Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

We beef with the pontiff and admire the Stanley Cup

47 min
Apr 18, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This episode of NPR's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! features news quizzes, games, and an interview with Phil Pritchard, the official guardian of the Stanley Cup. The show covers topics ranging from Pope Francis and crime to AI chatbots giving medical advice, Swiss cheese holes, and Airbnb food etiquette.

Insights
  • AI chatbots trained on internet data can confidently spread misinformation, including fabricated medical conditions, raising serious concerns about their reliability for health advice
  • The Stanley Cup's unique 100-day tradition where each team member gets personal time with the trophy creates stronger emotional connections than traditional trophy ownership models
  • Modern manufacturing innovations (automatic milking) can inadvertently eliminate traditional product characteristics (cheese holes), requiring legal intervention to preserve heritage
  • Consumer behavior around vacation rentals reveals emerging etiquette questions about property boundaries and resource sharing in the sharing economy
Trends
AI reliability and hallucination concerns in consumer-facing applicationsHeritage product preservation amid modernization pressuresSharing economy etiquette and property boundary disputesSports tradition innovation balancing exclusivity with inclusivityMedical misinformation spread through AI systemsVacation rental market growth creating new social normsInternational sports globalization and cultural celebrationConsumer skepticism toward AI-generated health information
Topics
AI Chatbot Medical MisinformationStanley Cup Tradition and GlobalizationSwiss Cheese Manufacturing StandardsAirbnb Food Etiquette and Property RightsPope Francis and International RelationsAI Training Data Quality and VerificationSports Trophy Ownership ModelsVacation Rental Market DynamicsHeritage Food Production RegulationsChatbot Hallucination and Fabrication
Companies
OpenAI
ChatGPT discussed as example of AI chatbot providing unreliable medical diagnoses 80% of the time
Airbnb
Vacation rental platform discussed regarding etiquette of eating leftover food found in rental properties
Hockey Hall of Fame
Phil Pritchard's employer; organization responsible for Stanley Cup custody and distribution
Netflix
Referenced as platform where comedian Dulce Sloan performs in joke festival
NPR
Parent network of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! and Wild Card podcast
People
Phil Pritchard
Guest who escorts Stanley Cup to winning team members for 100-day celebration period worldwide
Peter Segal
Host of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! news quiz show
Alzo Slade
Filling in for Bill Curtis as announcer and quiz reader
Dulce Sloan
Panel member who tells story about Faberge egg theft in Bluff the Listener game
Adam Burke
Panel member who tells story about Babe Ruth musical in Bluff the Listener game
Alonzo Boden
Panel member and episode winner who tells story about computer and Bermuda Triangle research
Julio Torres
Featured on NPR's Wild Card podcast discussing self-confidence and not needing to prove oneself
Donald Trump
Referenced multiple times including beef with Pope Francis and attending UFC fights instead of Iran negotiations
Pope Francis
Subject of Trump criticism regarding crime rates in Vatican City
Quotes
"When someone makes me feel like I have to prove something to them, I just walk away. Really? I'm like, seek help."
Julio TorresOpening segment
"If President Trump thinks the Pope is weak on crime, wait till he finds out about the Buddha."
PanelistPope Francis discussion
"I only hang out with winners, so it's pretty good."
Phil PritchardStanley Cup interview
"This is why you still fly a regional jet."
Air traffic controlPilot meowing incident
"I think for me, I would bring it back into my backyard and have an open house and of course an open bar."
