WWDTM: Bridget Everett and Jeff Hiller
Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices
NPR Privacy Policy
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1 This message comes from NPR sponsor Patagonia. As environmental progress stalls, Patagonia believes it's on businesses to step up.
Speaker 1 The company knows it isn't perfect, but it's proving businesses can make a profit without bankrupting the planet. Explore more at patagonia.com/slash impact.
Speaker 2 From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR news quiz. I'm Tim Meadows making the best of a weather delay at O'Hare by filling in for Bill Curtis.
Speaker 2 And here's your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sago.
Speaker 2 Thank you, everybody.
Speaker 1 Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 Later on, we're going to be talking to Bridget Everett and Jeff Hiller, the stars of the HBO show Somebody Somewhere.
Speaker 1 But first, I got to say what a thrill it is to be standing right next to legendary comedian and actor Tim Meadows. It's such a thrill to have you here.
Speaker 3 So, you know. Thank you.
Speaker 1 Big thrill for me, Tim. How does it feel for you to take on this job?
Speaker 2 I got to say, after years of working next to some of the absolute greats, it's really exciting to try something different.
Speaker 1
If you'd like to enjoy your debut on our show, just give us a call. The number is 188-WATWAIT.
That's 1-888-924-8924. Let's welcome our first listener contestant.
Speaker 1 Hi, you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Speaker 3 Hi. Hi, who's this?
Speaker 1 This is Daniel. Hey, Daniel, where are you calling from?
Speaker 4 I'm calling from Austin, Texas.
Speaker 1 Austin, Texas.
Speaker 1 We were just talking, ironically, a moment ago before the show about Austin, Texas, which a place many of us have been and all of us love. And I actually have a question for you that came up.
Speaker 1 Have, in fact, you been able to keep Austin weird?
Speaker 3 I guess. You guess?
Speaker 3
Doesn't sound very convincing. Yeah, I don't know, man.
That's how I feel about it. Well, well, that was a weird answer.
Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 1 Well, Daniel, let me introduce you to our panel this week.
Speaker 1
First, you can see him at the Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas on December 21st and 22nd, and then at the La Jolla Comedy Store on December 27th through the 29th. It's Moz Joe Bronny.
Hey.
Speaker 1 Next, a comedian you can see New Year's Eve at the Burlington Comedy Store in Burlington, Vermont. It's Joyelle Nicole Johnson.
Speaker 3 Hey, Danny Boy, how you doing?
Speaker 3 Fine. Hi.
Speaker 1 And a comedian who has a new Netflix special called Home Free. It's Tom Papa.
Speaker 3 Hello.
Speaker 3 Hello.
Speaker 1 So welcome to the show, Daniel. You are going to play the very first edition ever of Who's Tim this time.
Speaker 1 Tim Meadows filling in for 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.
Speaker 1 Any voice from our show you may choose on your voicemail. Are you ready to go?
Speaker 5 Absolutely.
Speaker 1 Okay, here is your first quote.
Speaker 2 If you can spill it, spread it, pump it, or pour it, it should go in a check bag.
Speaker 1 That was advice from the TSA for all the people who'll be traveling next week with food for what?
Speaker 1 Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving, that's right.
Speaker 1 The TSA expects this to be the busiest Thanksgiving travel period on record as millions of Americans will journey back home looking for someone to fight with.
Speaker 1
And the general rule is, as you heard Tim say, solids can go in your carry-on onto the plane. Liquids have to be checked in luggage.
This is for safety.
Speaker 1 When the soup in your checked bag leaks, it can help put out the fire when the lithium battery in there explodes.
Speaker 1 Are you guys going to be traveling?
Speaker 3 No.
Speaker 1 Absolutely not.
Speaker 3 No, I mean,
Speaker 7 is it the point to go to someone's house and they've made it and or bring something from the same city or state?
Speaker 3 Who's flying
Speaker 1 with
Speaker 6 gravy?
Speaker 1 who's doing that? It is weird.
Speaker 1 It is a little strange to be flying to Thanksgiving dinner with food. I mean, like, first of all, why are you flying anywhere if you also have to cook?
Speaker 1 My rule is: if I'm putting on an apron, you're getting on a plane, right?
Speaker 5 It is tricky, because you get caught in these traditions. You have to go to the same place year after year, and sometimes they don't make great gravy or other things.
Speaker 5
So, you got to come up with sneaky ways to get yours in there. That Ziploc bag in your pocket full of gravy, good way to do it.
Yeah.
Speaker 7 That sounds like
Speaker 6 the uncle who sneaks in some alcohol in a little flask.
Speaker 7 You got a flask of gravy?
Speaker 3 What's he doing? Yeah, I get a little Ziploc thing of gravy.
Speaker 5 I'm like, don't tell your mother.
Speaker 8 Yeah, and everyone in my family knows I do not cook, so they say, you bring the alcohol, baby.
Speaker 7 My family is mixed. Like, I'm Iranian, my wife's Indian, so we have Persian food and we have Indian food.
Speaker 6 Right.
Speaker 7 And nobody touches the the turkey.
Speaker 1 Do you actually have a turkey giving all that?
Speaker 9 Turkey there, you walk by, he goes, gobble, gobble. We're like, screw you, we got food, man.
Speaker 3 We got 2,000 years of cuisine.
Speaker 1 I was about to say the turkey's still alive, but if you're not going to eat him, why not? Let them live.
Speaker 1 It's also, I should say, because of these rules, it's a great time to be a smuggler because if they find drugs in your body cavity search, you can just say it's stuffing.
Speaker 3 It's cartel stuffing.
Speaker 1 All right, Daniel, here is your next quote. It is from Rolling Stone.
Speaker 2 There's been a Dev Patel contest in San Francisco, a Jack Sloshberg meetup in Central Park, a Paul Mescal hangout in Dublin, a Harry Stiles party in London.
Speaker 1
So Rolling Stone was talking about this latest popular contest craze that's spreading around the world. What kind of contest specifically? Sounds like look-alikes.
Exactly right. Look-alike contests.
Speaker 1 The hottest new pastime pastime is celebrity look-alike contests. So recently we had a Timothy Chalamet look-alike contest in New York, a Jeremy Allen White contest in Chicago.
Speaker 1
People are just flocking to these things. Is it surprising? I don't know.
People come running when they heard there's a park where a bunch of guys who look like Glenn Powell are hanging out.
Speaker 1
We're hot. So this all happens.
It all started just a month ago.
