Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! - WWDTM: Eric Idle
Episode Date: October 12, 2024This week, comedy legend Eric Idle joins panelists Eugene Cordero, Negin Farsad, and Shane O'NeillLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy...
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This message comes from Organic Valley, a dairy cooperative of small organic family farms that is dedicated to protecting the land and all the plants and animals that live there.
Learn more at ov.coop. This is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. Yes, I'm Stentorian, but I'm so much Morian.
Bill Curtis, and here is your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building
in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you so much, Bill.
Thank you, everybody.
So great to see you.
So great to have you here.
We have such a great show for you today,
and it is an important one to me personally.
When I was a teenager, many years ago, I really wanted to be funny.
So I just would repeat bits from Monty Python to charm people.
And it never worked for some reason.
But today I get to talk to Eric Idle, one of the founders of Monty Python,
somebody who might finally appreciate my version of the dead parrot sketch. And I do both characters.
But it's first your turn to join us by giving us a call. The number is 1-888-wait-wait.
That's 1-888-924-89wait. Let's welcome our first listener contestant.
Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Hi, this is Shababu from Downers Grove, Illinois.
Downers Grove, not far from here in Chicago.
Some people here know it.
What do you do there?
I am a product manager for a large financial company.
I've always wondered about this because you're a product manager for a financial company,
which technically doesn't make anything.
And does that ever bother you, like you're saying, would you like to try one of our financial
products which only exist in concept?
I mean, it's definitely very convoluted.
I feel like I work on a lot of stuff that people don't see.
So which I guess in one way it's a little less scary. So I know. Do you ever wish
you could just like sell ties or something? Something you could look at in
your hand? Something more tangible. Yeah, definitely. Well, welcome to the show,
Shivali. Let me introduce you to our panel this week. First up, it's a staff
writer in the Washington Post where he writes the absolutely essential style memo newsletter. It's Shane O'Neill.
Hello, Shevalli.
Next, it's the comedian and host of the podcast, Fake the Nation.
You can see her in The Muslims Are Coming, stand-up show in Reading, PA.
On October 18th, it's Nagin Farsad.
Hey there.
And you can see him on season five of Star Trek Lower Decks premiering October 24th and
on Mike Schur's A Man on the Inside on Netflix in November.
It's Eugene Cordero.
Hi.
Hello, hello.
So, Shivali, welcome to the show.
You're of course going to play Who's Bill this time.
That's how we always start our show with Bill Curtis giving you three quotations that we
found in the week's news. Your job correctly identify or explain just two of
them. Do that. You will win our prize. Any voice you might choose from our show for your
voicemail. Are you ready to go? Awesome. I'm stoked. That's we are. We're all stoked.
Here is your first quote. This is what happens when I drink beer. That was one of many presidential
pronouncements from somebody's media blitz this week. Who was it? It sounds a little
awkward so I wonder if it's Trump or Vance. Or if it's Waltz because I know Kamala Harris
and Tim Waltz were going on a lot of shows this week. You said it, it was Kamala Harris.
She said every possible answer.
Technically, you said every person running for every high office, but I wanted to stop
you before you got down to the Senate candidates.
The mainstream media, as I'm sure you know, has been constantly complaining that Kamala
Harris has not done enough interviews with them, so this week she did a barrage of appearances with everybody but them.
Harris this week appeared in the podcasts Call Me Daddy and All the Smoke, The Late
Show with Stephen Colbert, The View, Howard Stern, and somehow she's the next Bachelorette. I love the fact that she's getting on, you know, these shows where it's about getting
high and the basketball players and all that stuff.
Just the idea that she's doing it, I'm going like, okay, you're a real person.
But also, just walk through a door and I'll go, okay, you're not a ghost.
That's true.
You're easy to impress.
Yeah, yeah.
Doesn't take much.
She's been trying to appeal to more conservative voters in these appearances, so she's been
talking about the gun she owns and bragging, quote, I have put a lot of people in jail,
unquote, and, quote, I am the author of hillbilly elegy.
But I feel like she talked about her Glock the same way I've talked about having a tennis
racket.
You know what I mean?
Like I have one, it's in a closet, I've used it once in a really non-serious way, and I'd
like to pretend like I don't really have one.
But if somebody came to your house, you would play tennis.
I would play tennis with them.
I will, yeah.
So, it's the same.
It's the same.
I just, I don't like to sign up for that. I will, yeah. So, it's the same. It's the same.
I just, I don't get it. I was trying to fit in with like the salt of the earth people at Cracker Barrel,
but when I started telling everyone I had a Glock, it did not go over.
No, no.
All right, Shivali. Your next quote is from a scientist named Saul Newman,
who in a new study proves a very popular idea is completely wrong.
People want there to be some exotic island where everything's okay and if you eat goji
berries you're gold.
Dr. Newman says that he has now proved that in fact there are no special places on earth
where due to diet or climate or anything else, people
do what?
Live longer?
Yes, live longer.
Exactly right.
For decades, we have been told about these oases around the world of long life, and they're
called blue zones by scientists.
