate to the United Nations, recently found himself between a rock and a hard place. As The Guardian reported this week, a UN conference in Cali, Colombia, had so many delegates in attendance that the city completely ran out of hotel rooms. So, Baluku and others ended up staying at Motel Desires, an hourly rental sex motel, with rooms featuring stripper poles, sex swings, circular beds, and mirrors on the ceilings. The setup is quite different from other hotel rooms, said Baluku, who has now been declared Uganda's Minister of Understatement. But motel manager Diana Echevarri made it her goal to welcome
Starting point is 00:16:11 the delegates, even cooking them a fresh breakfast each morning of eggs, coffee, and traditional Colombian bread. And it seemed to work. According to the article, the delegates kind of loved motel desires. We are enjoying ourselves, Baluku told the Guardian. This motel is more comfortable than many of the other places we've stayed. Now if you can excuse me, I need to stare at my reflection in the ceiling and practice my presentation for tomorrow.
Starting point is 00:16:35 Delegates to a very serious UN conference in Cali, Colombia, having to stay in a sex hotel. Your next out of office message comes from Emmy Blotnick. When Samantha Meyers started her internship at a Canadian construction company, she thought it would be straightforward. She never thought she'd be sent on a clandestine business trip to broker a deal with the Quebecois mafia. According to the Globe and Mail, Samantha took some liberties under the special skills
Starting point is 00:17:06 section of her resume. I saw it as an aspirational space, Samantha explained. Her special skills were mentalist, hostage negotiation, and perfect French. Unfortunately, her skills were just the thing her employer needed to broker a major deal with a rival. They needed 100 tons of gravel at a low price, so they sent Samantha to the province to meet with the head of the construction mafia. Samantha took her can-do attitude and two weeks of Duolingo French to the meeting and came
Starting point is 00:17:37 home with an incredible deal, a hundred tons of well-made quebecois gravy. The French word for gravel is gravier, so I got confused. But really anyone could have made this mistake, explains Samantha, the only person who could have made this mistake. The gravy will be mixed into concrete and so now all Ontario roads will smell like slow cooked beef. It's a win-win. A woman sensed to negotiate with the Kippa-Kla mafia to get gravel and came back with gravy instead. Your last story of getting all up in somebody's business travel comes from
Starting point is 00:18:16 Brian Babylon. Archaeologists from all over the world gathered in Chicago this week for the Global Archaeology Conference were amazed by a discovery that would change everything they thought they knew about the ancient world. One exhibit booth showcased newly unearthed relics from an excavation somewhere in the Egyptian desert. Items include an ancient tablet adorned with hieroglyphics spelling out LOL and ROFL, a ceremonial cup with an embedded QR code and a clay tablet engraved with what looked like an iPhone.
Starting point is 00:18:52 Professors from top universities were soon gathered around, nodding seriously, with Dr. Viva Cohen, a specialist in Egypt's third dynasty, proclaiming, perhaps what we have been calling hieroglyphics the whole time were secretly emojis. She spent 30 minutes analyzing the tablet until a student scanned the QR code revealing a YouTube video of cats dressed as pharaohs. Gasped turned to laughter as a group of PhD students revealed it was a prank. Most professors took it with stride. With Dr. Cohen laughing,
Starting point is 00:19:25 it's a reminder that we need to think outside the tomb. Ha ha ha. Now if you will, I need to go look at that cat video again. There's something happened recently when some people left their offices at home to work abroad. Was it from Luke Burbank, some diplomats at a serious UN conference in Cali, Columbia, having to stay at a hotel for a more hourly clientele? From Emmy Blotnick, a woman who was sent by her boss to get some gravel came back with gravy instead because of her poor French, or from Brian Babylon, archaeologists gathering in Chicago were fooled by what seemed to be a discovery of ancient high technology.