Speaker 1 when some guy, for just joke, I guess, threw a Timothy Chalamet contest, broad daylight, Washington Square Park, New York City, and a lot of people showed up who looked a lot like Timothy Chalamet.
Speaker 1 And Timothy Chalamet showed up, which was pretty cool. And that made in the news.
Speaker 1 That led to Jeremy Allen White contests here in Chicago and New York and ones for Dev Patel and Harry Styles in London, as you heard.
Speaker 1 But all those fans were disappointed because just Timothy Chalamet showed up for those two.
Speaker 8
So Timothy famously grew up in the Health Kitchen building in New York. So I was there last year for a dinner and I'm coming out.
My friend was like, Timothy Shalomy grew up in this building.
Speaker 8 And I was like, isn't it Timothy?
Speaker 8 And I get out the elevator. I'm like shouting, Timothy, Timothy.
Speaker 8 And then he walked past me.
Speaker 3 What?
Speaker 8 And he like pulled down his hat because just some crazy woman is shouting his name in the lobby.
Speaker 1 Wait a minute, wait a minute. Did you shout it three times? I absolutely did.
Speaker 3
So that did conjure him. It did.
It did.
Speaker 9 I'm confused.
Speaker 7 Is he still living there or he just walks around the building now?
Speaker 8 He's waiting for somebody to recognize him.
Speaker 1 One of the side benefits of all these contests is it's amazing to see specifically what men think they look like.
Speaker 3
No, sir. No, sir.
I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 You don't look like Jeremy Allen White from DeBear.
Speaker 1 You just smoke cigarettes and your t-shirt is too small.
Speaker 5 This is very generational though, you know, like older celebrities, this isn't going to happen.
Speaker 5 Old people don't want to come out. Even if they look exactly like Jack Klugman, they're not coming out.
Speaker 1 Here, Daniel, is your last quote.
Speaker 2 California King not big enough for you? Meet the Alaska King.
Speaker 1 That was a headline of the Washington Post about the new trend of people wanting bigger and bigger what?
Speaker 1
Beds. Yes, beds.
Very good.
Speaker 1 The Alaska King mattresses are really something at nine feet by nine feet. They're great for anyone who loves losing their wife.
Speaker 1 The bed is equivalent of, quote, two full-size beds jammed together, then you add 28 inches of length.
Speaker 1 It's fun in a way that you could discover your spouse is cheating on you while you're in the same bed.
Speaker 1 And you catch them, and they feel terrible, and they're like, oh, sorry, we didn't think you could see us, what with the curvature of the earth?
Speaker 5 We've gone way too far.
Speaker 3 It's so
Speaker 5
gross. My grandparents slept in a one full-size bed.
It was just a little bit larger than a twin. And these were not small people.
Speaker 7 No.
Speaker 5 And they slept in that bed for 50 years together, every single night. And let me be clear.
Speaker 3 They hated each other.
Speaker 7 And their grandparents slept in a drawer together.
Speaker 3 Yeah. And they despised each other.
Speaker 1 Is it possible, Tom, that the reason they hated each other was because they had to fight for space in a tiny bed together?
Speaker 3 They were.
Speaker 1 Maybe if you get one of these Alaska Kings, you don't see your spouse for so long, you begin to miss them.
Speaker 5 I lose my AirPods on my bed five times a week. The idea of getting a bigger bed, unless they increase the size of the AirPods, I'm not getting it.
Speaker 1 Alaska King AirPods.
Speaker 1 Tim, how did Daniel do on our quiz?
Speaker 2 Wow, I'm keeping score and announcing.
Speaker 1 That's a lot of work, Okay.
Speaker 2
But Daniel, Daniel did really well. He got all three questions correct.
There you go.
Speaker 1 Congratulations, Daniel.
Speaker 3
Thanks for calling. Thank you.
Take care.
Speaker 1 Right now, panel, time for you to answer some questions about this week's news.
Speaker 1 Tom, a man was stopped from boarding a flight in Lima, Peru last week when it was discovered that it's not that he had a pot belly, he had what?
Speaker 5 A belly filled with pot.
Speaker 1 No, not filled with pot.
Speaker 5 Oh, he had a
Speaker 5 baby there.
Speaker 1 Not quite a baby.
Speaker 1 He wasn't kidding when he said he had a stomach bug.
Speaker 3 Ew.
Speaker 5 Oh, geez.
Speaker 3 A bunch of diarrhea?
Speaker 3 What?
Speaker 1 I said stomach bug.
Speaker 6 And I said diarrhea.
Speaker 3 I know.
Speaker 3 Bed bugs?
Speaker 1
I'll give it to you. Insects.
Hundreds of tarantulas, centipedes, and bullet ants.
Speaker 3 What? What? Who? Where? What flight?
Speaker 1 Airport security were suspicious of a man with a, quote, extraordinarily swollen belly, so they give him a pat down and discovered he had bags of 450 insects taped to his abdomen.
Speaker 5
That's so gross. It's so gross.
that I was more comfortable with my first answer of diarrhea.
Speaker 1 So the man, when they sort of got everything out of the bags and examined it, he he had 320 endangered tarantulas, 110 rare centipedes, and nine bullet ants.
Speaker 3 Bullet ants. Just a Ziploc bag? Yeah, pretty much.
Speaker 5 So let me get this straight, just because I'm flying tomorrow. No tarantulas, bullet ants, or gravy.
Speaker 3 Right.
Speaker 3 I like bugs with 16 legs and bugs with lots of eyes.
Speaker 3 I like spiders that crawl on the floor and eat up all the flies.
Speaker 1 Coming up, we grant your special requests in our bluff the listener game called 188-WaitWait2Play. We'll be back in a minute with more at WaitWait, Don't Tell Me from NPR.
Speaker 1 This message comes from NPR sponsor Patagonia. As environmental progress stalls, Patagonia believes it's on businesses to step up.
Speaker 1 The company knows it isn't perfect, but it's proving businesses can make a profit without bankrupting the planet.
Speaker 1 Out now is Patagonia's 2025 Work in Progress report, a behind-the-scenes look into its impact initiatives from quitting forever chemicals and decarbonizing its supply chain to embracing fair trade.
Speaker 1 Explore more at patagonia.com/slash impact.
Speaker 10 This message comes from NPR sponsor CNN. Stream Anthony Bourdain, Parts Unknown, Prime Cuts Now, exclusively on the CNN app.