Places like Okinawa, Japan and Sardinia, Italy where demographic
data shows that the population is living remarkably long and healthy lives. And it turns out,
was it the secret diet? No. Was it lifestyle? No. Was it shoddy record keeping and pension
fraud? It sure was. So it turns out all of those places reported very high average lifespans because lots and
lots of people in those places were pretending their parents were still alive so they could
collect their pension checks.
Now I found this very shocking and I've heard about this my whole life.
These places where people have figured out the secrets to their longevity
and that's led to all these died and lifestyle books like the Sardinian secret, the Flemish
fountain of youth, the Okinawan method of propping up grandpa in a lifelike manner.
But also that Netflix show came out pretty recently. And I'm so embarrassed because I have been that jerk at a cocktail party being like,
you guys haven't heard of Blue Zones?
Oh, my gosh.
This is what we should all be doing.
We should be walking on stairs every day.
Like, literally just spewing the stuff from that documentary at cocktail parties.
That's all I've been doing the last year.
And there you go.
Now you have to go back to every person you talk to at those cocktail
parties and tell them the word is all nonsense.
Cheetos. Eat Cheetos all day long.
Might as well.
I mean, it is a bummer that there's not a secret place and secret ways to like make
you like a Highlander or whatever, but I would absolutely, I'm actually more intrigued now
to go to Okinawa and see this weekend at Bernie's type people.
Yeah.
Like, I would be amazed by being like, wow, you kept them looking alive?
How'd you do it?
Like, maybe their embalming is really good.
Yeah.
No, Okinawans are really very friendly.
It's a very welcoming place.
Just don't ask them if you can meet their parents.
All right. Here is your last quote.
Wearing them is no longer an easy way to see who's given up.
That was the Wall Street Journal telling us, as they often do, about the latest fashion
trend wearing what all day, even to the office?
Pajamas?
Pajamas, yes.
People are wearing pajamas to work. even to the office. Pajamas? Pajamas, yes.
People are wearing pajamas to work.
Who hasn't wondered what their coworkers wear to bed?
Trick question, sickos.
You should never think that.
But soon, according to the journal,
it will be impossible not to know as more people are
wearing their sleepwear out and about.
Don't mind if I do, commented the Sleeps Naked contingent.
I'm sorry, this is not new.
Like, there was a whole squadron of girls in high school
that we all called, like, the Cookie Monster Fleece Pants Girls.
It's an archetype, and if you are a bullied gay teen,
all you have to do is get right with the Cookie Monster fleece pajama girls and they will
Defend you until they die
Really? Yes, it's like the universal. I guess you know if this trend does does widen look for the fleece
Cookie Monster bottoms those girls decide if you live or die
Life lessons ladies and gentlemen from Shane O'Neil
We should note by the, before everybody gets too
excited, that all the people pushing this and all the
people photographed in the journal, they're either models
or they're actresses or they're fashion influencers.
That is, they're very good looking people.
Oh, so they're not going to work.
Well, in a way.
Yeah.
Bill, how did Shivali do on our quiz?
She's putting on her pajamas right now because she won all three.
Exactly.
The winner.
Yeah.
You went to work.
Well done, Shivali.
I think I did.
Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Nagin, couples therapy isn't just for couples anymore.
The latest trend is who going to get couples therapy together?
Oh, throuples.
No.
By couple, I mean two people at once who are related, but, you know, not in that way.
Oh, siblings.
Yes.
Couples therapy for siblings is now a thing.
Why don't they just call it sibling therapy?
I guess they could.
Yeah.
Well, if we called it that in this context, you would have known the answer.
You know, couples therapy, as we know, is for couples trying to work out their differences.
And as we all know, siblings often have differences too, so why not them?
But if your session starts with your brother saying, our sex life is in a rut, you don't
need couples therapy, you need real therapy now.
Oh, God.
I mean, it seems healthy to me.
It's like if you're having trouble with your sibling and you go to therapy, then the two
of you, when things get too intense, you can just get back to making fun of your parents,
which is the best, most bonding thing.
That's why you have siblings.
Obviously. But I don't get it because also,
if my parents couldn't make it work between me and my sister,
how is a stranger going to do it?
Because I don't listen to my parents when they tell me that my sister was right.
So I'm not going to listen to some suit do it either.
Well, the difference is, is the therapist will be objective and unbiased
when your parents loved your sister more.
Ah, you're right!
Honesty, the best policy.
Don't let that tear us apart.
We are love, we are light.
We are fear, we are fight.
We are good, we are bad.
All that we have is each other.
We are love, we are light.
We are fear, we are fight.
We are good, we are bad.
All that we have is each other.
We are love, we are light.
We are fear, we are fight.
We are good, we are bad.
All that we have is each other.
We are love, we are light.
We are fear, we are fight.
We are good, we are bad.
All that we have is each other.
We are love, we are light.
We are fear, we are fight. We are good, we are bad. All that we have is each other. We are love, we are light, we are fear, we are fight, we are good, we are bad, all
that we have is each other, oh, sisters and brothers.
Coming up, you won't be Matty-o at our Bluff the Listener game call, one, triple eight,
wait, wait to play.