Starting point is 00:20:04 Which of these is the real story of a work trip? So I'm going to go with Luke's hotel sex desires. All right. Well, to bring in the correct answer, we spoke to a reporter who reported on that story. They took out some of the sex wings and chairs, so they tried to like slightly desex it. That was Phoebe Weston, a biodiversity reporter for The Guardian, who visited the sex hotel along with the diplomats. Congratulations, Yvonne, you got it right. Luke was in fact telling the truth.
Starting point is 00:20:37 I see sometimes that. For once. For once. For once. And you have won our prize, the voice of anyone you might choose. Congratulations, Yvonne. Thank you. And keep honking.
Starting point is 00:20:50 I will. Take care. And now the game we call Not My Job. Actor Brian Jordan-Alvarez didn't wait for some network to let him do a sitcom. He spent years making TV series and movies with his friends, putting them on YouTube between his acting jobs. Finally, FX on Hulu got the hint in his new show, English Teacher, which he created and stars in is their latest hit.
Starting point is 00:21:24 Brian Jordan-Alvarez, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Thank you for having me. So welcome. You have had this remarkable career, but right now it has brought you to this new sitcom on Hulu, which everybody loves. It's called English Teacher. And for people who don't know it is about in fact an English teacher is that right? Yeah exactly and I do I'm I I've cast myself in the role
Starting point is 00:21:52 of the titular English teacher. Right how did you get the part? Did you like a killer audition? I talked to the guy who created the show and he was like you have a good look and we want you for this which was me. The character is openly gay and sometimes has to deal with all these expectations that people have of him. Yeah, and I accept that about him, by the way. Never have. Yeah, you're very, yeah, it's very open-minded for you. Yeah, I was like, it's okay.
Starting point is 00:22:18 You're right, that's cool. My own way of, my own sort of way of thinking. Yeah. Have you been contacted by some of the teachers you had when you were growing up saying, it's me isn't it? That that part where he's really sensitive, that's me right? Not saying it's me isn't it, but I have had a lot of sort of Facebook support from my one of my teachers Phil White who is he would perch on his chair. He would always be squatting on his chair and he would spill coffee all over himself and so yeah, yeah, I had a lot of great English teachers though, Claire Reichman and Tom Gladstone
Starting point is 00:22:49 and I just like to name drop my English teachers. Right, right. We get it. So when you're crouching in a chair spilling coffee all over yourself, you say, this is because of the great teachers I had. Yeah, exactly. The show is set obviously in the present day. Did you have to like research like how high school has changed since you were there?
Starting point is 00:23:07 Did you bring in... I had to research the present day because I live in the past. I'm like so stuck in the past. Yeah. No, you know what it is is that I'm very online as they say, sort of terminally online. I'm, I, I, part of me, you know, a part of me that I'm always trying to improve is the part of me that can't get through most film and TV because I'm on TikTok too much.
Starting point is 00:23:30 So then I think that's to the show's benefit. I sort of know how people are talking right now and what people are arguing about online and so some of that translates. So you made a name for yourself by posting all of these videos to YouTube and TikTok. You've got self-made movies, you've got TV shows, you've got a video, just one I picked at random called Dancing to Cheeseburger in Paradise, which is literally just you dancing
Starting point is 00:23:56 shirtless to the Jimmy Buffett song, Cheeseburger in Paradise. Yes. Yeah, that was a lot of these are sort of COVID outgrowths where it's like you're in your apartment so long and as a creative person you just start coming up with nonsense basically. Really? And you say, what am I going to do today? I don't know, even when my only idea is to dance in my underwear? Then I'll just post that. You're having a big moment with that again, Brian, because you've been doing this meme, like this film, What Can You Offer My Daughter?