Phil PritchardStanley Cup interview
Full Transcript
On NPR's Wild Card podcast, Julio Torres says he doesn't need to prove himself to anyone. When someone makes me feel like I have to prove something to them, I just walk away. Really? I'm like, seek help. Watch or listen to that Wild Card conversation on the NPR app or on YouTube at NPR Wild Card. Be easy Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm the man they bring in when Bill Curtis gets busted for claiming Peter as a dependent. I'm Alzo Slade, and here's your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sego! Thank you, Algo! Thanks everyone, thanks to all of you. Great to see you. We do have a fine show for you today. Later on we're going to be talking for the first time ever on our show to a professional escort. That's right, the man who was paid to escort the Stanley Cup. What did you think I meant? But first, it's your turn to come on and try to check me into the boards. Give us a call. The number is 1-888-888-888-924-8924. Let's welcome our first listener contestant. Hi, you're on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi. Hi, who's this? This is Jennifer. I live in Tampa, Florida. I am an ELCA Lutheran pastor. Yeah, so... I think, and I'm not sure about this, but the one person who was excited about Tampa was also the same person excited about you being a Lutheran. So, maybe it's a coincidence, maybe they're just really happy today. We don't know. Yes. Jennifer, welcome to the show. Let me introduce you to our panel this week. First, a comedian who will be appearing at the White Rabbit Cabaret in Indianapolis, Indiana on Thursday, April 23rd. It's Adam Burke. Hi, nice to meet you, Jennifer. Hi. Hi. Next up, you can see here April 23rd through the 26th that Rooster T. Feathers in San Jose, California and May 8th at the Hollywood Improv with the Netflix as a joke festival. It's Dulce Sloan. Hello. Hello. Hit me. Amen. And a comedian you can see it. Amen. And a comedian you can see it's Suboba Casino in San Jacinto, California, April 24th. And the comedy seller in Las Vegas, April 27th through May 3rd. It's Alonzo Bode. Hello. Hello. So, Jennifer, Reverend, Jennifer, welcome to the show. You're going to play who's Alzo this time? Alzo Slade 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. Any voice from our show you might choose for your voicemail. Ready to go? Okay. Here is your first quote, Jennifer. It's from the president attacking a new rival this week. He's very weak on crime. Apparently, President Trump was upset about the high crime rate in Vatican City as he took on who this week? Pope Leo. Yes, the Pope. Or to use his technical title, Duh Pope. Yes, the president got into a beef with the Pope about the war in Iran, but who knew that the Pope was weak on crime? That was surprising. It also raises the question, do we want a tough on crime Pope? Like, he takes your confession and instead of seven Hail Marys, he gives you the death penalty? And I gotta say, if President Trump thinks the Pope is weak on crime, wait till he finds out about the Buddha. If you wanted any proof that Donald Trump knows nothing about history, he's starting a beef with an Italian guy from Chicago. Exactly. That never ends well. An Italian guy from Chicago loves beef. That's true. And thinking about it though, but actually we thought about it, it'd be cool if the Pope did fight crime, right? It'd be exciting. Like, coming to Netflix this summer, only murders in the conclave. Well, they've already had murders in the conclave. That's true, yeah. That's how he kept getting new popes. Does Trump think he's weak on crime? Because last time he was in the Vatican, there was a bunch of guys nailed to wooden property everywhere. Pope didn't really think about it. So he starts this beef with the Pope and then he decides to like, you know, throw some fuel in the fire. He posts a picture of himself as Jesus healing the sick. And when he was criticized for this, he insisted, and this is true, oh, he's not supposed to be Jesus in the picture, don't you see? He's a doctor. That's what he said, because whose doctor doesn't wear flowing white robes and treats you with glowing beams of light emanating from his hand? Well, that's the Republican health plan. Right there, yeah. That's all you're gonna get. Jennifer, here is your next quote. Okay. Just take two aspirin. You'll be fine. That advice was given to a patient who was in fact suffering a serious medical condition. It was part of a study showing you should not ask what for medical advice. I'm gonna say AI, but perhaps I need a hint. No, you were right. AI, chat box, chat GPT. Everybody's doing it, but they shouldn't. New research says if you give AI a chat box, just one or two symptoms of something bothering you, they will fail to give you the right diagnosis. 