We'll be back in a minute with more Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
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This election season, you can expect to hear a lot of news, some of it meaningful, much
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From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis,
who you're playing this week with Eugene Cordero, Shane O'Neill,
and Nagin Farsad. And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theatre in Chicago, Illinois,
Peter Segal.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you all so much. Right now, it is time for the Wait, Wait, Don't
Tell Me, Bluff the Listener game call, 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to play our game in the air or check out the pinned post on our Instagram page at WaitWaitNPR.
Hi, you're on Wait Wait Don't Tell Me.
Hi, Peter.
It's Glenn Strawn.
Hey, Glenn Strawn.
How are you?
Where are you calling from?
I'm calling from Annapolis, Maryland.
Oh, great.
Annapolis, capital of Maryland.
What do you do there? I work for an international organization named Chapaigo, whose goal is to save the lives
of women and babies at birth.
Oh, wow.
That is excellent work.
Do you know if any babies out there are named after you?
No, none. None.
Thank you.
Well, Glenn, it's great to have you with us.
You're going to play the game in which you must try to tell truth from fiction.
Bill, what is Glenn's topic?
Hey there, Daddy-o.
The word daddy-o popped up prominently in the news this week, and not just because of
Kamala Harris' appearance on the podcast, Call Her Daddio.
Our panelists are going to tell you the real reason that word came up.
Pick the one who's telling the truth and you'll win our prize, the weight-weighter of your
choice and your voicemail.
Are you ready to play?
Yes, I am.
All right.
First, let's hear from Eugene Cordero.
When the in-flight entertainment system broke down on a flight from Sydney to Tokyo, it
made it impossible for individuals to control their screens.
So in a stunning show of cooperation, a group of passengers chose a movie for the entire
plane to watch altogether.
The movie they chose was Daddy-O.
For those of us who haven't seen Daddy-O, which is everyone on earth who wasn't on that plane,
it's a 2023 film starring Sean Penn and Dakota Johnson that takes place entirely in a taxi cab
and somehow manages to feature full frontal female and male nudity.
How does this happen?
Was the only other choice Despicable Me for and everyone who voted had already seen it?
Did Inside Out 2 sound too sexual?
Who would have thought that raw dogging on a flight is a safer option?
The passengers on a long flight because of a malfunction all ended up watching the same
movie Daddio, much to most people's dismay.
Your next Daddio dispatch comes from DeGene Farsad.
Dave Pearson is a stay at home dad in Park Slope, Brooklyn, where New York City keeps
helicopter parents who sign their kids up for trapeze and feminist zine building workshops.
Dave was always looking for healthy snacks for his two kids, Eleanor and Henry, because
if you live in Park Slope, your kids were named off of a 1940s name registry.
So he created his own cereal, which he called-Os, the dad joke version of Cheerios.
And like Cheerios, they tasted rather bland, but unlike Cheerios, they were made from nuts,
seeds, and flavored with your imagination.
But one day, a video circulated among Brooklyn parents.
Daddy-Os had been featured on the OnlyFans page Hot Deliveries.
In the video, a hot Instacart lady delivers the cereal to a hot client.
They sexily unbox the snack in what turns into a rather steamy, albeit highly nutritious,
porn delivery scene.
Disappointed, Dave ends up changing the name of his cereal to Nutty's, and the rest of
us are just waiting for him to see the problem
with that name.
A Park Slope dad invents Daddio's his version of Cheerios and then things get unintentionally
sexy.
Your last story of Daddio drama comes from Shane O'Neil.
D'Adio's, an Italian restaurant in San Antonio, Texas, had been the pride and joy of the D'Adio
family since they immigrated from Italy in 1976.
But when owner Joseph D'Addio fell on hard times after an ill-advised investment in crypto,
he sold his family's restaurant to a venture capital firm that rebranded D'Addio's as
Daddio's, a vaguely nostalgic and very loud diner.
Once the menu had sundae sauce that marinated for hours,
sopped up with crusty bread baked from a closely guarded
secret family recipe.
Now you could order the Elvis Presley Ain't Nothing
But a Hot Dog platter with your choice of Jackie Onion rings
or Joan Crawford's Hush Hush Puppies Sweet Charlotte. This was all news to Joseph's grandfather Vitorio who paid a surprise visit to the restaurant during a day trip from his nearby nursing home
Lisa doesn't even make sense. He said is he supposed to be the 1950s or the 1960s?
Jackie Kennedy didn't marry Aristotle analysis until 1968 and does anyone remember the movie Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte, besides gay film buffs?
All right.
Dadios popped up in the news this week.
But what did that word refer to?
Was it from Eugene Cordero, a movie called Dadio, which the passengers on a long flight
inexplicably decided to watch all of them, or from Naguine Farsad, Daddio's the breakfast cereal that took off when a
Park Slope dad invented it, or from Shane O'Neill how Daddio's, the classic
Italian place, become Daddio's the retro diner, much to the dismay of the family
patriarch, which was the real story we found in the news this week.
Well, Peter, I did read about this and I'm going to go with Eugene, story number one.
Yes.
Okay.
Well, then your choice is going to be Eugene's story.
