Summary
Wait Wait Don't Tell Me episode featuring chef Roy Choi, who revolutionized the food truck industry and LA food scene. The show covers weekly news through games and humor, including discussions on AI job displacement, Whole Foods selling junk food, humanoid robots, and various cultural trends.
Insights
- Food truck innovation emerged from personal failure and spiritual reflection rather than deliberate market strategy, suggesting entrepreneurial breakthroughs often come from necessity
- Luxury consumer goods (like $7M armored vehicles) increasingly focus on experiential and entertainment features rather than pure functionality
- AI adoption in consumer products faces significant usability challenges, with current humanoid robots performing tasks slower and less efficiently than humans
- Whole Foods' expansion into junk food signals market pressure on premium grocery chains to compete on convenience and affordability, not just health positioning
- Celebrity pet cloning represents intersection of wealth, emotional attachment, and biotech commercialization, raising questions about genetic determinism in consumer behavior
Trends
AI-driven job displacement creating new service roles (car tenders, venting specialists) rather than pure automationPremium grocery chains abandoning health-only positioning to capture broader consumer spendingHumanoid robotics moving from research to consumer market despite significant usability gapsCelebrity adoption of biotech services (pet cloning) driving mainstream awareness and normalizationFood truck model evolution from street vending to multi-unit restaurant operations with media presenceGenerational political engagement among younger candidates (NYC Mayor Hochul) changing voter expectationsLuxury goods focusing on entertainment and experience features over traditional status markersCybersecurity vulnerabilities in high-profile institutions (Louvre password breach) highlighting basic security failures
Topics
Food Truck Industry InnovationAI Job Displacement and New Service RolesHumanoid Robot Consumer AdoptionPremium Grocery Chain Strategy ShiftsPet Cloning and Biotech CommercializationCybersecurity in Cultural InstitutionsYoung Political Leadership and Voter EngagementLuxury Vehicle Features and DesignKorean-American Culinary FusionFood Truck to Restaurant ScalingCelebrity Investment in BiotechWhole Foods Market PositioningAutomation and Service Industry EvolutionImmigrant Entrepreneurship in Food IndustryEntertainment Media About Chefs and Restaurants
Companies
Whole Foods Market
Expanding product lines to include junk food brands like Doritos and Pepsi, signaling shift away from premium health ...
Lyft
CEO David Risher proposed 'car tender' role as human job replacement when robotaxis eliminate driver positions
Colossal Biosciences
Pet cloning company in which Tom Brady is an investor; cloned his deceased dog Lua
Netflix
Produces 'The Chef Show' co-hosted by Roy Choi; mentioned as platform for chef-focused entertainment content
Tech Force
Boutique staffing agency proposing 'venting specialist' jobs where humans absorb customer complaints from AI systems
The Louvre
Museum security system breached; password was simply 'Louvre', later changed to 'Louvre1'
People
Roy Choi
Chef who created modern food truck movement in LA; opened Korean taco trucks after leaving gourmet restaurant burnout
Tom Brady
NFL legend who cloned his deceased pit bull mix dog Lua through Colossal Biosciences investment
Eric Adams
NYC Mayor elected on Tuesday; youngest mayor candidate who met his partner on dating app Hinge
David Risher
Lyft CEO proposing 'car tender' human job role to accompany autonomous vehicle passengers
John Favreau
Director/writer of film 'Chef' which recapitulates Roy Choi's life story and food truck journey
Quotes
"I truly believe it was something spiritual that happened. I had to fail. I had to have this amnesia and have no other opportunities out there."
Roy Choi•Food truck origin story discussion
"That might be petty, but it's not improper."
Canadian judge•Security deposit candy dispute ruling
"It fetched me a bottle of water, which took much longer than if I'd simply grabbed the water myself."
Fast Company Magazine reporter•NEO humanoid robot review
"The password for the security cameras at the Louvre was Louvre. They must have thought, well, no one will ever be able to spell Louvre."
Peter Sagal•Louvre security breach discussion
"I'm more Ratatouille. That's the only movie she's ever seen."