Starting point is 00:24:36 And the guy says nothing and then does this dance. You've done roughly 1,000 of those in the last week. Yes, 1,000, yes. How did you land on that? So that's a TikTok trend. I saw somebody do it. I thought it was really funny. I first think I've actually, I don't think that I'm aware I've ever been part of
Starting point is 00:24:54 a sort of a traditional TikTok dancing trend until now. And so English teacher, I'm very proud of, you know, the, the critics loved it. And a lot of people are watching it, but I wanted more people to watch it. And so I started doing this TikTok dancing trend and I say stream English Teacher and apparently it has quite seriously affected the numbers. And it's just sort of like people are saying it, they feel like they're watching like a bird do a mating call. And you have used this to successfully market your relatively, I say, mainstream sitcom on
Starting point is 00:25:29 Hulu, a big streaming service. Is this going to become a thing? Are they going to go up like Kathy Bates, who's the star of the new Matlock reboot, and say, Kathy, we need you to do something? They're going to be like, please, Kathy, just do one. I love your daughter video. Come on. It's going to be amazing.
Starting point is 00:25:43 I have to ask you, though, but another thing you are famous for apparently You know they say he's big in Japan Well, you are big in Australia because they think you out of all the people who attempted do the best fake Australia Is that exactly I have been on the news in Australia for how good my Australian accent? I've never been to Australia. Okay, so and your Australian character is a weightlifter of some kind. Yeah, Rick. Rick is a weightlifter. Right, and I think having set you up as the finest fake Australian accent, I think we need to hear from Rick or anyone else you might want to. Okay, okay, I don't know. I don't usually do it on the spot. I'm probably gonna fail, so let me let me say that.
Starting point is 00:26:21 But let me see. Hi guys, just wanted to say that I'm so glad we're all here together tonight and it's a privilege to be able to talk to this crowd and to show off my amazing biceps and to lift kilos and lift so many kilos. Something like that. and lift so many kilos. Something like that. And I just love, I love, I love the fact that somebody in Australia saw that and said, that man's a hero. We need to bring him onto our air just to praise him for his fake, how do you, is there a secret to your brilliant fake Australian accent? Yes. It's not a secret.
Starting point is 00:27:08 It's that I watched several seasons of Australia's Next Top Model. And one of the key phrases is this... Not such a nice thing to say, but this guy was talking to one of the models and he goes, look, waist up, it's great, but waist down, you've got a lot of work to do because you're not going to fit the clothes, and if you don't fit the clothes, you don't get the job. Wow, that was amazing. That's exactly the speech Peter gave me backstage. Well, Brian Jordan-Alvarez, it is so much fun to talk to you, and we have asked you
Starting point is 00:27:47 here to play a game we're calling... English Teacher? Meet an English Creature. And by English Creature, we of course mean the hedgehog. That adorable spiny thingamajig that's under severe threat because apparently we just can't have good things. Answer two or three questions about hedgehogs correctly, Brian, and you will win a prize for one of our listeners.
Starting point is 00:28:08 A hedgehog. No, actually not that voice for their voicemail message. Bill, who is Brian Jordan Alvarez playing for? Kate Smith of Orlando, Florida. All right. Here's your first question. Hedgehogs, of course, are beloved in England, and in 2006, the Hedgehog Preservation Society, a real thing, won an important battle on behalf of the hedgehogs. Was it A, they won a court case that led to
Starting point is 00:28:31 hedgehogs being legally classified as, quote, tiny, spiny persons? B, every town is required to have at least one hedgehog highway, a lane at the side of the road reserved for hedgehogs? Or C, they got McDonald's to redesign their McFlurry cups because hedgehogs kept getting stuck in them. Oh, it's B or C. I think C. You're right, Brian. That's what happened. It took six years of lobbying and presumably television commercials with sad hedgehogs with McFlurry cups on their heads, but it did work.
Starting point is 00:29:13 McDonald's did change the design of their McFlurry cups. Look, and we all miss the old McFlurry cup, but you got to know. It's all right, man. It's for the hedgehogs. It's for the hedgehogs. Okay. Now, as we've established, English people love their hedgehogs, but maybe not as much as Americans do, who went so overboard for that animal that what happened in 2019? A, the American Kennel Club had to change their rules to officially exclude hedgehogs
Starting point is 00:29:35 from being entered into the Westminster dog show. B, the CDC had to issue a warning that kissing your hedgehog could give you a rare form of salmonella, or see the Met Gala kept Zendaya from entering while wearing a cape made of 24 live hedgehogs. I think it's B. You think it's B, you're right. The CDC has put out a warning. Stop kissing your hedgehogs, it is not sanitary.