To find out the correct answer, we spoke to a reporter covering the real story.
After passengers complained about Daddy-O, they switched it to a family covering the real story. After passengers complained about Daddio,
they switched it to a family-friendly movie.
Yeah, that was Mary-Kate Carr of the AV Club
talking about the in-flight Daddio debacle.
Congratulations, Glenn, you have earned a point for Eugene
by simply telling the truth, and you have won our game.
You get the voice of your choice in your answering machine.
Well done, sir.
Thank you very much.
Take care, granny.
Congratulations on the very good work you did.
Bye-bye.
And now the game where we ask people about things they know nothing about.
It's called Not My Job.
Eric Idle is one of the founders of Monty Python's Flying Circus, the most influential sketch
comedy show ever made.
And he's also the creator of Spamalot, the hit musical based on the film Monty Python
and the Holy Grail.
He has just published a book about the making of that musical and he joins us now.
Eric Idle, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
You can find it.
It is such, I'm just gonna put it this way,
it's a lifelong dream to talk to you.
In fact, when we first spoke earlier this week,
you called me and I picked up the phone
and you said, hi, it's Eric Idle,
and I became completely incapable of human speech.
And I was wondering, does that happen to you a lot?
Because there are a lot of people like me.
Well, not really.
I mean, you know, human speech.
But thank you.
It's very nice to be back in Chicago
where Spamalot started.
Yes, yes, it's true.
Spamalot, you had what they call the out of town tri-ots
here. It's very exciting. We certainly did, yes. Did you enjoy your time in Chicago? I loved my
time in Chicago. I'm married to a Chicago woman and I have lots of Chicago relatives, so I'm very,
you know, I love Chicago. Yeah, that's really great. It's a good town.
And let me put it this way, when you walk the streets of Chicago, we're a very
cool, sophisticated place, I know, but do people recognize you and go nuts because they,
like me, were Monty Python fans growing up?
Yes, sadly they do, but there's very little you can say. I mean, people come up and start
reciting a sketch at you that you can't say, well, how are you too? You know, I mean, they sort of remove the possibility of conversation.
Right. So you just have to stand there and nod while they do the whole, like,
nudge nudge, wink wink thing, for example.
Exactly. Yeah.
Exactly so.
Is that hellish or do you just sort of accept that as the price of fame?
It's fine. I mean, I'm glad that the nice thing about being a comedian is if people
recognize you, they tend to laugh.
Because they remember you in some silly costume, usually a drag or something, you know.
So, it's not unpleasant. It's not like rock and roll. They don't try and kill you or anything, you know.
In addition to knowing all these rock and roll bands in the 70s, we've also heard stories that you, either yourself as a group used to throw these pretty legendary parties is that true? I've always enjoyed it we
always had some good parties because I you know I like to play music and we
always have sing-alongs and ding-dongs and we still we still do that. Right we
we heard once that like you threw a party in the late 70s and the cast of
Star Wars which was filming at the time, came over? Well, Carrie Fisher rented my house in London
for filming the Empire Strikes Back.
And they were very depressed and Harrison Ford,
they'd been in England for a long time.
They were depressed.
Yeah, that'll do it.
So I pulled out a special liquor we bought from Tunisia
and the party started and by chance the stones were around the corner in Abbey Road and they all came around and this party
went on all night and they were finally picked up by their cars at six o'clock
and we all went off to bed and I'm happy to say I ruined one of the scenes in
Star Wars. Do you know which scene you ruined and how you ruined it?
Well because they stayed up all night.
They blamed me.
I mean they're adults, you know.
It was a scene where they meet Billy Dee Williams and they come off the plane and they, you
know, Carrie says, hi.
And they're all completely high, you know, they've been up all night.
That is an amazing bit of Star Wars lore and I don't know if everybody knows it.
That is amazing.
Speaking of musicians, the stones came by to your party.
I also, again, for the first time found out, was it true that Elvis Presley was a big fan
of yours?
Yes, and I found that out quite surprisingly in one of the books.
He called everybody Squire after my nudge nudge sketch.
No, he did not.
Yes, he did, and he was a huge fan. And I met Linda Thompson, who was his girlfriend,
and she said at night in Memphis when the television stopped about 2.30 in the morning,
Elvis would make her do Monty Python sketches with him.
And not just anyone, she'd go,
Hello Mrs. Thing, hello Mrs. Entity.
And I said, well, no, I don't believe you. She convinced me finally that because she knew the words.
Could that be what Elvis was doing the night he died?
I think it's a little harsh to blame us for that.
If you take a tour of Graceland, and I have, they're very cagey about what he was doing the night he died.
They won't tell you. And maybe it was that. Maybe he was, you know, just sort of shut up.
I think he was quite healthy sitting up in bed
doing sketches of Linda.
I think so.
I want to talk to you about the musical, of course,
which went on to be a huge hit.
And One Tony's, and then was revived, and One Tony's again.
You had always been a musician.
In fact, you wrote, I don't know if this
is your first big hit of a song, but Always Look
in the Bright Side of Life from the end of Life of Brian.