Roy Choi•Chef media representation discussion
Full Transcript
This message comes from Mint Mobile. If you're tired of spending hundreds on big wireless bills, bogus fees, and free perks, Mint Mobile is for you. Shop plans at MintMobile.com slash Switch. Taxes and fees extra. See Mint Mobile for details. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR news quiz. I'm Alzo Slade, the man they bring in when the show conflicts with Bill Curtis' daily mani-pedi. And here's your host at the Sagersstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa, California, Peter Sago. Thank you, Alzo. Thank you, everybody. Thank you so much. We are delighted. We are absolutely excited to be here in Orange County. Now, that is a beautiful part of Southern California, where people are always quick to tell you that, no, no, no, this is not L.A. Unless, of course, the Dodgers happen to win the World Series. Later on, we're going to be talking to Chef Roy Choi, the man who pretty much created the modern food truck scene. But first, we want to find out what you're cooking up. The number to call to player games is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924. Now, let's welcome our first listener contestant this week. Hi, Yiren. Wait, wait, don't tell me. Hi, this is Tammy. I'm from Flagstaff, but I'm emigrating to Portugal. Oh, okay. You're like, all right, you wanted us to know that up top, so in case we went to find you, we know we'd be out of luck. Okay, so right now you're in Flagstaff, Arizona. What do you do there? My husband and I were both retired teachers. Right. What did you teach? We were both music teachers. You were. Oh, I don't make fun of music teachers. You guys are like teaching them wizardry and magic, and I think that's awesome. Tammy, welcome to the show. Let me introduce you to our panel this week. First, say hello to a comedian and writer for TV shows like Netflix's A Man in the Inside out with a second season on November 20th. It's Karen Chee. Hi, Karen. Hi, Karen. Next, a comedian you can see on his Grateful Bread stand up tour. You can find info at TomPapa.com. That's right. It's Tom Papa. Hi. Hi, Tom. And you can see her in Washington, D.C. at the Atlas Performing Arts Center, and the Muslims are coming. Stand up comedy show on December 12th. It's Nagin Farsad. Hey. She's saying Nagin. So, Tammy, welcome to our show this week. You, of course, are going to play who's Alzo this time, Alzo Slade, filling in Fibyl Curtis, who's going to read for you three quotations from this week's news. You know the rules. All you need to do is identify or explain two of them. Two out of three, you'll win our prize, the voice of anyone you might choose from our show. Are you ready to go? I think so. I hope so, because it's happening. Yeah, that's great. Your first quote is somebody being gracious on election night Tuesday. I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in private life, but let tonight be the final time I utter his name. So, who will be too busy being mayor of New York to talk about Andrew Cuomo? That's Monanti. Close enough. Monthani. Monthani. Monthani. Wait a minute. Is the mayor himself there correcting you? Yes, it was Zoran Monthani. The election was one of a number of big races, Democrats won on Tuesday. And in New York, they were absolutely giddy about it. People were walking down the street going, hey, I'm walking here. And isn't it great? I am so excited to say that I cast a vote for Monthani because I live in New York City. You do? And I just want to say it was my first time voting for a Muzz. That was exciting. And look, he's going to be sworn in as mayor on January 1st, which means January 2nd, Sharia Law. Am I right everybody? Yes. Did you see this? I was wondering especially, Nagin, if you saw this, that Monthani brought his parents to the victory party on Tuesday night, which was adorable, really. But people are already saying he's too young for the job. It does not help that he did his victory speech wearing a daddy's little moustache. Well, that's what's so exciting is that we actually have someone in office whose parents are still alive. Yes. But knowing a thing or two about immigrant parents from the East, they're probably still disappointed that he's not a doctor. It is nuts to have such a young politician. Like, he's young enough that he met his partner on hinge, who he's married to, which is crazy because I feel like he's inspiring everybody to get more civically involved. And he's inspiring me to get back on the apps. Yeah. All right. Here is your next quote. Bring on the Doritos. Now that was the Wall Street Journal reacting to the surprising news that what fancy, healthy supermarket chain is going to start selling junk food. I would go with Whole Foods. That's a very good choice. Whole Foods. Yes. Finally, Whole Foods, famous for their, you know, healthy foods, will be selling Pepsi and Doritos and chips ahoy cookies. Oh, I'm sorry. That is of course free range chips ahoy cookies. But I kind of object to the characterization that they don't already sell junk food. They sell junk food. It's just in packaging that looks like it has a master's degree. Right. Exactly. Exactly. When they brought in Pirates Booty, I knew something was up. Like these, they're up to something. But I mean to be, you know, I get it. These are times that are tough and you want to reward. It's difficult to go through Whole Foods and be like, I've had a hard day. I deserve it and just get a big raw carrot and little on it. You know. To hell with my diet. I'm having a persimmon. You need to stuff a whole can of Pringles down your throat in order to feel good in these dark times. I personally do not need Whole Foods to start selling junk food. I need them to start selling cleaning products that actually work. Right. I mean you've tried this. They're dish soap. It's just an empty bottle that says scrub harder. A friend of mine got some organic Roach Killer from Whole Foods and I was like, yeah, that ain't going to do the trick. I bet the Roaches liked it. They were like, this stuff's good. Does he say organic for who for the Roaches? Okay. Your last quote is a mixed review of a new $20,000 piece of home technology. It fetched me a bottle of water, which took much longer than if I'd simply grabbed the water myself. That was a reporter for Fast Company Magazine talking about the fact that finally you can buy a human-sized and human-shaped what for help around the house? A robot? A robot