Speaker 10 These rarely seen, never-before-streamed episodes dig deep into the Parts Unknown archives with personal insights from Anthony Bourdain and rare behind-the-scenes interviews about each season.
Speaker 10
Anthony Bourdain, Parts Unknown, Prime Cuts, now streaming exclusively on the CNN app. Subscribe now at cnn.com/slash all access.
Available in the U.S. only.
Speaker 1 Support for this podcast and the following message come from Dignity Memorial. For many families, remembering loved ones means honoring the details that made them unique.
Speaker 1 Dignity Memorial is dedicated to professionalism and compassion in every detail of a life celebration. Find a provider near you at dignitymemorial.com.
Speaker 2
From NPR in WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Tim Meadows.
We're playing this week with Joel Nicole Johnson, Tom Papa, and Maz Gibrani.
Speaker 2 And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Speaker 3 Thank you, Tim.
Speaker 1 Right now it's time for the WaitWait Don't Tell Me bluff the listener game call 188 WaitWait to play our game in the air or check out the pinned post on our Instagram page at WaitWaitNPR.
Speaker 1 How are you on WaitWait Don't Tell Me?
Speaker 4 Hi, this is Camille from Baltimore, Maryland.
Speaker 1 Hey, how are things in Baltimore, the Queen City? I love it there.
Speaker 3 Things are great in Baltimore.
Speaker 1 Yeah, that's good. What do you do there?
Speaker 3 Ooh, I love to go see concerts.
Speaker 4 I like to cook and
Speaker 10 be anywhere near or on the water.
Speaker 1 And you can do that, there being a lot of water available in Baltimore.
Speaker 3 Exactly, exactly.
Speaker 1
Well, welcome to the show, Camille. You're going to play the game in which you have to tell truth from fiction.
Tim, what is Camille's topic?
Speaker 2 No brown M ⁇ Ms.
Speaker 1 So we all love hearing about those fun tour riders, whether it's Van Halen's No Brown M ⁇ Ms or Tim Meadows' Peter Sagle, Do Not Look Me in the Eye.
Speaker 1
This week we heard about a VIP who made a very unusual demand. Our panelists are going to tell you about it.
Pick the real one and you'll win the weight waiter of your choice in your voicemail.
Speaker 1 You ready to play?
Speaker 3 I'm so ready.
Speaker 3 Okay, well, so are we.
Speaker 1 First, let's hear from Tom Papa.
Speaker 5 While some may think that the demands of rock stars can be extravagant, a famous Italian opera singer may put them all to shame.
Speaker 5 The legendary alto Josephine Giulio credits her longevity to creating a tropical backstage environment that keeps her voice in shape and theater staff pulling out their hair.
Speaker 5 The dressing rooms must be kept at 85% humidity, generated by plants, misting machines, and 12 heavy-breathing howler monkeys from the Peruvian rainforest.
Speaker 5 Two hours before showtime, anyone over five feet two inches tall has to leave the backstage area so as not to directly inhale any of Josephine's perfect air.
Speaker 5 The monkeys, who average three feet in height, are welcome to stay.
Speaker 5 Finally, after her vocal warm-ups in this perfectly tropical air, Josephine's private chef caps things off by serving her red wine and meatballs because after all, she is an Italian diva.
Speaker 1 An Italian diva in her
Speaker 1 contract demands a tropical environment complete with monkeys backstage. Your next story of ridiculous requests comes from Joyelle Nicole Johnson.
Speaker 8 Most couples bond over things they adore, but Amar Rahman and Melody Merchant bonded over unadulterated hate.
Speaker 8 It was their second date that one of Forbes Pakistan's richest couples discovered they hated other people's mouths. He asked me out to a restaurant and I confessed my disgust.
Speaker 8 Thinking the relationship would be over then and there, Merchant was amazed to find that her new beau shared the same idiosyncrasy.
Speaker 8 Anything mouth-based is off the table, which is a lot more stuff than you think.
Speaker 8
So they do what any other rich couple would do. They throw money at the problem.
They've hired a bodyguard whose sole job it is to get all mouths away from them.
Speaker 8 Whenever they go out, all mouths must stay closed. While they both know this behavior is ridiculous, when asked if they would ever seek therapy, Merchant bluntly stated, Why?
Speaker 8 I have money, my man, and a bodyguard. When you have those things, you do what you want.
Speaker 1 A very wealthy couple
Speaker 1 insists that they never see the mouths of anyone ever around them.
Speaker 1 Your last story of a peculiar plea comes from Maz Jobrani.
Speaker 7 Slipping on a banana peel might be funny to you, but to Sweden's gender equality minister, Paulina Brandberg, it is terrifying. Why? Because she is afraid of bananas.
Speaker 7 In fact, she is so afraid that her staff has to, quote, banana-proof any areas she might be present in so that she doesn't have to face her banana phobia.
Speaker 7 Who knows what causes this banana phobia in Minister Paulina?
Speaker 6 Now, I don't want to make any assumptions, but maybe as a child, she had a pet monkey, and that monkey's name was Bjorn, who doesn't go,
Speaker 7 but has a Swedish accent, goes, whoo, hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo.
Speaker 7
And maybe the monkey went bananas. Seriously, it's a medical term for when monkeys eat too many bananas.
And maybe to this day, whenever Paulina sees a banana, it reminds her of baby Bjorn.
Speaker 7 And the feeling she gets can best be summarized by the 80s pop band Banana Rama.
Speaker 6
It's a cruel, cruel summer, leaving me here on my own. It's a cruel, cruel summer.
Now you're gone.
Speaker 3 You're not the only one.
Speaker 3 All right.
Speaker 1 So this week we heard about someone who has an odd demand for pretty much when they leave the house. Was it?
Speaker 1 From Tom Papa, an opera singer, an Italian woman who demands an absolutely tropical jungle-like environment in her dressing room to preserve her voice.
Speaker 1 From Joyelle Nicole Johnson, a wealthy couple from Pakistan, who insists that whenever they go out, no one ever display their oral cavity.
Speaker 1 Or from Maz Giobrani, a Swedish government minister who is so terrified of bananas that her own staff has to make sure that none will appear wherever she goes.
Speaker 1 Which of these is the real story of an unusual condition?
Speaker 3 I'm going to go with the Prime Minister Afraid of Bananas.
Speaker 1 I'm going to go with the Swedish minister afraid of bananas. That was from Maz Gilbrani.
Speaker 1 Well, to bring you the correct answer, we spoke to an expert on this area.