We heard that that is, at least at one time, was the number one song played at funerals
in the UK.
I'm proud to say that it still is.
It's been that for 20 years. Really?
Yes, I'm happy to say it replaced my way. Oh that is good. I think yeah that is
definitely improvement. Have you ever been to a funeral and all of a
sudden the choir starts you know it's like, always look on. They start doing it in harmony.
No, they play the record, I'm happy to say.
Oh, unfortunately.
They don't play royalties.
Right.
Funerals don't pay royalties?
They don't.
I think it's wrong, quite wrong.
Well, Eric Idle, it is a huge honor for me especially to talk to you and a pleasure to
have you here.
And we have invited you here to play a game that we're calling...
Spam, spam, spam, spam, and spam.
Now, as I'm sure you know, it was that famous Monty Python spam skit that is responsible
for the fact that unwanted email advertisements
is called spam.
But we wanted to know, even if you knew that, we wanted to know if you knew anything about
spam email.
So we're going to ask you three questions about it.
Answer two right and you will win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone
they might choose for their voicemail.
Bill, who is Eric Idle playing for?
Andy Hill of Boston, Massachusetts.
All right.
You ready for this?
Yes.
All right.
Here's your first question.
The first genuine mass advertisement that people called spam went out to the users of
Usenet, a precursor to the internet, in 1994.
What did it advertise?
A, a then unknown new TV series called Friends,
B, a new canned meat product called Spam Plus, or C, Jesus Christ?
I would say Spam Plus.
Spam Plus. You think that Hormel, the manufacturer of Spam, which by the way has embraced Monty
Python and Spam. Oh, that's not spam oh yeah not them but it could it be friends well that would be an
interesting way of advertising a brand new television show on something called
Usenet yes so that leaves us with Jesus Christ then it does so in many situations
in life all you're left with is Jesus Christ.
Yes, the message was headed, global alert for all, Jesus is coming soon.
And it was sent to the hundreds of thousands of people who were on Usenet at the time.
So not only was it annoying, it was also incorrect.
So far anyway.
So far, yes.
Well, it said soon in 1994, I think we can say, that it was inaccurate.
Wow.
Okay.
Here's your next question.
Now, one of the odd things about spam is while that everybody hates it, and they really hate
the people who send it out, it doesn't make the advertisers themselves a lot of money.
One study showed that you would make more money and suffer less social disapproval
if you did which of these?
A, dined and dashed once a month.
B, played saxophone in a subway car.
Or C, stole a car.
I would say stole a car.
Yes, that's right.
Stealing a car.
People don't like car thieves, it's true, but at least you could sell the car and make
some money.
All right, here's your last question.
One of the most notorious spammers ever was a man named Alan Ralsky, who was actually
convicted of fraud for sending out all those spam emails.
Before that though, he had another punishment.
What?
A, he fell for a spammer himself and ended up
sending all the money he had to a fake prince. B. He typed so many fake emails that his fingers
all broke. Or C. People found his physical address and signed him up for every piece
of junk mail they could find, resulting in him getting thousands and thousands of magazines
and pamphlets every day.
I would say C. You're right again.
Bill, how did Eric Idle do in our quiz?
He woke up on the better side of life because he got all right.
Congratulations, Eric.
Thank you very much.
Eric Idle is one of the founders of MoneyPython. Congratulations, Eric. Thank you very much.
Eric Idle is one of the founders of MoneyPython. He is also the Tony-winning creator of Spamelot
and the author of the new Spamelot Diaries out now.
Eric Idle, an absolute pleasure to talk to you.
Thank you so much for joining us.
I'm Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much.
Take care....
...
...
...
In just a minute, Bill offers you a delicious smoothie
to either drink or rub under your arms.
It's your choice. It's the Listener Limerick Challenge.
Call 1-888-WITWAIT to join us on the air.
We'll be back in a minute with more of Witwait Don't Tell Me
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like Stoney Pond Farm, where Tyler Webb and his family consider the earth, the animals,
and the community in the stewardship of their farm.
This is Electra who's wandered up the lane to say hi. She is very curious.
She's probably the most curious cow that we have.
Every one of those cows all has their own sort of unique
attribute.
They're such peaceful docile creatures, you know, and I say that that's my job is to wake up in this beautiful place every day and wander
around and try to figure out how to make it better. Better for my cows, better
for the land, better for the community, the overall ecology. And it's that stewardship which evolves from that
patient observation, I think.
It's that stewardship which evolves from that patient observation, I think. Discover Organic Valley Dairy at ov.coop slash ethically sourced.
From NPR in WBEZ, Chicago, this is, wait, wait, don't tell me. The NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis, we're playing this week with Nagin Farsad, Eugene Cordero, and Shane
O'Neill.
And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Thank you, Bill.
In just a minute, Bill performs his hit Broadway show Rime a Lot in our listener limber challenge.
If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-888-924-8924.
Right now, a panel of those, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Eugene, President Macron of France has decided to publicly protest somebody who has announced
their intention to leave that country.
Who is it?
Oh, I don't know.
Who's leaving France on purpose?
Well, specifically, they'll be leaving Paris.