Starting point is 00:30:00 Shake their paws firmly. Okay. Yeah. All right. Last question. You're doing very well, Brian. Hedgehogs are very familiar animals, but there are still some mysteries about them. For example, nobody knows why hedgehogs occasionally do what? A, refuse to eat anything but cheese pizza.
Starting point is 00:30:19 B, blow up like a balloon. Or C, get into formation and do what really looks like a synchronized dance number. I think it's, I could be wrong, but I think it's B. Blowing up like a balloon, you're right. Wow. They do that. People do that sometimes too.
Starting point is 00:30:35 Yeah. Yeah, it's technical name is balloon syndrome, and nobody knows exactly what causes it. It's very dangerous for the hedgehogs, and the cure, and I am very serious, is to deflate them. Bill, how did Brian Jordan Alvarez do in our show? He has entered a rare group. Three in a row, yes! Congratulations!
Starting point is 00:30:56 Wow, Brian! Brian Jordan Alvarez is the creator, producer, writer, and of course, star of English Teacher on Hulu. Brian Jordan Alvarez. Yes, binge English Teacher on Hulu. Binge it, binge it. Do not sleep, do not eat. Bye, I'm out of time. Bye. In just a minute, Bill goes for gold in Mario Kart in the Listener Limerick Challenge. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air. We'll be back in a minute, Bill goes for gold in Mario Kart in the listener limerick challenge. Call 1-888-WAITWAIT to join us on the air. We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait Wait Don't Tell Me from NPR.
Starting point is 00:31:35 Well we finally made it, election week. That is what this whole never ending election cycle has been building up to. And what happens now will determine the future of our country. You can keep up with election news when it matters most with the NPR Politics Podcast. All this week, we're taking the latest stories from the campaign trail, swing states, and polling places to help you make sense of them and what they mean for you. Listen now to the NPR Politics Podcast. We finally made it. Election week. It's what this whole never-ending election cycle has been building up to. And what happens now will dictate the future of the country.
Starting point is 00:32:10 Keep up with election news when it matters most with NPR's Consider This podcast. All this week, we are taking major stories from the election to help you make sense of them and what they mean for you in under 15 minutes. Listen now to the Consider This podcast from NPR. This message comes from Wondery. Kill List is a true story of how one journalist ended up in a race against time to warn those on the list whose lives were in danger. Follow Kill List wherever you get your podcasts. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis.
Starting point is 00:32:50 We're playing this week with Luke Burbank, Emmy Blotnick, and Brian Babylon. And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, the boy Peter Zegel. Thank you so much. And just a minute, Bill finds it hard to hold a candle in the cold November rhyme. In our listener limerick challenge game, if you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-888-924-8924. Right now, a panel of some more questions for you from the week's news. Emmy, the New York Times this week made a plea to wedding planners to look out for a marginalized group of people at weddings. Who are those people?
Starting point is 00:33:31 Are they single people? They are, in fact, the single people. One of them is here. Yes, apparently. Single people, yes. You know, everybody's there to celebrate true love between two people, but what about the sad spinsters? Not to mention, of course, the spinstos. This article recommends, for example, that people who are organizing weddings should cancel the slow dances because
Starting point is 00:33:58 those can be hard for the people without a date. The article even mentioned one woman at a wedding who felt so awkward she tried to get on the slow dance floor by dancing around with her dinner roll. What a goof. I wonder why she's single. Who goes to a wedding and makes it about them? Why would you? This is my day. How dare you? No, I'm not. Brian Zilla. Yeah. I also think that the premise, having been married a couple of times, not to brag,
Starting point is 00:34:29 the premise that the single people are the sad people misunderstands the nature of some committed relationships. Yeah. Heading on home, doing whatever you want to do, is not a bad feeling compared to tense car ride home. Wait a minute. So you're telling me. Someone tried to break out their moves to jungle fever. At your weddings, the number indeterminate at this point, you were there. That's for the courts to decide.