Speaker 12 What's probably happened is that this person had a banana, saw a banana, ate a banana during some negative experience.
Speaker 1 That was Professor Mark Sheffield, a neurobiologist at the University of Chicago, talking about the possible origins of the bananophobia suffered by the Norwegian minister.
Speaker 1 Congratulations, you got it right.
Speaker 3 Thank you.
Speaker 1 Picked Maz's story, he was telling the truth. That means he gets a point, but more to the point, you win our prize, the voice of anyone you might choose.
Speaker 3 Thank you very much.
Speaker 1 Thank you.
Speaker 3 Take care.
Speaker 1
And now the game where we ask famous people about obscure things. It's called Not My Job.
HBO's Somebody Somewhere is not like their other shows.
Speaker 1 There are no dragons or gangsters or billionaires, just a bunch of normal people trying to get by in Manhattan, Kansas.
Speaker 1 And it's become immensely popular because won't it be so cool when a dragon finally does show up?
Speaker 1 The two stars of the show, Bridget Everett and Jeff Hiller, join us now. Bridget and Jeff, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Speaker 1 Thank you.
Speaker 1 So let's start here. I just started watching the show and I devoured a season or so and I've been trying to explain what it is and why it's so popular.
Speaker 14 Well, I mean, it's not getting those House of Dragons nights.
Speaker 12 You know, it's like so popular.
Speaker 14
I don't know, you know, it's a slice of life. It's about friendship.
It's,
Speaker 14 you know, it's about making each other, lifting each other up. And,
Speaker 14 you know, we're not afraid of a fart joke.
Speaker 3 You know, I can say that on NPR. I don't know.
Speaker 6 Our show is all fart jokes.
Speaker 3 Really, I know.
Speaker 1 You and I have the same formula.
Speaker 1 Bridget, since you are from Manhattan, Kansas, and it is a show set in Manhattan, Kansas, about a woman from Manhattan, Kansas, I'm assuming that everything we see in the show actually happened, right?
Speaker 14 Oh, yeah, pretty much.
Speaker 10 Give me take six. Wait, I was going to...
Speaker 14
I can't talk like this. I was going to say something naughty.
I'm going to leave.
Speaker 1 And Jeff, I'm told that your character that you play is awfully close to your real life experience. Is that the case?
Speaker 12 Yeah, we both love Vitamixes and we're both middle-aged homosexuals with asymmetrical faces. That's true.
Speaker 12 It was meant to be, Peter. It was meant to be.
Speaker 1 Right, right, right.
Speaker 1 And I know, Bridget, there are a lot of your friends from the New York scene in the show, including your own dog.
Speaker 14 Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 14 In season three, there's a dog. She's a beautiful
Speaker 14 Pomeranian who plays a rescue dog, and she's actually a rescue in real life. Thank you so much.
Speaker 3 You are an angel.
Speaker 1 Is she there with you now in your home where we find you?
Speaker 14 Yeah, she's, I gave her a little sleeping assistance in the other room.
Speaker 3 I understand.
Speaker 3 She wouldn't bother.
Speaker 1 Perhaps a big bottle of Chardonnay.
Speaker 3 That's right.
Speaker 1 Was this whole show just a plot to get your dog into the union?
Speaker 1 It occurs to me, Bridget, that I don't know of any other major piece of entertainment set in Manhattan, Kansas, so you must be like a queen there because you have done for Manhattan, Kansas, what say Game of Thrones did for King's Landing.
Speaker 1 You put it on the map.
Speaker 3 That's right.
Speaker 14 You know, they actually did a Bridget Everett day for me a couple years ago.
Speaker 14 So if anybody ever wants to go to Manhattan, Kansas, I think it's March 5th every year, they make a little Bridget Everett donut and a Bridget Everett beer.
Speaker 3 Wait a minute, it's not just, wait a minute, hold on.
Speaker 1
I mean, it's not just like they had a day for you when you showed up. There is an actual day on the calendar every year.
The kids get off school. Oh, what are you doing for Bridget Everett Day?
Speaker 14
That's right. As a great L.L.
Coolj says, dreams don't have deadlines.
Speaker 3 So that's amazing.
Speaker 3 So
Speaker 1 this is the third and last season of Somebody Somewhere, which is sad, but I think four episodes are out now.
Speaker 1 I did want to ask you this, though, because the show is, the characters characters you play are broadly similar to you. They have similar styles maybe in similar backgrounds.
Speaker 1 Would you both love to play someone next or soon who is nothing like you and if so what kind of character would that be?
Speaker 14 I'm waiting for the train wreck spin-off for me and Tim Meadows to do like a rom-com that gets a little freaky at the taco bar.
Speaker 3 I don't know.
Speaker 1 How about you, Jeff? Do you have any idea like if I could if you said oh my god somebody somewhere what a huge hit you can write your own ticket You can play anything you want. What do you want to do?
Speaker 12 Well, I've been playing a lot of serial killers lately.
Speaker 12 And that's nice to be someone who you know.
Speaker 3 Exactly.
Speaker 1 I thought for a second you were kidding, but are you not kidding? Have you been playing a lot of serial killers?
Speaker 12 I have been playing a lot of serial killers.
Speaker 1 I imagine that's kind of a mixed blessing because you get steady work, right? Serial killer is always popular.
Speaker 1 But at the same time, what is it about you, you think, that makes them think, hmm, serial killer, psychopath, sex criminal.
Speaker 12 You know, I just got a face for murder.
Speaker 3 Thank you.
Speaker 12 You give me precious back. You give me precious.
Speaker 3 That's my son.
Speaker 1 Oh, all of a sudden, I have a premonition of what the big surprise climax of somebody somewhere is going to be.
Speaker 1 Well, Bridget Everett and Jeff Hiller, this is really fun. And we
Speaker 1 have asked you here to play a game that this time we're calling Nobody Nowhere. So obviously, since your show was called Somebody Somewhere, we thought we'd ask you about Nobody Nowhere.
Speaker 1 That is three questions about places where it's hard to find anybody. Tim, who are Bridget and Jeff playing for?
Speaker 2 Jack Powers of Las Vegas, Nevada.
Speaker 3 Okay.
Speaker 1
Come on, you guys, as we do this, you're allowed to argue. You're allowed to team up.
You're allowed to play this however you want. Here Here we go, here's your first question.
Speaker 1 The loneliest and most desolate place on Earth is Antarctica, an entire continent whose population never exceeds about 5,000 people.