Oh, um...
She has to be in Paris because it's right in the title, in Paris.
Oh...
You know this.
Don't you play straight with me, Eugene.
Ha ha ha ha!
Emily? Yes! Yes. Emily in Paris.
Don't you play straight with me.
Emily in Paris is of course the hit Netflix show about a clueless American woman in Paris
that Americans watch because they hate it and French people watch because they hate
Americans.
And the producers announced that for the fifth season, Emily will move to Rome.
And that cannot be.
The French national motto is, liberty, equality, MLA.
And Macron, the president of the country, weighed in.
He told Variety Magazine, quote, Emily in Paris in Rome doesn't make any sense.
And he's right.
I mean, how is she supposed to find the time
with her social schedule to also not learn Italian?
Well, I mean, what are the incentives for Emily to stay?
Is Macron offering bigger hats, more clashing patterns?
These are the things Emily needs to sustain herself.
Did she go through every neat, cute possibility
with Frenchmen that she now has to go to Italian
men?
Is that what's happening?
Yeah, apparently she had gotten down to the Frenchmen who wear pajamas outside.
She had to move on, I guess.
Eugene, nobody likes a person who brags about themselves all the time, trust me.
But sometimes you need to let people know about all the great things you've done.
So how do you do it?
According to experts, the key is while you are bragging, you also need to do what?
Is that like a humble brag?
Sort of.
It's related, but it's a different style of bragging that they say is more successful.
Add a joke?
Yes, be funny.
Very good, Eugene.
Oh, thanks. You ever thought about that?
A team of researchers found that being funny and playful while boasting about your accomplishments
helps you stay likeable as you also convey confidence.
They call this humor bragging.
I think it's also the thing Elon Musk thinks he's doing. Yes. In one
of the studies they did, this was social science ladies and gentlemen, they sent
out a serious resume to a bunch of employers and then they sent out the
same resume with an added joke and that joke was quote the more coffee you can
provide the more output I will produce and And it got 25% more responses.
But of course, they were all just people writing and saying, did you just apply for a job with
a poop joke?
So if you're looking for a job, everybody don't write successfully managed a team of
five to increase sales by 20% or something, right?
What's the deal with the increased sales from that team I manage?
I increased profits in Q4.
Orange or glad I didn't say banana.
Hired.
Hired.
I'm embarrassed, but I used to have in special skills on my resume for the two and a half
minutes that I was trying to be a real person with a job, languages, French, Farsi, Pig,
Latin, or something stupid like that.
And like no one, I mean, maybe that's why I'm now in this fate that I have.
That's true.
By the way, this is important, and this was part of the study.
They tried this.
Self-deprecating humor doesn't work.
Oh, then what are you supposed to do?
Well, it comes across as either insincere or if insincere, you're downplaying your own
achievements.
So don't be like, oh, I won the Nobel Prize for economics, I know gross blah
nerd.
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 including including some Halloween night fun, right
here at the beautiful Studebaker Theater in Chicago. And we'll be back at the Fox Theater
in Detroit on November 14th. For tickets and information, go to nprpresents.org and check
out this week's How to Do Everything podcast featuring, and I kid you not, Sir Patrick
Stewart mooing like a cow. Hi, Aaron. Wait, wait, don't tell me.
Hi, this is Quinn Duffy from Glastonbury,
Connecticut. Glastonbury, Connecticut. What do you do there? I'm a civil engineer. I work
for the state of Connecticut. Oh, really? Oh, I always love talking to civil engineers because
you're one of the few jobs, not having one myself, that I can understand. You build stuff
like bridges and highways, right? Yeah. I did bridges for the majority of my, beginning of my career, and now I do like railroad stations
and rail adjacent facilities.
Wow, you do railroad stations.
You ever stand in front of one and wait for people to compliment it and then just go,
yeah, that's mine.
I did that.
Yeah, they mostly just walk by and on their way.
Oh, it's a shame.
Well, I'm very impressed by what you do.
Welcome to the show, Quinn.
Bill Curtis is going to read you three news related limericks
with the last word or phrase missing from each.
If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly
on two of the limericks, you will be a winner.
You ready to go?
Yes, sir.
All right, here's your first limerick.
As little kids walk down the blocks,
they wear squishy kicks without socks.
As they're pounding the streets, it's deforming their feet. They're unhealthy.
These shoes we call... Crocs?
Crocs, yes. We all love crocs because they're comfortable and great for our feet, which
we are now told they're also destroying. Some podiatrists say that young children should
not wear crocs because they lack arch support, could cause gait issues,
and if your kid's foot grows inside the Croc, it'll look like one of them forever.
Okay, as someone who has been Croc-pilled, I love Crocs.
Are we sure these are deformities and not just the next step of human evolution?
Maybe.
You're a big fan of crocs.
Love crocs.
I resisted for years.
I know how they look.
I know they're terrible, but I'm one of those jerks where just, you know, I saw Balenciaga
do it and I said, what the hell?
And oh my God, there's no going back.
There's no going back.
Thank you.
You're using Kamala's campaign slogan for crocs.
We will not go back.