Starting point is 00:34:56 You were there getting married. Looking at the dateless people who were leaving alone going, those lucky bastards. Not in those moments. But I'm just saying this cultural idea that we have to feel so bad for folks who are single, like their life is such a living hell. I would just say spend a Saturday morning with them and see how unhellish it is. Yeah, they're asleep. They're asleep.
Starting point is 00:35:17 Yeah. They're chilling. Nobody is messing with them. It's a pretty good scene. You know what? I will say I've been to some receptions and they put people at the single table. So it's that old auntie, a couple of teenagers, and a few single people. Fill some joints on that table and keep it steppin'. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:35:36 Yeah. Do you catch a bouquet? Go home. I'm just imagining, you know, they throw the garter in the air or whatever they throw in the air. The bouquet, right? Yeah. And some people are going, whoa. Luke, managers have tried a variety of incentives to get employees back in the office even this long after the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:35:53 Things like ping pong tables, massage chairs, but one company in Sweden may have topped them all by adding what feature? Is it experiential? Yes. Is it like some kind of a trampoline or slide? Oh, yes, a slide, very much like that. I'll give it to you. It's a roller coaster.
Starting point is 00:36:10 A roller coaster, yes. The great exhibition design studio, that's the name of the company, they made waves this week by becoming the first office in the world, as far as anyone knows, to feature a fully functional indoor roller coaster in the office. It's the perfect addition to lure back employees who love both fun and filing workman's comp applications. The roller coaster, which has a 10-foot vertical drop and is 200 feet long along its course, can carry a single rider on a trip throughout the office, through the halls and the lunch
Starting point is 00:36:39 room and the work rooms, right by the desks of all the employees who are like, good Lord, Sven, I'm on a Zoom call, could you not? I like the idea that if you go to this company's website, everyone's profile pic is that photo they sell you at the exit. Exactly. What have you got? Do they do that like when you get laid off, like you just get into the roller coaster and then you look up, you're at your car with your box.
Starting point is 00:37:02 That would be nice, yeah. It seems like it would be, I guess, a good way to wake yourself up if it was like you're hitting that low-ghee point in the day. Yeah. But it also seems like a tremendously poor use of the space of the office building. Especially for just one person. One person at a time. Don't you want to do that with your friends?
Starting point is 00:37:19 That's even more important. Well, you can wave to them. Friendship? No. A one-person roller coaster sounds dumb. What does the company manufacture or sell or do? They're a design company. They do design installations.
Starting point is 00:37:32 So it's less surprising than, say, a payroll processing company. It would be great if it was like Safeco Insurance. Yeah, exactly. 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. You can catch us most weeks at the Studebaker Theater in downtown Chicago, or you can come
Starting point is 00:38:05 see us on the road in Detroit on November 14th and at Carnegie Hall in New York City on December 12th. For tickets and information, go to NPRpresents.org. Also you can check out our sister podcast, How to Do Everything. This week, Mike and Ian talk to two of your kids' favorite celebrities, Josh Gad from Frozen and the Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hello, this is Jenna from Cincinnati. What do you do there in Cincinnati? I am a project engineer for a large steel company and mom to a rambunctious
Starting point is 00:38:39 three-year-old son. How very cool. And I'm talking about the son, I got one of those, big deal. sun. How very cool. And I'm talking about the sun. I got one of those big deal. I'm talking about the steel because you know, it's the modern world. People call in their teachers, their consultants, their IT professionals. You make something. Yeah, it's really actually kind of cool. Right. Do you like take steel home from the office? I can't say yes or no. Right. Well, Jenna, welcome to the show. Bill Curtis is going to read you three news related limericks with the last word or phrase missing from each. He'll stop suddenly. That's when you'll know it's your turn to fill in that last word.