Speaker 1 Despite that, one scientist who was there in December of 2013 managed to do what?
Speaker 1 A, convince the band Cold Play to come there and do a show,
Speaker 1
naturally. B, match with someone on Tinder.
Or C, organize the first ever Freezing Man Festival.
Speaker 10 I think it's C.
Speaker 12 I do too. I think it's C.
Speaker 3 I'm thinking of you.
Speaker 3 Wait a minute. So you're saying
Speaker 1 Freezing Man Festival.
Speaker 1 The audience is objective.
Speaker 3 Wow.
Speaker 1
I was going to pull the trigger, but the audience is shouting no, no, no. Audience, what do you think it is? They always know.
They think it's B.
Speaker 12 They think it's B. Okay, let's do B then.
Speaker 13
We got to do it, Bridget. They always know.
They always know.
Speaker 15 Okay, let's go B.
Speaker 1 They don't always know, but they did this time.
Speaker 1 A scientist was sitting there and he's like, what the hell? And he turned on Tinder and he swiped right on this woman who was camping on the ice about 45 minutes away by helicopter.
Speaker 1 And they did meet up, but they say nothing came of it that time. So
Speaker 1 as far as we know,
Speaker 1 the first Tinder hookup
Speaker 1 has not happened yet on Antarctica.
Speaker 12 What a pit's ending to a great story.
Speaker 3 I'm so sorry.
Speaker 3 All right,
Speaker 1
here's your next question. Now, the loneliest place that anybody has ever been that we know of is the moon.
Only 12 people have ever visited the moon.
Speaker 1 Now, the first astronaut to do it, after Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, was Pete Conrad. What were Pete Conrad's first words after stepping off the lunar lander onto the surface of the moon?
Speaker 1 Was it A, one small step for a man, one giant step for mankind? Suck it, Neil.
Speaker 1 B so where can I get a drink around here that's not recycled urine?
Speaker 1 Or C, whoopie!
Speaker 1 You're messing with us, right?
Speaker 3 Right.
Speaker 1 This guy sounds like an I kind of am, but one of them is real. When he said one of those things as he stepped in the face, he's wild.
Speaker 12 I love him.
Speaker 15 I love like TT.
Speaker 15 I think it's the TT. He drinks the TT, the TT one.
Speaker 6 The TT one?
Speaker 12 I don't know. I feel like it's whoopee.
Speaker 12 It's It's definitely not the first one because people don't say sucked it in the 70s.
Speaker 1 So you're going to go with two different answers. Bridget, you're going to take the recycled urine and Jeff, whoopee.
Speaker 12 Yeah, we're diverging in two different woods.
Speaker 1 Jeff is the winner. Jeff is correct.
Speaker 3 Whoopee!
Speaker 1
All right, Jeff has already won. He got two right.
Let's see if Bridget can catch up. Your last question.
Speaker 3 In 1993.
Speaker 14 I went to Arizona State.
Speaker 8 Give me a break.
Speaker 12 Bridget, I went to Texas Lutheran College. I think we're on the same plane.
Speaker 1 In a famous incident in 1993, a French man's car broke down far out in the Moroccan desert.
Speaker 1 And he was so far out there was no way for him to get back. So to save his own life, he stripped down the car and he built a motorcycle from the parts and drove it back to civilization.
Speaker 1 And when he got there, what happened? A, his wife said, oh, were you gone?
Speaker 1 B, he was ticketed for riding an illegal vehicle. Or C, at the celebration of his miraculous return, he died when a popped champagne cork punctured his head.
Speaker 14 Oh, that's not C, but it's got to be C.
Speaker 12
I can't die from that. That's a fun answer.
That's a fun answer.
Speaker 7 Come on, you got to do better.
Speaker 14 So you can die from that, and I'm willing to give it a shot.
Speaker 1 All right, Bridget wants to go with he died ironically from the popped champagne cork. What do you think, Jeff?
Speaker 12 I think it's the ticket. You think he got a ticket? It's the ticket.
Speaker 1 Once again, Jeff is correct.
Speaker 1 So, Tim, how did Bridget and Jeff do on our quiz?
Speaker 2 Jeff got all three questions correct.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1
It's a record. It's a record.
It's never happened before.
Speaker 1
Bridget Everett and Jeff Hiller are stars of Somebody Somewhere on HBO and Max. Season 3 is out now.
Catch it. It is remarkable and heartwarming and funny.
Speaker 1 And every now and then, Bridget says something very dirty. Bridget and Jeff, thank you so much for joining us on Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me.
Speaker 3 Awesome to have you.
Speaker 1 In just a minute, a wine that could make a sommelier rethink every single one of their life choices in our listener limerick challenge game. Call 188-WaitWait to join us in the air.
Speaker 1 We'll be back in a minute with more WaitWait, don't tell me from NPR.
Speaker 1
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Mint Mobile. At Mint Mobile, their favorite word is no.
No contracts, no monthly bills, no hidden fees. Plans start at $15 a month.
Speaker 1
Make the switch at mintmobile.com slash wait. That's mintmobile.com slash wait.
Upfront payment of $45 required equivalent to $15 a month. Limited time new customer offer for first three months only.
Speaker 1 Speeds may slow above 35 gigabytes on unlimited plan. Taxes and fees extra, see Mint Mobile for details.
Speaker 11
This message comes from Schwab. Everyone has moments when they could have done better, like cutting their own hair.
or forgetting sunscreen, so now you look like a tomato.
Speaker 11
Same goes for where you invest. Level up and invest smarter with Schwab.
Get market insights, education, and human help when you need it. Learn more at schwab.com.
Speaker 11 This message comes from NPR sponsor eBay, who is home to millions of parts for your next project and free returns. If it doesn't fit or it isn't what you expected, eBay has your back.
Speaker 11
Eligible items only. Exclusions apply.
eBay, things people love.
Speaker 2
From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Tim Meadows, filling in for Bill Curtis.
Thank you.
Speaker 2 We're playing this week with Tom Papa, Maz Gibrani, and Joelle Nicole Johnson.
Speaker 2 And here again is your host at the Scude Baker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sagal.
Speaker 3 Yes, thank you.
Speaker 1 Tim, thanks everybody. In just a minute, Tim Meadows Meadows brings you our first ever listener Timerick challenge.
Speaker 3 Oh,
Speaker 1
if you'd like to play, give us a call at 188-WATEWAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924.
But right now, panel, some more questions for you from the week's news.