80% of the time. Either they will, as that one did, dismiss a serious disease as nothing, or say a minor complaint, means you just have days to live. Robots are stealing other robots' jobs, telling me I'm gonna die is WebMD's thing. Yes! The head of health and human services is wrong 90% of the time. That's true, so it's an improvement. And he's certainly not a doctor. I mean, they're clearly trying to destroy us. They're trying, yes, I know. They're just saying it'll be fine. Have you guys ever done this? I know a lot of people actually use chat GPT and are very happy with it. Have you ever tried it? I used it. Yeah, I'd ask it for health advice. And what'd you get? Yeah, it told me that I was going through paraminopause. Does this play in the moon swings? Now, of course, the way the chatbots do is they just suck up all the information on the internet and they use predictive technology to figure out what to say. So this is true. A researcher in Sweden uploaded a fake paper, she wrote, describing a completely made up illness called bixanomania, including, thanks to, and I quote, researchers at Starfleet Academy and funding from the sideshow Bob Foundation in the paper. And sure enough, within a year, chatbots were telling people all over the world that they had bixanomania. The amazing part, bixanomania is what the Trump Jesus doctor was curing in that picture. So chat GPT is just a telephone psychic? Sort of? They have no information. They have absolutely nothing. So it's just Ms. Cleo? Well, sort of, Tana. No, no, because chat GPT does not cost 99 cents a minute. That's true. All right. Here, Jennifer, is your last quote. Stuff always gets left behind. I didn't have to pay for eggs for a hot minute. That was someone quoted in the Washington Post about why they like to eat the food people leave behind. Where? At a restaurant? Not at a restaurant. That would be creepy walking around, waiting for people to leave a table, diving in before the bus boy can get there. Yeah, I've done it, but I'm not recommending it. Can you give me a hint? Yeah, well, apparently they are supposed to clean between guests, but sometimes they don't check the fridge. Oh, in a hotel. Well, close in an Airbnb. More and more people are booking private vacation rentals, right? There's a growing debate as that happens about whether or not you should eat the leftovers you find in the fridge. Some people think that's gross. Other people are like, oh, great, free Baba Ganoush. I think. Wouldn't it depend on, like, if it's just like, oh, there's a bag of oranges. Right. I can see somebody doing that as opposed to, oh, there's chicken wings, the four of them got a bite out of it. Yeah, actually, you know who apparently eats a lot of it are the owners of the Airbnb. That's part of, I guess, a perk of being a landlord. One guy complained to the Post that his family wouldn't eat the leftovers he brought home from his rental, which he said recently included lobster mac and cheese. Come on, kids, it's just old cheese and shellfish. Other people has breathed on. It's great. Now, there's certain food items you know you're always going to find in a vacation rental, like your old vegetable oil, an unusably small amount of pancake mix. It's all useless. On the other hand, if you are going to make a recipe that calls for nothing but bay leaves, you are in business. Yes. Odd spices that don't connect. It's like cinnamon and majorum. I don't know what I'm supposed to make. Yeah, I can't put this on a chicken. Kind of weird cinnamon chicken. No, not cinnamon chicken. You can, and then leave it for the Airbnb owner. That'll teach him and ruin his night. Also, how did Jennifer do in our quiz? She got a perfect score, three out of three. Congratulations, Reverend. Yay! Hallelujah! Thank you so much for playing. It was very fun. Thank you very much. Take care. I'm a hungry man. That's what I am. I'm a hungry man. That's what I am. A hungry man. Right now, panel, it is time for you to answer some questions about this week's news. Alonzo, big news in cheese making. Thanks. I know, it's exciting. Thanks to a change in the law in Switzerland, the makers of traditional Swiss cheese will now be able to add artificial what to their cheeses? Holes. Yes, holes. In recent years, holes have started disappearing from traditional Swiss cheese, something I learned from my holes Google alert. It turns out... I'm so mad. A hole can't disappear. A hole is the disappearance of the thing that the hole is replacing. I'm about to lose my mind. Let me attempt to explain. It turns out in traditional Swiss cheese making, the holes in the cheese are caused by tiny particles of hay from the milk barn that gets into the milk. And with modern automatic milking technology, those little particles don't occur, right? So Swiss cheese makers want the holes back, but not from the guy