helper. It's here. We have dreamed of this for a century and now it is here meet NEO, the $20,000 humanoid chore robot who walks around your house doing all the things that you do but slower and worse. So this reporter who tried out NEO in his own found it could fetch a bottle of water five times slower than he could do it. And in just under five minutes, this is amazing, it loaded two glasses and a fork into the dishwasher. So they're saying it's not good? I really want it to be good. You do? You want what? I've been buying everything that comes out. I got that Roomba, that little vacuum thing. I was like, oh, this is great. I'll never have to vacuum again. And then it went over some cat crap and smeared it all across the rest of the place. All right, no, Al, please tell me this thing works. I saw maybe six or eight months ago an onstage test of it so they could share it with an audience of 2,000, okay? And me and 2,000 other people were sweating watching this robot try and water a plant. And I swear to God, the spokesperson said, he's still working out handles. Because he had a hard time getting his hand around the watering pot. I know, but with all technology, I mean, we can all pretend we want it to load the dishwasher, but the majority of people out there want to know, can I have sex with it? It happened to the copy machine. It happened with faxes. Can you, Peter? Dad, this is a very NPR question. No, I'm just making a note never to buy any used technology from Utah. Not me, I'm saying people. People, not you. People, people. Now, you might be wondering, okay, we've been dreaming of this for years, like the Jetsons and everything, how can they finally have a robot that can do anything you ask on its own? And the answer says the company, is that actually it can't. But it will eventually learn, and until then, your NEO, the one you paid for in your house, will be remotely controlled by a human back at company headquarters, using a VR headset to see what it sees and control. I'm going to take back what I said about having sex with it. That's a shame, because my understanding is one of those operators is getting pretty excited about getting into your house. Also, how did Tammy do in our quiz? She did amazing. Three out of three. Congratulations, Tammy. Good luck with the big move. Take care. Thanks. Take care. Bye-bye. Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news. McGean is part of the investigation into the massive jewel heist at the Louvre a little while ago. We have learned the password to the museum's security camera system. You get one guess what that password was. Was it one, two, three, four, five? No, it was not. All right, you don't know. I'm going to actually ask the other panelists. Do you have any idea, Karen? No, was it password? It wasn't. The password for the security system at the Louvre was... The Louvre. Exactly right. The password for the security cameras at the Louvre was Louvre. They must have thought, well, no one will ever be able to spell Louvre. That's such a weird word. But of course, now that it has been exposed, they quickly rectified the situation. The password is now Louvre one. They caught them, right? They caught the... They have caught a bunch of them. A bunch. How many were there? It was a whole crew, and I'm not quite sure how many there were who did the robbery, but they have arrested a number of suspects. Was it George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon? Coming up, forget LinkedIn. You've got everything you need in our Bluff the Listener game. Call 1-888-WATE-WAIT-TO-PLAY. We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR. This message comes from Whole Foods Market. Head to Whole Foods Market for savings on zesty flavors. It's the Cocina Latina event with yellow sales signs throughout the store. Check out the meat department for marinated skirt steak with no antibiotics ever, and explore delicious weeknight shortcuts with a variety of 365 brand simmer sauces, rice, and beans at wallet happy prices. Liven things up in produce with fresh salsa and guacamole. Save during the Cocina Latina event at Whole Foods Market. This message comes from Intuit TurboTax. With TurboTax Expert Full Service, match with a dedicated expert who will do your taxes for you from start to finish getting you every dollar you deserve. It's that easy. Visit TurboTax.com to match with an expert today. This message comes from Whole Foods Market. Head to Whole Foods Market for savings on zesty flavors. It's the Cocina Latina event with yellow sales signs throughout the store. Check out the meat department for marinated skirt steak with no antibiotics ever, and explore delicious weeknight shortcuts with a variety of 365 brand simmer sauces, rice and beans at wallet happy prices. Liven things up in produce with fresh salsa and guacamole. Save during the Cocina Latina event at Whole Foods Market. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Alzo Slade. We're playing this week with Tom Papa, Nagin Farsad and Karen Chi. And here again is your host at the Saganstrom Hall in Costa Mesa, California, Peter Seigel. Thank you, Alzo. Thank you, everybody. Thank you so much. I'm excited for the next episode of the New York Times. I'm excited too because 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 games on the air. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, this is Ian Wood calling in from Grand Rapids, Michigan. I love Grand Rapids. What do you do there? I am a student at Calvin University. What are you studying? Environmental health and conservation. Oh, that's very cool. Thank you all. What year are you in? I'm a freshman. You're a freshman. Okay. Well, hopefully there will still be some left for you to conserve by the time you graduate. Oh, please. Keep the faith. Well, Ian, welcome to this show. You're going to play our game on which you must try to tell truth from fiction. Alzo, what is Ian's topic? Jobs of the future. They say that AI is going to take all of our jobs. Well, we're always going to need artists and crafts people to feed to the robots. Our panelists are going to tell you about another new job for real human beings. Pick the one who's telling the truth and you'll win the weight-weighter of your choice and your voicemail. Are you ready to play? Born ready. All right. First up, let's hear from Karen Chi. As AI quickly encroaches on our daily lives and leaves people jobless, there is one career that is surprisingly very secure. The