Speaker 1 Tom, this week a high tribunal in Britain ruled that calling someone what is a form of illegal harassment.
Speaker 2 Calling someone
Speaker 1 an American?
Speaker 3 No.
Speaker 1 That may be coming.
Speaker 5 Can I have a hint?
Speaker 1 Sure. Finally, Some male pattern justice.
Speaker 3
Oh, calling him bald? Yes. Finally.
Yes.
Speaker 3
Yes. Yes.
Yes. Yes.
Yes.
Speaker 3 Yes. Yes.
Speaker 3 No, I'm not.
Speaker 1 So, yes, according to a court in Great Britain, bald is now
Speaker 1 a formal offense. A man named Tony Finn, a longtime employee of the British bung company,
Speaker 1 sued after his supervisor called him a, quote, stupid, bald C word.
Speaker 1 And to be clear, being called a C word, he's fine with it.
Speaker 1 Totally fine. But bald was going too far.
Speaker 3 He sued,
Speaker 1 and this week a high tribunal ruled that using bald as an insult is sexual harassment because
Speaker 1 Only men tend to be bald. So again, all this is true.
Speaker 1 All three members of the tribunal that made this ruling were themselves bald.
Speaker 1 Oh, they stacked the court.
Speaker 1 Why else do you think they all wear those wigs in red?
Speaker 5 What if they flip it, though, and you have to start wearing a brassier on your head and cover it up? If this is a big sexual problem,
Speaker 6 I don't want you flaunting it around the office.
Speaker 3 Wrap that thing up.
Speaker 5 You take off your hat, you're like, they go, you're flashing me. You're like, officer, my eyes are down here.
Speaker 1 Moz, last week a group of fishermen working in their boat off the coast of Norway must have celebrated when they caught what in their net?
Speaker 7 They celebrated when they caught, was it something valuable?
Speaker 1 Oh, very valuable and very large.
Speaker 3 Ooh, ooh, ooh.
Speaker 3 Gold?
Speaker 1 No.
Speaker 3 Give me a hand, give me a hand.
Speaker 1 Give me a hand. According to the fishing regulations, they got to keep it, but they have to throw the missiles back because they're over the allowed size.
Speaker 7 Oh, gosh. It was
Speaker 7 a nuclear thing?
Speaker 3 Like a
Speaker 3 submarine?
Speaker 1 A nuclear submarine, yes.
Speaker 1 Specifically, they caught the USS Virginia, a 19,000-ton nuclear-powered attack submarine armed with cruise missiles.
Speaker 1 Although, of course, when they got back, the fishermen said it was really a 50,000-ton sub armed with ICBMs.
Speaker 1 The small fishing boat, right, lowered their net, looking for one more haul before heading back into port, and all of a sudden they found themselves being towed very fast out to sea, right?
Speaker 1 While down in the submarine, they were all asking each other, have we been down here too long, or am I really hearing the distant sounds of screaming in Norwegian?
Speaker 7 You know your military is not good when a net catches you.
Speaker 3 That's right.
Speaker 3
Right. Yes.
Hold on, Captain, there's a worm worm on a hook over there.
Speaker 3 Let's go investigate.
Speaker 1 From now on, all the submarines in the Sixth Fleet are going to be equipped with scissors.
Speaker 1 Coming up, it's Lightning Fill 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 188-WATEWATE.
Speaker 1 That's 1-888-924-8924. You can also see us most weeks at the Studio Baker Theater right here in Chicago, Illinois.
Speaker 3 They love it. You will too.
Speaker 1 And come see us on the road at Carnegie Hall in New York City on December 12th, tickets at nprpresents.org. Also check out our sister podcast, How to Do Everything This Week, How to Handle It.
Speaker 1
If your cousin comes to Thanksgiving dressed as a furry. Hi, I'm on.
Wait, wait, don't tell me.
Speaker 4 Hi, this is Kristen calling from Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Speaker 1
Virginia Beach, Virginia. I've been there.
It's in Virginia. What do you do there?
Speaker 4 Well, I'm a hairstylist and I am an all-star cheerleading coach.
Speaker 1 You're an all-star cheerleading coach.
Speaker 3 You want to let us know that you are a very good one.
Speaker 4 Well, my kids are very good.
Speaker 3 Of course.
Speaker 1 I have noticed in my very limited exposure to cheerleading that it's gotten really athletic.
Speaker 4 Incredibly athletic.
Speaker 1 Does it ever get dangerous? Do you ever worry for your kids?
Speaker 14 Oh, all the time, but I'm a good coach, so they're pretty safe.
Speaker 1 We have established that, okay.
Speaker 1 Well, welcome to the show, Kristen. Tim Meadows, filling in for Bill Curtis, is going to read you three news-related limericks with a last word or phrase missing from each.
Speaker 1
If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly into the limericks you will be a winner. Ready to go? I am.
Here is your first limerick.
Speaker 2
To Pizza Hut's wine, I won't say no. It's from fruits of a vine stalk that they grow.
Like basil notes chaste, a crust forward taste in wine that is made from.
Speaker 2 No?
Speaker 1 I don't know.
Speaker 1 Neither does anyone at this particular juncture. So Tim, why don't we do that again?
Speaker 3 Okay.
Speaker 3 Here we go.
Speaker 2 I'm not a limerick. Never in Detroit has limericks ever been
Speaker 3 taught or read.
Speaker 2 And I'm willing to allow someone who's better, like if you have an Irish person in the room, they want to talk.
Speaker 3 I'm all for you.
Speaker 2 Okay, here we go. To Pizza Huts wine, I won't say no.
Speaker 2 It's from fruits of a vine stalk that they grow like basil notes chaste, a crust forward taste in wine that is made from
Speaker 12 pesto?
Speaker 3 I truly know. Not an unreasonable guess.
Speaker 3
They grow. Tomatoes.
Tomatoes, yeah.
Speaker 1 Pizza Hut is now selling tomato wine, a wine made from tomatoes infused with basil that is supposed to taste like pizza.
Speaker 1 It is a wine that experts describe as technically non-toxic.
Speaker 8 How is it different from a Bloody Mary?
Speaker 3 Good point. It's not as good.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I think you're about to say, yeah.
Speaker 1 All right, here's your next limerick.
Speaker 2 All right, hold your hats.
Speaker 3 Here we go.
Speaker 2 Listen closely as the brother reads the limerick.
Speaker 2
Once an asteroid belt was our thing, and our skies had big rocks on the wing. They just kept flying around till they crashed to the ground.