who keeps showing up at the factory saying, I'll do it, no question about it. So they went to court in Switzerland and won the right to create their own holes artificially, and it's still Swiss cheese. I love that at some point in this saga, somebody pounded his fist in the table and said, get me the best damn cheese lawyer money can buy. I love that Switzerland basically sat out World War I and II, but this, they finally take a stand. Yeah, we gotta get the holes back. Coming up, the pressure is on, and this week's Bluff the Listener game called 1-888-WATE-WATE-TO-PLAY. We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR. This message comes from Wwise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart, get wise, download the Wwise app today or visit wise.com, tease and seize apply. From NPR and WBZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR news quiz. I'm Alzo Slade. We're playing this week with Alonzo Bodin, Adam Burke, and Dose Sloan. And here again is your host at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Sago. Thank you, Alzo. Thank you, everybody. Thank you, everybody. Right now it is time for the Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me Bluff the Listener game called 1-888-WATE-WATE-TO-PLAY. Our game on the air. Hi, Yaron. Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hello. This is Hannah and Austin. Hello, Hannah and Austin, Texas. What do you do there? I am a registered nurse turned private practicing license and massage therapist and end of life school us. So if I were dying for a massage, you would definitely be the person to go to. Exactly, exactly. Well, Hannah, welcome to the show. You're going to play our game on which you must write to tell truth from fiction. Alzo, what is Hannah's topic? You blew it. As the great philosopher Eminem said, you only get one shot. Do not miss your chance to blow. This week somebody had a chance to do something amazing but came up short. Our panelists are going to tell you about it. Pick the one who's telling the truth and you'll win the Wait, Waiter of your choice in your voicemail. Are you ready to play? I am. You are? Okay, well then let's play. Let's start then with Alonzo Bode. Wanna be influencer, Alan Lane bought a computer from Brandon Terrell on Facebook. He deleted the computer's memory, a bunch of math and maps, to edit videos of him smoking a cigar for his brand. He figured he'd get rich on millions of views. Now he has videos of him crying at the idea of losing millions of dollars. The former owner of the computer, Brandon Terrell Sr., spent a lifetime researching the Bermuda Triangle and had it figured out. He had researched wind and water currents, the times and temperatures of when things disappeared. Terrell believes that his research could have led to a fortune in sunken treasure. So Terrell Jr. sold the computer thinking all the data was backed up to iCloud, but he forgot to pay Apple the $3 monthly fee for extra storage, so it all vanished the data new owner erased it. Once he realized what had happened, he joined forces with the new owner. Lane smokes his cigars for views while Terrell tries to rebuild his computer from memory so he can make them both rich. And almost acquired the secret to untold riches at the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle, but erased it all. Your next story of a big chance comes from Dulce Sloan. We've all met up with friends after a work event and still had our work stuff with us, like a laptop, a suitcase full of comedy merch, or a Fabra J egg. That's what happened to Rosie Dawson, who was entrusted to show the Fabra J egg and matching watch to potential buyers by her employer, the Kraft Whiskey Company. When she was unable to sell the pieces, she did what anyone would do after a hard day at work. She put the egg in her bag and went to the pub. Enter Enzo Conticello, a run-in-a-mill pickpocket who noticed Dawson's $2,000 GVONCY handbag on the floor, so he stole it. Like he was supposed to. Because who puts a $2,000 bag with a Fabra J egg in it on the floor of a bar? Now, what does a petty thief do with a Fabra J egg? Well, he's a regular person who doesn't know what it is, so he traded the bag and everything in it for cocaine. He didn't find out the value of his thievery was about $2.7 million until he was in court. Now, do you know how much cocaine you can buy with $2.7 million? Now, I have no idea I'm a good Christian woman, but I'm sure it's a lie. A thief steals a purse, takes out the money and cards, and throws away the Fabra J egg inside. Your last story of somebody coming up short comes from Adam Burke. It's considered one of the greatest missed opportunities in sports history. Boston Red Sox owner Harry Frazzi sells Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees in 1920 for $100,000, ushered in an 84-year