Here is your next limerick, Quinn.
The smoothies stand down by the ocean front.
It's requests that just might make the honor grunt.
A tangy hint of the spritz that belongs on arm pits.
Make a smoothie that tastes like...
Oh my God, it's a tough one. I was reading along going, this isn't working.
But there are some... Say what? We'll have Bill do it again.
Listen for that rhyme-like thing that's happening.
And there is a hint. Armpits is a hint. Here we go.
The smoothie stand down by the ocean front
gets requests that just might make the owner
grunt.
A tangy hint of the spritz that belongs on armpits make a smoothie that tastes like...
Oh dear God, I have no idea.
There's no way in the world you would ever guess this just logically, which is kind of
why we're featuring it.
I'll give it to you.
It's deodorant.
Deodorant.
Okay.
Yeah, I never would have got that.
Yeah, no, we would have been here all day.
It's all right.
Deodorant.
A fancy LA health food store just announced a new smoothie that tastes like deodorant.
Strong enough for a man, smoothie enough for a woman.
The store is known for its $20 smoothies.
And for this one, they partnered with an upscale deodorant brand called Salt and Stone.
So if you've ever sniffed your own armpit and said, wow, I wish this was edible and had 1500 calories, this is your moment.
Here is your last limerick.
New viruses are an uncouth mush.
That they go in my mouth makes the youth blush.
We have found brand new germs that are making us squirm. In the bathroom, right here on my
Brush? Yes, toothbrush. Yes.
I was gonna say deodorant.
Yeah! I was going to say deodorant.
Scientists at Northwestern University discovered hundreds of different viruses on used toothbrushes
even though they claim that none are harmful to people.
Okay, then why would you even bring this up?
Yes!
This was part of a scientific exploration called, really, Operation Potty Mouth to find microbes that
live around us in daily life.
And it turns out there are uncounted numbers of microbe species in our toothbrushes and
showers and toilets that have never been discovered before.
I mean, I feel like it makes me feel less lonely in the world.
Just to know that there are thousands of new species.
You know, we're never quite alone, you know?
Bill, how did Quinn do on our quiz?
Two out of three. Good for another bridge.
Yay, Quinn!
Congratulations.
Thank you so much. This has been a childhood dream of mine.
I'm so glad.
Thank you, Quinn, for playing.
Bye-bye.
Thank you.
This message comes from Indiana University.
Indiana University is committed to moving the world forward, working to tackle some of society's biggest challenges,
nine campuses, one purpose, creating tomorrow today.
More at iu.edu.
Support for NPR comes from NPR member stations
and Eric and Wendy Schmidt
through the Schmidt Family Foundation,
working toward a healthy, resilient, secure world for all
on the web at the Schmidt.org.
It's a high stakes election year, so it's not enough to just follow along.
You need to understand what's happening so you are fully informed come November.
Every weekday on the NPR Politics Podcast, our political reporters break down important
stories and backstories from the campaign trail, so you understand why it matters to you.
Listen to the NPR Politics podcast
wherever you get your podcasts.
Now onto our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank.
Each of our players will have 60 seconds
in which to answer as many Fill in the Blank questions
as they can.
Each correct answer is worth two points.
Bill, can you give us the scores? Eugene and Nagin each have three and Shane has two. Alright, Eugene and Nagin
are therefore tied for first and Shane is in second place. So Shane, you will be up
first. The clock will start when I begin your first question. Fill in the blank. Asserting
it harms children's mental health, 14 states have filed a suit against social media at
blank. Tic-tac. Right?. This week Jessica Campbell became the first ever female coach in the Blank.
NBA?
No, NHL.
Since entering the presidential race in July, Blank has raised over a billion dollars.
Harris?
Yes.
Transportation campaigners who were trying to keep Cybertrucks out of the Czech Republic
say the cars are, quote, too blank for European roads.
Ugly.
That's right. They say too big and too sharp.
On Tuesday, blank once again raised ticket prices
for their theme parks.
Six Flags?
No.
Disney, it must be.
It was Disney.
Yes.
On Wednesday, Rafael Nadal announced his upcoming
retirement from blank.
Tennis.
Yes.
This week, a staff member at a museum in the Netherlands
had to apologize for throwing away two crushed beer cans
without realizing they were blank.
Installation art.
Yes, they were.
According to the artist, the two empty beer cans that were placed inside a transparent
elevator shaft symbolized, quote, precious moments with my friends, unquote.
So an elevator technician was like, oh, and he picked them up and he threw them out.
Fortunately, they recovered completely unharmed.
And now that engineer has a really great excuse the next time he's sitting around having a
beer.
I'm not drinking in the job, I'm making art.
Bill, how did Shane O'Neill do in our quiz?
Hard to beat.
Six right, 12 more points, 14 is the total and the lead.
All right.
Nagin, I'm going to arbitrarily choose you to go next.
Here we go.
Fill in the blank.
On Monday, a new report showed that in 2020, Donald Trump promised a secret shipment of
COVID-19 testing equipment to blank.
Vladimir Putin.
Who else?
Yes.
On Tuesday, the union representing over 30,000 striking airplane mechanics said that talks
with blank have broken down.