Just like Saturn, the Earth had a
Speaker 3
ring. Ring, yes, there you go.
How we presented it.
Speaker 1 How we're currently
Speaker 1 fine.
Speaker 1 That's right, according to a groundbreaking new geological study, at one point, God liked us, so he put a ring on us.
Speaker 1 460 million years ago, the Earth was struck by a series of meteorites all along the equator, so scientists now hypothesize that the rocks were were not just like randomly striking the Earth, but instead dropping down from a ring around the Earth.
Speaker 1 It's fascinating what we didn't know about the past, right? Now we know. Someday, far in the future, scientists will discover that the Earth used to have land.
Speaker 3 Oh,
Speaker 5 because we're dying.
Speaker 7 What are the benefits of having a ring? It just looks good?
Speaker 1 Yeah, pretty much. I mean, Saturn's pretty sexy, right?
Speaker 7 So we had bling back in the day.
Speaker 5 Saturn is really hot, right?
Speaker 5 Man, the number of times in grade school where I was like, they were like, will you focus? And I'm like, I am.
Speaker 1 He's in an erotic reverie, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 1 Here is your last limerick.
Speaker 2
Airline comfort is crossing a line. When they sleep, I have no space to dine.
They lean back, and I'm hoping my laptop won't open. I vote to ban seats that
Speaker 2 recline.
Speaker 3 Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 1 It's like church church in here. This is awesome.
Speaker 1 According to a new survey, 41% of airline passengers say they want airlines to ban reclining seats on flights completely.
Speaker 1 Which means, of course, that the other 59% of passengers are monsters.
Speaker 5 It is very offensive when someone just comes back and you're in that little tiny space and you're collapsing your skeleton in like a praying mantis and eating pretzels.
Speaker 5 It's It's like, bam, I'm here now with my bald head in your lap.
Speaker 3 That's not cool.
Speaker 7 What if they add like the beep, the rubber beep?
Speaker 3 Beep, beep, beep.
Speaker 7 So you're reversing, and the person knows it's happening.
Speaker 3 Yeah.
Speaker 1 Tim, how did Kristen do in our quiz?
Speaker 2 That's a good question. You know, I was focusing so much on
Speaker 2 I'm going to give her 800 points.
Speaker 3 There you go.
Speaker 3 I'm sure that's close.
Speaker 1 That's within a margin of error.
Speaker 1 Congratulations.
Speaker 3 You've set a record on our show.
Speaker 1 Well done.
Speaker 1 Thank you so much for playing, Kristen. Take care.
Speaker 4 Thank you, guys. Happy Thanksgiving.
Speaker 2 Bye-bye, you too.
Speaker 10
This message comes from Jerry. Noticing your car insurance rate creep up even without tickets or claims? You're not alone.
That's why there's Jerry.
Speaker 10 Jerry handles the legwork by comparing quotes side by side from over 50 top insurers so you can confidently hit buy. No spam calls, no hidden fees.
Speaker 10 Jerry even tracks rates and alerts you when it's best to shop. Drivers who say with Jerry could save over $1,300 a year.
Speaker 3 Don't overpay.
Speaker 10 Download the Jerry app or visit jerry.ai slash npr today.
Speaker 10 This message comes from Shipbub. Nothing ruins your holiday faster than the customer emails like, where's my order? Or worst of all, why can't you deliver by Christmas?
Speaker 10 But peak doesn't have to be chaotic when Shipbob's in your corner.
Speaker 10 Shipbob helps brands like Our Place, Bloom Nutrition, and Tony's win the holidays with reliable, scalable, fast, and cost-effective fulfillment. Make this your best holiday season yet with Shipbob.
Speaker 10 Go to shipbob.com/slash NPR for a free quote.
Speaker 1 Now on to our final game, Lightning Fill-in-the-Blank. Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill-in-the-blank questions as they can.
Speaker 1 Each correct answer is worth two points. Tim, can you give us the scores?
Speaker 2
Tom has three points. Moz has three points.
Joyelle has two.
Speaker 3 All right, very good.
Speaker 1
So here we go. That means, Joyelle, you are in second place behind the guys, so you're up first.
The clock will start when I begin your first question, fill-in-the-blank.
Speaker 1 On Thursday, Blank withdrew as Trump's pick for Attorney General.
Speaker 3 Matt Gates. Yeah.
Speaker 1
On Monday, budget airline Blank filed for bankruptcy. Ill Spirit.
Yes, this week, Raphael Nadal officially retired from Professional Blank. Tennis.
Right, tennis.
Speaker 1 On Thursday, the CDC confirmed the first U.S. case of the new strain of blank pox.
Speaker 3 Ooh, monkey?
Speaker 1 Yeah, M-pox, as they call it. After dozens of monkeys escaped a research facility in South Carolina this week, reports now say that blank
Speaker 1 know almost that there are also feral emu on the loose in South Carolina.
Speaker 8 Was I supposed to know the answer to that?
Speaker 3 Well. Okay.
Speaker 1 This week, the daughters of civil rights leader Blank sued the CIA over his assassination.
Speaker 1 Bernice King?
Speaker 3 Martin Luther King? No, Malcolm X.
Speaker 3 That was Malcolm X, yes, I'll give it to you.
Speaker 1 On Wednesday, Lady Gaga and Post Malone were named as headliners of 2025's Blankella Festival. Coach? Coachella.
Speaker 1 This week, authorities in Argentina caught a man trying to swim smuggled cigarettes across the border from Paraguay, disguised as Blank.
Speaker 3 Tarantulas.
Speaker 1 No, he was disguised as a giant aquatic plant.
Speaker 1 The man had been swimming across the river that forms the border between Paraguay and Argentina with 200 packs of cigarettes covered with leaves and artificial plants.
Speaker 1 And authorities were like, wait a minute, plants don't usually have arms.
Speaker 1 Tim, how did Joyelle do on our quiz?
Speaker 2 Well, I'm happy to tell you, Joyelle got six right, and she now has 12 points, and she is in the lead.
Speaker 3 There you go.
Speaker 1 I have 14 points.
Speaker 6 14 points.
Speaker 9 Did I say 12? I meant 14.
Speaker 3 There you go. There you go.
Speaker 1
Moz, I'm going to arbitrarily pick you to go next, fill in the blank. On Tuesday, President Biden authorized Blank's use of American-supplied long-range missiles.
Ukraine. Right.
Speaker 1
On Monday, the Manhattan DA agreed to postpone Blank's hush money sentencing. Trump's.