World Series drought for the socks, propelling the Yankees to huge success, and making Ruth a baseball legend. It's also a pivotal moment in a new musical about the Bambino, entitled simply Babe, exclamation point, which began production earlier this year in Boston. That was until Walt Gassman, the play's chief financial backer, dropped into rehearsals and witnessed some of the show's so-called hit numbers, such as, I'm not throwing away my shot, but I am calling it, a whole new world series, and ho-ho-ho where the murderers row, and decided he had a stinker on his hands. Enter Janice Keller, an aspiring empresario from the Bronx, who upon hearing Gassman complain about the show at a function offered to buy it from him. All the things he hated, I adored, says Keller, like when the sick kid flies in in his hospital bed, magic. And then a case of life imitating art, imitating life, Boston's loss has been New York's gain, with the play becoming an instant camp classic off-Broadway and quickly making its money back. I guess Boston won't win a Tony any time soon, groused Gassman. All right. These are your three stories of a lost opportunity. Was it from Alonzo Bowden, a guy who bought a computer and erased it, before he realized on it was the secret untold sunken treasure, from Dulce Sloan, a thief who grabbed a purse and threw it away, not realizing he had just thrown away a $2.5 million Faberge egg inside, or from Adam Burke, the story of Babe Ruth being sold from Boston to New York is recapitulated again in a musical about Babe Ruth being sold by Boston to New York. Which of these is the real story of a lost opportunity? Wow. The awesome. I have to pick Dulce. This seems like the human thing to do. The human thing to do, because who would think of the bringing up a purse that there's a Faberge egg inside? And he chose Dulce's story while we spoke to a reporter who covered the real story. He takes her to watch the handbag and she realizes, oh my gosh, my Faberge egg is being stolen. That was the Telegraphs of Warren Sheriff talking about the stolen slash not stolen Faberge egg in London. Congratulations, Henna. You got it right. You're in point for Dulce. You've won our prize. The voice of anyone you might choose for your voicemail. Thank you so much for playing with us today. Take care. Thank you. Thank you, Emily. And now the game we call Not My Job. The national hockey league playoffs begin next week and the winning team won't get their own version of the Stanley Cup, the championship trophy, because there is only one. Each member of the winning team, though, will get to have that one trophy for one day before it goes back on display. And that means somebody has to escort it safely from place to place. And that somebody is Phil Pritchard, a longtime employee of the Hockey Hall of Fame and the official guardian of the one and only Stanley Cup. And he joins us now. Phil Pritchard, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. So, first a fact check. Is that correct that hockey is the only major sport that does not give the trophy to the team to keep? They get to hold it up in the air and have it for a while, but then they have to give it back? Yeah, it's actually a pretty amazing tradition, Peter. The team wins it, obviously, in late June, and they get it for 100 days, which means everybody on the team gets an opportunity to take it home. Right. Not only the players, the coaches, the trainers, the equipment managers, the staff, everyone gets time with it because it's a team event. Right. And so why, do you know how that tradition began? Was it like they didn't have the money to make a new trophy every year? Well, you know what? You look at that trophy, it's three feet high, it's 38 pounds, it's pure silver. I think it's beautiful enough, you only want one of them. Nothing against the other sports traditions, they do a great job of it, but none of it is like the Stanley Cup. Right. Yeah, they didn't have the money. They didn't have the money, yeah. Thanks, Aldo. And this has been your job for a long time. You are the guy who brings the cup to the game, who gives it to the winning team, then takes it and brings it to each member of that team. That's your job. Yeah, and it's a pretty amazing summer because I only hang out with winners, so it's pretty good. Sure. Wow. Please tell me you have that on a T-shirt. How did you get that job, Phil? What skills did you bring to it? When he was little, he said, that's what I want to be when I grow up. Also, I don't think anyone ever says that. They want to win it. They want to bring it home to mom and dad. I didn't plan on bringing it to someone else's mom and dad. That didn't really work out that way. You know what's amazing though? I took a sports administration course in college, and one thing led to another. And working at the Hockey Hall