Boeing?
Right. This week, the National Weather Service warned that talks with blank have broken down. Boeing? Right.
This week, the National Weather Service
warned that an intense blank could
disrupt satellite operations.
Solar shower.
Yes.
On Monday, the largest water utility company in the US
said it was the target of a blank attack.
Cyber attack?
Right.
This week, a woman in Washington state
who spent decades feeding raccoons outside her home
called 911 because blank.
They attacked her. Yes, her house was overrun with 100 feeding raccoons outside her home called 911 because blank. They attacked her.
Yes, her house was overrun with 100 hungry raccoons.
Thursday, human rights advocate Ethel Kennedy, the widow of blank, passed away at 96.
Kennedy?
Which one?
There have been a lot.
Like one of the main ones? Laughter
It was Robert Kennedy Senior.
This week a beach clean up crew in Denmark
who posed for photos with what they thought
was a four foot long sea snake
have since learned it was in fact blank.
A toy?
No, a giant attached whale penis.
Laughter
I'm sorry, did you say attached or detached?
I said detached.
Oh, okay.
I was going to say if you didn't see the rest of that whale.
The two men posted the photo before realizing what they were actually holding.
It's an understandable mistake, but it doesn't explain why passengers on that flight from Sydney to Tokyo voted to look at the picture for two hours instead of watching Inside Out 2.
Bill, how did Nagin do in our quiz?
Five right, ten more points, total of 13.
She trails Shane by one.
And how many does Eugene need to win?
Six to win.
Here we go, Eugene, this is for the game.
Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, the U.S. government hinted we go, Eugene. This is for the game. Fill in the blank.
On Tuesday, the U.S. government hinted they may break up Search Giant Blank.
Google.
Right.
This week, the CDC confirmed a fourth case of blank flu in California.
Swine?
No, bird flu.
On Wednesday, sources said that North Koreans were fighting alongside Russians in blank.
In Ukraine.
Right.
This week, police confirmed that a suspicious package left outside a news station in Baltimore
was blank.
A bomb?
Just an old toilet.
On Wednesday, pop star Blank donated $5 million toward hurricane relief efforts.
Oh, that's sweet.
Taylor Swift?
Right.
On Friday, South Korean author Han Kang was awarded the Blank Prize for Literature.
Oh, the Nobel Peace?
Yes.
This week, a court in South Korea ruled that a man couldn't be charged with drunk driving
because he blanked after getting pulled over.
Made it art?
No, chugged an entire bottle of alcohol.
According to the cops who pulled him over, the 60-year-old man got out of the car and
immediately pulled out a bottle of liquor and drank the whole thing.
And this week, a court ruled that because he had drank so much immediately after he was pulled over and was out of the car, any breathalyzer test would be invalid. Pretty smart. Yes. I mean,
how could you know what his blood alcohol level was when he had just swapped out all of his blood for alcohol. Wow.
Writing that down for the future.
Yeah.
Bill, did Eugene do well enough to win?
Shane, no he did not.
Shane is staying.
Just no.
Just no.
Don't even bother giving the score.
Just move on.
Shane is the winner this week.
Congratulations, Shane.
Now, coming up, our panelists will predict now that the blue zones have been is the winner this week. Congratulations, Shane. Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!
Yeah!
Now, coming up, our panelists will predict,
now that the Blue Zones have been debunked,
what will be the next thing to be revealed as a hoax?
But first, let me tell you.
Wait, wait, don't tell me.
The production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago,
in association with Urgent Haircut Productions,
Doug Berman, Benevolent Overlord.
Philip Kotica writes our limericks.
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman.
Our tour manager is Shane and Donald. Thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker
Theater. 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. This week,
Peter Gwynn escaped! Look out! Emma Choi is our vibe curator, technical directionist from Lorna
White, our CFO is Colin Miller, our production manager is Robert Newhouse, our senior producer, that's Ian Chilag,
and the executive producer, wait, wait, don't tell me,
is Michael Danforth.
Now panel, what would be the next big hoax to be revealed?
Eugene Cordero.
That your only fan account that you follow,
that that person actually does like you.
Nguyen Farsad.
The commonly held belief that if you step on a crack, you'll break your mother's back
is in fact untrue.
You can step on multiple cracks.
And Shane O'Neill.
Tim Walz is actually a bachelor from Mississippi.
Well, if any of that happens, we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Thank you so much, Bill Curtis.
Thanks to Eugene Cordero, Nguyen Farsad, Shane O'Neill.
Thanks to our fabulous audience here
at the Studebicker Theater in downtown Chicago.
And thanks to all of you out there for listening.
Wherever you are, I am Peter Sagal.
We'll see you next week.
["The Last Supper"]
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All this month, the Throughline Podcast is asking big questions about our democracy and
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Listen now to the Throughline Podcast from NPR.
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Hosted by Joel Kim Booster, Bad Dates dives into downright iconic bad date stories.
Whether you're laughing, cringing, or even tearing up, you'll definitely feel a bit better about your own dating disasters.
Listen to Bad Dates wherever you get podcasts.