Right. This week, the U.S.
formally proposed a partial breakup of search giant Blank. Google.
Right.
Speaker 1 In order to avoid space debris, the Blank was forced to adjust its orbit on Wednesday.
Speaker 7 The blank, the
Speaker 6 space station.
Speaker 1 Right, this week an art collector paid $6.5 million for a banana duct taped to a wall and then blanked.
Speaker 3 He ate it? Yes.
Speaker 1 What? Dozens of people were sickened this week after eating carrots contaminated with blank.
Speaker 7 E. coli.
Speaker 1 Right, for the first time, wildlife officials suggested that giraffes be added to the blank list.
Speaker 3 Endangered species?
Speaker 1 Right. This week, a woman who was baffled at how her puppy escaped its crate every night, set up a camera and discovered blank.
Speaker 7 The puppy was escaping the crate every night, discovered that
Speaker 7 it wasn't a puppy, it was
Speaker 7 a monkey
Speaker 7 and was using his arms to get out of the crate.
Speaker 3 No. Oh.
Speaker 1 She discovered that her other dog was unlocking the crate and letting the puppy out as soon as the coast was clear.
Speaker 1 The woman caught her other dog on camera walking up to the puppy's crate and using his teeth and paws to unlock it.
Speaker 1 The woman has since gotten a more secure cage and is confident the puppy will not escape any longer. But why is that other dog bringing it a birthday cake? It's not the puppy's birthday.
Speaker 1 Tim, how did Moz do on our quiz?
Speaker 2
I'm happy to tell you that Moz got seven right. He now has 14 points, but he is 17 points total.
And he is now in the lead.
Speaker 3 There you are.
Speaker 6 There you go. 17.
Speaker 1 Here's the tough one, Tim. How many then does Tom Papa need to win?
Speaker 2 Seven to tie, eight to win.
Speaker 3 Nine.
Speaker 3 Nailed that.
Speaker 3 Nailed that.
Speaker 1
All right. Here we go, Tom.
This is for the game, fill in the blank. On Thursday, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for blank.
Speaker 5 Netanyahu.
Speaker 1
Netanyahu, right. On Tuesday, Donald Trump picked WWE's Linda McMahon as his secretary of blank.
Education.
Speaker 1 Right, this week, Australia's government introduced a bill to limit kids under 16 from using blank. Social media.
Speaker 1 Right, this week, MIT announced it would offer free blank for families earning less than $200,000 a year.
Speaker 5 College.
Speaker 1
Well, free tuition. On Tuesday, private space company Blank scrapped their latest booster catch attempt.
SpaceX. Right, on Thursday, cryptocurrency Blank hit an all-time high.
Bitcoin. Right.
Speaker 1 Last week, a man in the UK who had his phone stolen by thieves was able to easily chase them down because Blank.
Speaker 6 Because
Speaker 5 find my iPhone.
Speaker 1 No, because he happened to be four-time Olympic gold medalist runner Mo Farah.
Speaker 3 Hilarious.
Speaker 3 Amazing.
Speaker 1 Mo Farah, one of the greatest middle-distance runners who has ever lived, was out for a jog when the thieves snatched his phone, but I have a feeling they instantly regretted it after they heard the four-time Olympic champion mutter, finally.
Speaker 6 That is cool.
Speaker 1 Tim, did Tom Papa do well enough to win?
Speaker 2 This math is difficult.
Speaker 9 Tom got six right,
Speaker 3 12 more.
Speaker 2 He had 15 total. But he doesn't beat Moz, because Moz got 17 total.
Speaker 3 He's the winner.
Speaker 1 In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict after giant mattresses what will be the next innovation in sleep. But first, let me tell you all that.
Speaker 1 Wait, Wake, Del Tell me, is a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago in association with Urgent Haircut Productions, Doug Berman, benevolent overlord Philip Godeka, writes our limericks.
Speaker 1
Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman. Our tour manager is Shana Donald.
Thanks to the staff and crew at the East of the Baker Theater, BJ Lederman composer our theme.
Speaker 1
Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Norbos, and Lillian King. Special thanks to Blythe Robertson, Binny and Bizuna, and Monica Hickey.
Peter Gwynn is our turkey baster.
Speaker 1 Emma Choi is our vibe curator. Technical directions from Lauren White, our CFO is Colin Miller, our production manager.
Speaker 1
Is Robert Newhouse, our senior producer, Zean Chillog, and the executive producer. Wait, wait, don't tell me.
It's Mr. Michael Danforth.
Speaker 1 Now panel, what will be the next big thing in sleep after big mattresses?
Speaker 7 Maz Joe Brani. Now that the beds are so big, Starbucks will build a store in your bed so you can have a cappuccino and then take a nappuccino.
Speaker 1 Joelle Nicole Johnson.
Speaker 8 The Eternal Sunshine Mattress. Wake up refreshed, not knowing what happened the day before.
Speaker 3 And Tom Papa.
Speaker 5 The San Francisco Sleep Center where guests can go to sleep in pods and wake up in four years when this is all over.
Speaker 2 And if any of that happens, panel will ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell.
Speaker 3 Thank you so much, Tim Meadow.
Speaker 3 Thanks also
Speaker 1 to Maz Jo Brani, Joyelle Nicole, Johnson, Tom Papa. Thanks to our fabulous audience who joined us here in Chicago with the student victory, Peter.
Speaker 1 And thanks to all of you for listening wherever you might find yourselves. I'm Peter Sagal and we'll see you next week.
Speaker 1 This is NPR.
Speaker 10
Support for NPR and the following message come from HomeServe. It never happens at a good time.
The pipe bursts at midnight. The heater quits on the coldest night.
Speaker 10
Good thing Home Serve's hotline is available 24-7. Call to schedule a repair and a local pro will be on their way.
Trusted by millions. For plans starting at $4.99 a month, go to homeeserve.com.
Speaker 10
Not available everywhere. Most plans range between $4.99 to $11.99 a month your first year.
Terms apply on covered repairs.
Speaker 11 This message comes from NPR sponsor OnePassword. Forget your password again? Skip the resets and sign in securely with strong, unique passwords that autofill across all your devices.
Speaker 11 Try it free for two weeks at onepassword.com/slash npr.
Speaker 16 Support for this American Life comes from Capella University. Interested in a quality online education? Capella is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.
Speaker 16 A different future is closer than you think with Capella University. Learn more at capella.edu.