amusement park carney. In fact, you'll probably start seeing them everywhere. AI is replacing waiters, cashiers, and salespeople, but marketing experts know that there's just something magnetic about a carney. That sketchy guy who definitely doesn't want to be working at the carnival but also was maybe born there. So they predict all kinds of businesses will now have designated carneys who will attract consumers and make them feel great about their experiences. These designated carneys will add to consumer interactions by smoking in front of children, handing out merchandise with the deadest of eyes, and loudly swearing while families are within earshot. They'll also mark where their employee entrances are by standing in front of them and vigorously making out. Another advantage, an element of danger. With a carney standing there, even using the self-checkout at places like Target will have that, I might die on this tilt-a-world feeling that keeps you young. Carneys soon to be everywhere to provide that creepy, exhilarating feeling while you deal with the machines. Your next job of the future comes from Tom Papa. As people worry about AI replacing us, David Risher, the CEO of Lyft, assured us that our jobs won't be going away, they'll just be changing. As an example, when Lyft starts using robotaxis to drive people around, that doesn't mean a job will be eliminated. He floated the idea of a car tender, a human who isn't driving but sits in the car along with you. Because as we all know, the main reason to book a rideshare is for the sharing part. Risher added that the car tender could help with your luggage, make you drinks, and answer questions as the local guy. Because who hasn't been in a rideshare with a creepy driver and thought, I wish this guy was talking to me more, and also trying to give me some of his alcohol. AI, there's nothing to worry about. In the future, your rideshare driver will become your rideshare car tender. Your last profession preview comes from the Game of Arts song. When you call a 1-800 number, your main goal as a human being is to say, Agent, Agent at increasing volume levels and with an expanding sense of existential dread. When the agent finally comes on the phone, you yell at them. At one point, you stop and say, I'm so sorry to get upset, I realize you're just a messenger, and then you continue yelling. This yelling is a time-honored capitalist tradition. But what happens when AI takes over the job of the agent? Where does the yelling go? The boutique staffing agency, Tech Force, is prepared for this very moment. They believe a new spate of human jobs will open up in the field of getting yelled at, or GYA for short. These venting specialists, as they're called, don't fix your problem, but they do let you yammer on about it while making empty threats about leaving a bad review. And or saying stuff like, I swear to God, I'm changing my cell phone carrier. The agency is also hoping to expand operations to offer an in-person combat experience where you can just punch a representative of your internet service provider right in the gut. Alright. Let's say you lose your job to AI. If so, you might be able to get one of these jobs of the future. Was it from Karen Chi, the universal carny, bringing that aura to every kind of consumer interaction? From Tom Papa, the car tender, since humans will no longer be needed to drive the cars. Or from Nagin Farsad, the venting specialist, the person whose job it is, will be to get yelled at by people frustrated by the AI. Which of these is a real potential job of the future? Well, everyone loves self-driving cars, so I think you're going to go with Tom Papa's. You're going to go with Tom's choice of the car tender. Alright, well, we actually spoke to somebody who has not yet lost his job to an AI to bring you the real story. I don't know how you'd stock a car for a full service bartender. Seems like you're nightmare. Yeah, that was Riff Richards, a bartender at Dewar Dive in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, talking about the potential of having car tenders in your ride shares sometime soon. Congratulations Ian, you got it right. You've earned a point for Tom, you've won our prize. The voice of your choice and your voicemail, thank you so much for playing. Thanks for having me on. Take care. Bye-bye. And now the game we call Not My Job. Roy Troy trained as a chef but found himself burned out working in gourmet restaurants in New York, so he came back to his hometown of Los Angeles and eventually opened a food truck selling Korean tacos. Which first, yes. You wish you thought of that. And those food trucks first revolutionized the food trucks scene and then the LA food scene and then the food scene everywhere. He now runs a bunch of trucks and brick and mortar restaurants here in Southern California. He co-hosted the Chef Show on Netflix and has written a best-selling memoir and a cookbook. Roy Troy, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Thank you. So first things first, a UDRO from LA where you live to be with us today. Now whenever you drive somewhere, do people just expect you to show up driving a food truck? They don't expect me to show up, but on the freeway when we're driving them, they expect us to throw in food. Do they really? They expect the food to be ready at any moment. I was about to make a joke of it. Because it's almost like a reptilian or instinctual thing. Yeah, the instinctual thing, they see it. They start to salivate like Pavlov's dogs. I was about to make a joke about them wanting you to throw them a taco at 80 miles an hour but then I remembered this is LA. They want you to throw them a taco at five miles an hour. Five miles an hour. If they're lucky. Yes. Right. Exactly. So you grew up in LA. Yes. LA Boy. We understand that you were like been involved in the food industry from an early age. Is it true your mom kind of got you involved in the business? I ate a lot of food that my mom cooked. Yeah. I grew up in a house where she was cooking constantly for many people, but there were only three of us in there. Really? Yeah. She was cooking for like hundreds of people at all times. So I ended up eating most of it. And early on my mom used to make the kimchi in the house. Very much like you would see mothers right now making pozole or menudo. Sure. Putting it in big eglues and then putting it out on the corner and selling them in styrofoam cups. It was the same thing we were doing but in