Starting point is 00:39:12 And if you do that two times out of three, you'll be a winner. Ready to play? Yeah, let's go. Here is your first limerick. Though the slime factor's making me chokra, For my health, I am going for brokra. For the good of my bod, I'm distilling green pods. And I'm drinking the water from... Okra.
Starting point is 00:39:35 Okra, yes! Okra is the... In a new health trend that is supposedly going to lower your blood pressure and aid your digestion, people online are drinking something called okra water I was worried we were drinking Oprah. No Only two ways that limerick ends pretty much Oprah would have been better Okra water is I am sorry to report exactly what it sounds like It's the perfect drink for anyone who's looked at you know water and thought sure this is good
Starting point is 00:40:04 But couldn't it be more mucilaginous? So to make okra water, you just leave lots of slices of okra in water overnight, and then in the morning you throw out the okra and you drink the bitter, gloppy liquid that's left over. The trend started after someone said, you know, I'd like to drink my own snot, but there's not enough of it. What if Rocky Balboa did that in the morning? I'd like to drink my own snot, but there's not enough of it. What if Rocky Balboa did that in the morning?
Starting point is 00:40:28 No, that stuff, he never would have had a boxing career. He'd put it down, walked away. That's too gross. Gaston from Beauty and the Beast, raw eggs in his okra water. No one's thick as Gaston. No one slimes like this. Alright Jenna, here is your next limerick. Though the internet answered with rage,
Starting point is 00:40:50 I did not lock my tot in a cage. I merely chose paint that is boring and faint. Now the baby's room's color is... Beige, yes, that's right. Instead of the bright primary colors that we're all used to with children's stuff, more and more baby toys and decor and clothing is being made in beige and other neutral colors. Even the beloved TV character Bluey has become beige-y. Well, there is a shortage of accountants in America, and the only way to get more of them
Starting point is 00:41:21 is raise them in a beige bedroom with babies. Here is your last limerick. Though not buff, I won't fave any shaming. With controllers on screens, I am aiming. New Olympic events will appear four years hence. I'll be getting a medal in... Gaming. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Yes, very good. Three in a row! Wow! An official at the International Olympic Committee said recently that they quote, cannot ignore the staggering numbers unquote of video game players out there. So video games will probably be added to the Olympics sometime in the near future. Say by 2032 when the top medal winners in the games will be the US, China, and the Mushroom Kingdom. So this is going to replace because they breakdanced and clearly came and went.
Starting point is 00:42:12 So thanks Ray Gunn. Bill, how did Jenna do in our quiz? Jenna is solid as steel, three in a row. Congratulations Jenna. Thank you all so much. Jenna, take care. You too. Bye bye. Bye bye. Congratulations, Jenna! Thank you all so much. Jenna, take care.
Starting point is 00:42:26 You too. Bye-bye. Ever look up at the stars and wonder, what's out there? On Shortwave, we ask big questions about our universe. From baby galaxies to the search for alien life, we explore the celestial science behind these questions. Listen now to the Shortwave podcast from NPR. Do you feel like there's more on your to-do list than you can accomplish?
Starting point is 00:43:04 Or maybe the world's problems feel extra heavy these days. We can't eliminate stress, but we can manage it. It's almost like I have a new operating system now. Like I tend to live more in this light. Stress Less, a quest to reclaim your calm, a new series from NPR's Life Kit podcast. How does the brain process memories? Why is AI a solution and a problem for our climate? What is leadership in 2025 and beyond?
Starting point is 00:43:34 The TED Radio Hour explores the biggest questions and the most complicated ideas of our time with the world's greatest thinkers. Listen now to the TED Radio Hour from NPR. Now it's time for our final game. Lightning fill in the blank. Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill in the blank questions
Starting point is 00:43:53 as they can. Each correct answer is now worth two points. Bill, can you give us the scores? Luke has four, Emmy and Brian each have two. All right. So I'm just going to arbitrarily choose Brian to go first. Here we go. The clock will start when I begin your first question.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Fill in the blank. Okay. On Monday, federal authorities started an investigation into the fires that destroyed blanks in Oregon and Washington. Wildfires. No ballot boxes this time. Oh yeah, they were like wild in there. On Tuesday, the CDC confirmed that 15 people contracted E. coli linked to food from blank.