kimchi jars. But we had a big 1976 Thunderbird and a 19 late 70s station wagon. So there was a lot of room to store a lot of kimchi. Right. These trunks were huge. And so she would stuff all of them and we would go around. We would hit up people like at a stoplight. Really? It was like a drive-by but with kimchi. We would just roll up on the side and I was the one, I was in shaka and I would roll down my window and then we would just talk to the person at the stoplight and say you want to buy some kimchi. Really? Yes. How? Yes. She was ready to roll at any time she had. How old were you when you were doing this? Started when I was like five. Okay. Because you could sit in front seats back then. Oh sure. Yeah, I know. That's why most of us were killed. Yes. We're the only ones that remain. You were left. Yes, exactly. So a big moment in your career is you got fired from this big restaurant and then you, as History now celebrates, opened a food truck. What was the inspiration for it? You know what I really want in my moment of getting fired? But I think that, you know, because I've had time now to reflect and look back and I truly believe it was something spiritual that happened. I do, you know. It wasn't like you were walking down the street with some bulgogi. Some guy was walking down the street with a taco. You hit each other. No. It fell to the ground. You got my bulgogi. That would have been like a Mentos commercial. That would have been really nice if it happened that way. But unfortunately I had to go through all of these trials and tribulations and from that came the soul of this Kogitako. But I think that I had to fail. I had to have this amnesia and have no other opportunities out there. Now you have how many food trucks out there you're operating and how many restaurants? Can you even keep counting? Not that many. Not that many. We only have four trucks. We're a company that looks bigger than we are. Right. Yeah. And we have three restaurants. I got two more things for you before we play our game. Sure. First of all, we live in an age where like all of a sudden everybody's interested in the lives of chefs, right? TV shows. You actually were a consultant on a movie called Chef that your friend John... It's really weird. Yeah, I know. Thank you. In which basically for people who haven't seen it, the character played by the director and writer John Feverau basically recapitulates your life. Sort of. Sort of. Sort of kind of. What do you think of any of these shows that you like? I mean do you watch The Bear for example and say, oh my God, that's exactly what it is. No, no, no. Yeah, like do you watch Ratatouille and go, that's exactly what it is. I'm more Ratatouille. Yeah, really. As far as, just between you and me, as far as I know that's the only movie she's ever seen. Go with it. Ratatouille's still the gold standard. It really is. Thank you. It really is. I'm telling you, all the movies, TV about chefs and restaurants, that's the one that is closest to your friend. It's still the one that no one has talked about. That's true. Yeah. Wait, your story's so... I've realized that's why you have the big hat. Exactly. I got one more thing. You guys are too good. This is a point of personal privilege. I found out just recently that you are responsible for my very favorite recipe ever, which happens to be the New York Times cooking app. And that is instant ramen with American cheese. Yes. So now that I have you, I'm going to ask you. What exactly is American cheese? Do you know? It says it's from the land of process. That's true. From the region of process. Yeah. It's a terroir in America. Actually, it sounds like a stoner food, and it really does feel like something you would make in the depths, but it's actually what parents feed their kids if you're Korean. Yeah, it's true. You grew up eating that? Your parents get that? I feel like my parents were like, this is unhealthy, but that would be like a treat, would be ramen with cheese on it. Yeah, it's our treat. Our whole life is healthy. Yeah. Yeah. It's the inverse of growing up in America. Everything we eat are shoots and roots and vegetables and pickles and fermented things and dried fish and all these things. So the ramen with the cheese was like our lucky charms. Lucky charms. Wow. Well, I'm just saying this. I'm saying this to people here, and hopefully it will make the broadcast. You got to try this. It's amazing. Well, Roy Choi, it is a pleasure to talk to you. We have invited you here to play a game we're calling. Food trucks meet these new trucks. So you invented the modern food truck as we have discussed, so we're going to ask you three questions about other kinds of trucks. Get two out of three right. You'll win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone from our show they might choose. Also, who is Roy Choi playing for? Ryan Santos of Hanford, California. All right. Ready? Here's your first question. Now the most expensive truck ever made was the Darts Prombran Black Diamond. That is a $7 million custom-built armored SUV made for the most discerning billionaire. One of the early editions of this incredibly high-end luxury truck featured what luxury feature? Was it A, a built-in parachute in case you ever happened to drive off a cliff? B, seats upholstered with leather made from the foreskins of whales. Or C, an entertainment system that included a small stage for live performances. It's got to be B. You're going to choose B as your final answer? That's right. It's B. Whale foreskin leather. Although they changed that after the outcry. Next question. Everybody loves fire trucks. We all love fire trucks, sometimes to excess like in which of these people. A, baseball hall of famer, Rube Waddell, who used to run off the field during games to follow a fire truck if it happened to go by the stadium. B, President Luis Lecal of Uruguay, who insisted on using a fire truck as his presidential limo. Or C, Mark Zuckerberg, who likes to drive a custom-made full-size working replica of the play school fire truck he had as a child. You're going to go with B, the president of Uruguay. No, it was actually the baseball player. This is the guy from the early days of baseball, early to the 20th century. He was a great player, but everybody knew that if a fire truck went by the stadium, he would just disappear and run after it. All right, this is not a problem. You got one right with one to go. If you get this, you'll win. Here we go. Now then, as