Starting point is 00:44:28 McDonald's? Yes. On Wednesday, rescue workers confirmed that 1,200 people were still trapped after Spain experienced massive disastrous blanking. Floods. Right. Saying they pose a risk to their health, schools throughout the country are banning students from blanking.
Starting point is 00:44:41 Tweet. Texting. No. Wearing Crocs, the shoes. On Monday, Apple unveiled the first features of their new blank feature. Articles of Intelligence? Yes, Apple Intelligence is called. Best known for her roles in Young, Frankenstein, and Tootsie,
Starting point is 00:44:53 blank passed away at the age of 79. Damn. Terry Gar? Right. This week, a pizzeria in Wisconsin apologized to customers after they ran out of cooking oil and ended up using blank instead. French fry oil.
Starting point is 00:45:04 No cannabis oil. Ha ha ha ha. You know how it is, you run out of oil for your pizza you're making in a communal kitchen and accidentally you grab the bottle that somebody else was using to make pot brownies. About 70 customers reported getting super high after eating the pizza, which is, of course, the reverse order of the way it usually happens.
Starting point is 00:45:27 Things got even worse when the restaurant ran out of those little Parmesan cheese packets and thought, well, we'll just send these little baggies of white powder instead. Bill, how did Brian do in our quiz? Four right, eight more points. A total of ten puts him in the lead. All right. Emmy, you're up next. Here we go.
Starting point is 00:45:46 Fill in the blank. According to a new report, Elon Musk has been in regular contact with blank for at least two years. Putin. Right. After serving 120 days in prison, former Trump Chief of Staff Blank was released on Monday. Steve Bannon. Right.
Starting point is 00:46:01 This week, the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the New York Yankees to win their eighth blank championship. World Series? Right. On Wednesday, Starbucks announced they would no longer charge extra for blank. This week, the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the New York Yankees to win their 8th blank championship. World Series? Right! On Wednesday, Starbucks announced they would no longer charge extra for blank. Like one of those Alt milks? Right!
Starting point is 00:46:13 Yes, non-dairy milks. This week, a group of skateboarders fulfilled the wishes of their recently deceased friend by blanking. Quitting? No, by turning his headstone into a quarter pipe skating ramp. For the first time in 130 years the peaks of Mount Fuji in Japan don't have any blank on them in October snow right passengers flying from Seattle to Anchorage were outraged this month after a man blanked while in flight
Starting point is 00:46:36 Seattle to anchor not important, okay Not even sure why I mentioned it Sorry. Not even sure why I mentioned it. What did he do, Peter? He opened a can of tuna. Oh, no. So a TikToker named Ali Jackson was sitting there and she started filming when the person sitting next to her just reached into his bag, pulled out a can of tuna, popped it open,
Starting point is 00:47:00 and just started eating it with a fork. The smell quickly filled up the plane, which was terrible for everyone except that family of cats traveling in row 34. Bill, how did Emmy do on our quiz? Really good. Five right, ten more points. Her total of twelve puts her in the lead. Alright. So how many then does Luke Burbank need to win?
Starting point is 00:47:28 Four to tie, five to win. Not impossible, Luke. Here we go. Ready? This is for the game. Fill in the blank. After their opinion editor was prevented from publishing a presidential endorsement by their owner, over 250,000 people canceled their subscription to the blank.
Starting point is 00:47:42 Washington Post. Right. In a move that sparked international outcry, Israel banned the UN group supporting refugees from blank. Gaza. Right. This week, several economic experts confirmed that America has managed to avoid a blank. Recession.
Starting point is 00:47:56 Right. On Monday, a new rule went into effect requiring airlines to automatically refund passengers whose flights are blanked. Delayed. Right. Or canceled. This week, a Canadian man was arrested for driving under the influence after he was caught blanking. Drinking maple syrup. No, driving a Zamboni into the sides of an ice rink while dressed as a kangaroo. On Thursday, the USDA announced plans
Starting point is 00:48:15 to test raw milk for blank. Botulism. No, bird flu. After months of complaints online about their portion sizes, blank announced they were returning to quote, consistent and generous portions. Chipotle?
Starting point is 00:48:27 Right, after residents of the UK started posting pictures of the Northern Lights on social media, authorities revealed that blank. It was a children's drawing of the Northern Lights. No, they're actually just the light shining up from a tomato factory. A recent stoller storm has caused the aurora borealis to be visible far closer to the equator than any time in recent history. Sadly, this, though, was not that. This was the lights from the plant over there that processed tomatoes. If you're wondering how to tell the difference, the clues were the glow in the sky was shining
Starting point is 00:49:00 upwards and it was red, and some observers reported the moon hitting their eye like a big pizza pie. Oh, yeah, yeah. Bill, did Luke do well enough to win? Five right, ten more points, fourteen gives him the win. Good job Luke. Luke, Luke, Luke, Luke. In just a minute we'll ask panelists, now that we know that animals drink alcohol, what will be the next surprising vice that we learn they have? 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 Kodaka, Rezard Limerick, our public address announcer is Paul Friedman,
Starting point is 00:49:42 our tour manager is Shayna Donald, special thanks this week to our old friend Gary Yech. And thanks as always to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theatre. BJ Liederman composed our theme. Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King. Special thanks to Blythe Robertson and Monica Hickey. Our intimacy coordinator is Peter Gwynn. Emma Choi is our vibe curator. Technical direction is from Lorna White, our CFO is Colin Miller, our production manager is Robert Newhouse, our senior producer is Ian Chilag, and the executive producer, wait, wait, don't tell me, that's
Starting point is 00:50:11 Michael Danforth. Now panel, what wild things will animals be getting up to? Brian Babylon. It comes to find out that McGruff the crime dog has been selling drugs the whole time. That's what he keeps under the trench coat. Makes perfect sense. Emmy Blotnick. Horses are doing human tranquilizers. And Luke Burbank. They'll become addicted to gambling, but the slot machines, when they come up cherries,
Starting point is 00:50:48 it will be actual cherries. Well, if any of that happens, we're going to ask you about it right here on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Them. Thank you so much, Bill Curtis. Thanks to Brian Babylon, Emmy Blotnick, and Luke Burbank. Thanks to our fabulous audience who came out to see us at the Studevik Theater. And thanks to all of you for listening out there wherever you might be. I'm Peter Sagal.
Starting point is 00:51:02 I'm Peter Sagal. I'm Peter Sagal. I'm Peter Sagal. I'm Peter Sagal. I'm Peter Sagal. I'm Peter Sagal. I'm Peter Sagal. and Luke Burbank, thanks to our fabulous audience who came out to see us at the Studevik Theater. And thanks to all of you for listening out there wherever you might be. I'm Peter Segel, and we'll see you next week. This is NPR. Studies have shown that elections can spike feelings of stress and anxiety. That's why NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour is there to help you feel more grounded as we talk about the buzziest TV movies and music. Try a show on HBO's industry or a roundtable on romcoms
Starting point is 00:51:42 to take a step back from the news of the day, at least before you plunge back in tomorrow. New episodes every week on pop culture happy hour from NPR. Jim Ewing had to get his foot amputated after a climbing accident. Thanks to a new procedure, his prosthetic feels like it's his real foot. Your brain recognizes this piece of equipment as being part of you. It just adopts it and starts using it as if it belongs there. How technology is augmenting humans. That's on the TED Radio Hour podcast from NPR. Every weekday, NPR's best political reporters
Starting point is 00:52:20 come to you on the NPR Politics podcast to explain the big news coming out of Washington, the campaign trail, and beyond. We don't just want to tell you what happened, we tell you why it matters. Join the MPR Politics podcast every single afternoon to understand the world through political eyes.

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