we all know, a truck on our highways might spill its cargo and cause some pretty serious problems as in which of these cases. Was it A, a truck in Kentucky that spilled its entire load of pancake syrup after colliding with the buttermilk pike overpass? B, a truck in Idaho that spilled 20 million bees on the highway causing the driver to run for his life? Or C, a truck in Oregon that spilled 7,000 pounds of live eels? Oh my God. We got to go see? You're going to go see? You're right, but they're all true. Those all happen. The game is fixed. The game is fixed. Sadly, in your favor though. And by the way, the eels in that truck in Oregon, the one you like, not just eels, but slime eels. Also, how did Chef Roy do on our quiz? He cooked up a win. He did. There you go. We've won on behalf of our listener. Chef Roy Choi's newest book is The Choi of Cooking. Roy Choi, thank you so much for joining us on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Give it up for Chef Roy. In just a minute, we go into the brine and our listener, the Limerick challenge called one, two, three, wait, wait, to join us in the air. We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR. This message comes from Fisher Investments. Senior Vice President Michael Hosmar shares why he believes in empowering clients with knowledge at every step of their financial planning journey. At Fisher Investments, we prefer to use a sizable group of experts with a diverse skill set, diverse knowledge, all collaborating together to deliver what hopefully is optimal advice for our clients. I believe the best and maybe the only way to properly address client expectations is through education. Once I've met with a prospective client for the first time, I hope they feel that they've learned something. I hope they feel they've made some progress and they understand not only the financial markets and financial planning better, but they understand their own personal goals and objectives a bit better as well. I hope they have a little bit more peace of mind. Join more at fisherinvestments.com. Investing in securities involves the risk of loss. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Alzo Slade. We're playing this week with Nagin Farsad, Karen Chi, and Tom Papa. And here again is your host at Sagerstrom Hall in Costa Mesa, California, Peter Sago. Thank you, Alzo. Thank you, everybody, in just a minute. In just a minute, America's number one and only remaining source of natural limericks are listener limerick challenge. If you'd like to play, give us a call at 1-888-8800-888-924-8224. Right now, a panel, some more questions for you from the week's news. Tom NFL legend Tom Brady just welcomed a new pet into the family after losing his beloved dog, Lua, a little while ago. But he has just revealed that the new dog is what? A clone of his old dog. That's exactly right. Yes, he's done the dog cloning thing. Brady widely regarded as professional football's greatest of all time, but pretty iffy in all other areas of life. He cloned his beloved pit bull mix dog, Lua, after she died in 2023. Brady, of course, it turns out, is an investor in the company that did it, Colossal Biosciences. He made the announcement alongside his new girlfriend, Gazelle 2. Is it have the personality of your old dog? How close is it to your old dog? Well, famously, the stories we hear about these, people think they're going to get their old dog renewed, right? A new copy, but it never quite works out because they're different animals. Yeah. Even though they have the same DNA, they could be very different. So it looks like your old dog, but at night, it just growls in the corner at you. Wondering how it could eat you. Yeah, exactly. You're just saw alien earth, I feel like. I haven't, but I have a dog that I would like to take some parts out of. If you had the chance. If I had the chance. It mixed to futz with the recipe. Yeah, like maybe change some of its bad habits. For example? Eating the litter box as a buffet. Right? Yeah. Wouldn't you take that out if you could? I would totally take that out. I wonder if there's a gene for that. Karen, this week a court in Canada ruled in favor of a woman who withheld part of an ex-roomate security deposit as compensation for what? For playing music too loud? No. For eating all of her food? Very close. In fact, I'll give it to you for eating her candy. Whoa. Yes. She withheld $4.60. And the judge allowed this when he took her to court to get the money back. The judge said, quote, that might be petty, but it's not improper. Which I will be using so much as an excuse in the future that I will have it printed on a t-shirt to save time. But on the other hand, knowing you can be held legally liable for stolen candy just set a chill through every parent whose kid went trick-or-treating last week. How long are you allowed to keep Halloween candy in your kitchen after Halloween? I think ultimately my rule is forever until you finish it. So you're cool with getting to Easter and still having some KitKats around? God yes. Yeah. What do you do? What do you do? What do you do? You're too good for that? Or what's happening? Yeah. Who do you think you are? Oh, I just kind of live a more conservative life than you guys. I'm just imagining when your daughters were young, you're holding them back with one hand when holding up the candy going, no, I'm sorry, dear. It's expired. I know. It's not broccoli. No, I know. But it's depressing. It's like when you leave the Christmas lights up too long and it's spring and it's raining and there's like Christmas lights, it's like you gotta move on. But it's the same candy off season as it is in season. No, it's not. It's Halloween candy. It's very different from regular candy. We all know you break it out and you're like, hey, I got you some candy. You're going to know. No, no. This has little kids' hands on it. Coming up, it's Lightning Fill on 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 back at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago or on the road in Phoenix, Arizona on December 4th. Tickets and info at nprpresents.org. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, Peter. This is Danielle from Santa Barbara, California. Santa Barbara, California. Bit of a way is up the coast. What do you do there? I work at an interactive science museum that is geared towards STEAM education. STEAM education. What's your favorite exhibit? We have an exhibit where kids can build race cars and then race each other or their adults. It's always fun to see the competitive nifts that comes out in that. I'm looking at Karen Shee here on stage and it's everything she can do to keep from leaping up and running to where you are now to try it. I'm going to be there tomorrow. We will welcome you. Well, welcome her to the show, Danielle. Also, Slade is going to read you three news-related limericks with a last-word or phrase missing from each. If you can fill in that last-word or phrase correctly and two of the limericks, you will be a winner. You ready to play? I'm ready. Here is your first limerick. We said Jimmy John's, our chefs are fickle. Our sandwich won't crumble, it trickles. The subs that we sell have a crunchy wet shell. We're replacing the bread with a pickle. A pickle, yes. You ever sat down to lunch and said to yourself, wow, this sandwich is good, but what if it were wetter? We've got great news. Jimmy John's is now offering the pickle which is sandwich that replaces the bread with a giant hollowed-out dill pickle holding all your meat and cheese. Best thing the pickle which is part of Jimmy John's new as if dad packed your school lunch menu. I'm so sad dad got divorced. Do they have like a special holder? I'm just curious about the logistics. I think they wrap it in the traditional paper and they hand it to you. They'll give you my guess. Niggie, what were you picturing? I thought maybe there'd be some sort of fun, like water resistant holder of some kind. Like a roll? Yeah, something like that, like something bread like. Yeah, exactly. Danielle, here is your next limerick. Food mashups, some people a boreal, but I say, yes, queen, give me more. Cream corn is the boss as is cranberry sauce, a Thanksgiving meal in and Oreo. Yes, the Oreo cookie, a new limited edition Thanksgiving Oreos. They're great, they cover the entire meal from the turkey Oreo that comes with a stuffing Oreo and a creamed corn Oreo all the way to the apple pie Oreo and the pumpkin pie Oreo. I feel like the audience is about to do an insurrection with this information. You can get them all together. The whole meal is a gift set online. Reviews have been mixed with one customer calling it the Thanksgiving meal no one wants. And you can buy this at Whole Foods? You can now! Pretty good. You got to go around back and knock on the door though. Here is your last limerick. Past your 20s, design should show upper care. Get nice dishes to store your old supper there. You need nothing drastic, just no mismatched plastic. So get some nice organized. Tupperware? Tupperware, yeah! We did food, food and now food storage. House Beautiful provided a list of things you simply cannot have in your home once you're 30. Sorry. And high on this list, mismatched Tupperware. You're a grown up now. Your Tupperware carpet better match the drapes. The problem is nobody, nobody has perfectly matched Tupperware containers and lids. That's because you never throw out any of it. Yeah, the lid for this one is missing, but you have to believe it'll come back. You can't give up on little liddy. Early in my relationship, my now husband threw out a bunch of lids inexplicably. What? He thought they didn't go with something, but they totally went with five somethings. And it's been ten years and I still think about those lids. Really? And you still married him? It was a tough call, but I did it, yeah. She was hoping that for some sort of wedding present, he'd give her the lids back. Also, how did Danielle do in our quiz? Three out of three, amazingly. Well done, Danielle. Thank you so much. Thank you so much for playing. Take care. This message comes from AmeriPrize Financial. Chief Market Strategist Anthony Saglin-Bennie shares how AmeriPrize and their advisors focus on putting clients first. AmeriPrize advisors are really collaborative and want to help, and so those are really great attributes when sitting down with clients who are looking for advice and looking for guidance on their investments. For more information and important disclosures, visit ameriprize.com. Securities offered by AmeriPrize Financial Services LLC, member FINRA and SIPC. Here comes from our 2026 lead sponsor of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, Viking, committed to exploring the world in comfort. Journey through the heart of Europe on an elegant Viking longship with thoughtful service, destination-focused dining, and cultural enrichment on board and on shore. And every Viking voyage is all-inclusive with no children and no casinos. Discover more at Viking.com. This message comes from Instacart. Instacart knows not all bananas are created equal. Some want them green, some ripe, some want them ready right now. With Instacart's preference picker available at most retailers, you can choose preferences like avocado ripeness or deli thickness before your shopper starts. So instead of hoping for the best, you get groceries picked the way you would pick them. Download the app and get bananas just how you like with Instacart. Now it's time for our final game, Lightning Fill in the Blank. Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many fill in the blank questions as they can. Each correct answer is now worth two points. Also, can you give us the scores? Absolutely. Tom has four points, Karen has two, and Nagin is struggling with one. Why did you add struggling? We don't need editorial. We don't need editorial. I'm just saying from you. All right. Well, Nagin, since you only have one point, that means you're in third, so you're going to go first. Here we go. The clock will start when they begin your first question. Fill in the blank. On Thursday, a federal judge ordered the White House to fully fund blank benefits this month. Snap. Right. On Tuesday, former Vice President Blank passed away at the age of 84. Dick Cheney. Right. On Monday, two people were arrested in connection with an explosion at Blank's medical school. Harvard? Yes. Kia Motors, complained after discovering a dealership in Finland, had been offering customers of their electric cars blank. Whitefish. No. They've been offering the electric car drivers an air freshener that smells like gasoline. According to new data, 66 poultry flocks have been infected with blank in the past month. Bird flu. Right. On Thursday, blank released the annual list of her favorite things. Oprah. Right. A report this week said that while unemployment is up, more people than ever have been finding jobs as blank. A white fisherman. Stick to the theme. So more people than ever are employed as Timothy Chalamet lookalikes. A group of men may remember that a couple of months ago there was this very high-profile Timothy Chalamet lookalike contest in New York. And a lot of those participants have seen this huge boom in employment opportunities. Since then, they've been on Saturday Night Live. They've been in commercials. They were invited to the Golden Globes. Who knew? Looking like a handsome movie star could be so advantageous. Also, how did the game do in our quiz? She did a little something. She got five right for 10 more points. Total of 11, and she's in the lead. Oh! Thank you. Struggling no more. All right. Karen Chi, you're up next. Please fill in the blank. On Tuesday, Abigail Spanberger was elected the first female governor of blank. Virginia. Right. This week, former House Speaker blank announced her retirement from Congress. Nancy Pelosi? Right. And the long-term use of blank supplements as a sleep aid can lead to serious health risks. Melatonin? Melatonin, yes. After he was arrested for robbing a bank, a man in Ohio asked police if he could blank. Use the bathroom. No. If he could keep the money, please. On Thursday, King Charles officially stripped blank of all of his royal titles. Oh, Andrew. Yes, Prince. Well, I was going to say Prince Andrew, but no. Just Andrew. On Monday, the LA Dodgers held a parade to celebrate their second consecutive blank win. The world's here. Yes. Despite her raising the issue multiple times, a woman in Florida says that a garage door repair company keeps blanking. Oh, turning into an alligator. No. The company keeps using her address as the location of their business. Okay. It happens sometimes. It's a type of an ad. You get calls for, like, the plumber. But this company put up a website with her phone number, her address, and a picture of her house as their headquarters. And if that wasn't bad enough, she was also named employee of the month. Also, how did Karen do in our quiz? She did pretty good as well. Five right for 10 more points. That gives her a total of 12. And now she's in the lead. And how many then does Tom need to win? Four to tie. Five to win. And a bonus of a robot. All right, Tom, this is for the game. Filling the blank. On Wednesday, the Supreme Court heard arguments on the legality of Trump's global blanks. Taras. Right. On Thursday, Tesla shareholders approved a $1 trillion pay package for blank. Elon. Right. On Thursday, a massive blank made landfall in Vietnam. Bird. A typhoon. This week, disgraced hip hop mogul blank was transferred to a federal prison. Diddy. Right. This week, a publicly available video of a city council meeting in Glasgow will be edited after a representative accidentally blanked. Pooped. I'm actually going to give it to you. Left his camera on while going to the bathroom on Wednesday. Unionized baristas at blank threatened to strike if their new contract was not approved. Starbuck. Right. On Monday, People Magazine named wicked star Jonathan Bailey the blankest man alive. Sexiest. After he was accidentally paid the salaries of 34 of his co-workers, a factory worker in Russia announced he would blank. Retire. Yes, pretty much, because he's going to keep it all. After a payroll error meant he was paid 15,000 times more than he was usually paid, the factory worker just did the right thing. He told his employers, see you later, nerds. And fled to another city. The case is now headed to Russia's Supreme Court, who are expected to rule in the company's waiver unless someone has a bunch of money he could use to bribe them with. Alzo did Tom do well enough to win. We did he. He got seven right for 14 more points, total of 18, and he is the champion. There you go. In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict now that they're doing junk food what will be the next big change over at Whole Foods. But first, let me tell you that, wait, wait, don't tell me, it's a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago, an association with urgent hair car productions Doug Berman, Benevolent Overlord. Philip Godica writes our limericks. Our public address announcer is Paul Friedman. Our tour manager is Shayna Donald. BJ Liederman composed our theme, our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Normbos, then Lillian King. Special thanks to Mohanad El-Sheiki and Monica Hickey this week. Peter Gwyn is our humanoid chore robot. Emma Choi is our visual host, technical direction is from Lorna White or CFO. It's Colin Miller, our production manager is Robert Newhouse, our senior producer is Ian Chillog. And the executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me is Mr. Michael Danforth. Now panel, what will be the next big change at Whole Foods? Nagin Farsad. They're going to start selling guns. Carrons she. They're going to start selling organic edibles so that you want to buy all the snacks in the back room. And Tom Papa. They're teaming up with Oreos and launching a new line of deodorants. And if any of that happens, we'll ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Thank you so much, Ozos. Thanks also to Nagin Farsad, Tom Papa and Carrons she. Thanks to the staff and crew here at the Magnificent Sager Strom Center for the Arts. Thanks to John Cohn and everybody over at LA as then. Thanks to our fabulous audience here who came out to see us. We'd love to see you too. Thanks to all of you for listening wherever you are. I'm Peter Segel. We'll see you next week back in Chicago. This is NPR. This message comes from Mint Mobile. If you're tired of spending hundreds on big wireless bills, bogus fees and free perks, Mint Mobile might be right for you with plans starting from 15 bucks a month. Shop plans today at mintmobile.com slash switch. Upfront payment of $45 for three month five gigabyte plan required. New customer offer for first three months only. Then full price plan options available. Taxes and fees extra. See Mint Mobile for details. This message comes from eBay. The worst part about loving cars might just be buying them and all the parts. From Toyotas to Aston Martins, eBay has thousands of cars and the largest online selection of vehicle parts and accessories. eBay. Things people love. This message comes from Easy Cater. Making it easy for organizations to order food for meetings and events from favorite restaurants, set up meal programs for their employees, and manage food spend all in one place at EasyCater.com.