of Fame, the game was evolving, and it became more and more an international sport, more than just North Americans, players from all around the world. So it began the effect of trying to, how do we get this trophy out there to everybody? And yours truly put up his hand and said, why don't we take it round and let everyone celebrate it with it per day? So I think we've been to 31 countries with it around the world now. Wait a minute, you just told me something I hadn't heard, which is that you came up with the idea of every member of the winning team getting it for one day? Well, also an idea, actually. Well, you know what it was. It was like, we got to figure out a way to get our sky miles up. So you said, I have an idea. Let's get it out in the world. Let's let every player and other associate of the winning team have it for a day. And then somebody said, well, that's ridiculous. Some idiot would have to pick up the damn thing and fly around the world with it for 100 days. Where are we going to find that fool? Here's the idiot right here. All right. Over the year. I was part of a whole team that came up with that idea. And I'm a little biased here, but I think it's one of the greatest traditions there is in sport because they get the chance to take it home to their hometown and celebrate with their family and friends. Okay. We on this show over the years have occasionally mentioned when it's made the news, some of the weirder things that the players especially have done with the cup during that precious day when it's in their possession. What are some of the weirdest things you've seen? Wow. We've been we've been water skiing on C-Dos with it. We've been in sauna parties in northern Finland. We've been mountain climbing in the Rocky Mountains. Wait a minute. Let's go back. A player says to you, all right, it's my I'm assuming it's a player. They get a lot of head blows to the head. He says, I'm going to take the Stanley Cup. I'm going to tuck it under my arm. I'm going to get on my my C-Doo, my jet ski type thing, and I'm going to scoot out across the ocean or lake holding it. And you say, make sure it's got a life jacket on. Has anyone ever offered you some cash to keep it a couple extra days or? A lot of cash, guys. This guys are well paid. So I imagine they're like, you know, hey, I got some friends who haven't seen it yet. That has happened. It has. You've seen the shirt I have on. I'm not well paid. Yeah. But you've resisted the temptation. Never taken a bribe. Let me ask you a question. I know that you played hockey. Well, you're Canadian. It's obvious you played hockey as a young man. You had aspirations. So presumably like all Canadian kids, you dreamed of the Stanley Cup yourself. Yeah. And given your job, have you ever imagined or planned what you would do? Were you to get the cup to yourself as one of the players or team members do? What would you do? You think if I had the chance to have it for a day, I mean, I think for me, I would bring it back into my backyard and have an open house and of course an open bar. Sure. And we'd have a party. And why not? Was anyone else expecting long walk on the beach? Yeah. The hell with them. Well, Phil Pritchard, it's a pleasure to have you here. And we have in fact invited you to play a game that we've come up with that we are calling. Let's go visit the NHL. By which we mean National Historic Landmarks. We're going to ask you three questions about this list of interesting sites that make up the other NHL. And if you get too right, you'll win our prize for one of our listeners, the voice of any person on our show that might choose for their voicemail. Also, who is Phil Pritchard of the Hockey Hall of Fame playing for? Sam Chang of San Carlos, California. All right. So here's your first question. All right, Sam, let's do this. All right, here's your first question. There is a long list you can find at the Department of the Interior website of National Historic Landmarks around the country. And one of the great things about it is the variety. It's not just old houses and battlefields. The list also includes which of these? A, the birthplace of Saran Wrap. B, the nation's first Claire's Store. Or C, the Fresno, California municipal sanitary landfill. Whoa, I'm going with A, Saran Wrap. You're going to go to the birthplace of Saran Wrap? Yes. I can imagine what the pilgrims would wear as they visited. No, it's actually C, the Fresno, California municipal sanitary landfill on the National Historic Landmark list. It was the first modern landfill in the US. Here's your next question. One of the newest landmarks designated in 2024 is the Kentucky birthplace of paleontology in North America. One of the first places where people started discovering fossils of ancient animals. What is it called? A, dinosaur hole. B, big bone lick. Or C, Jurassic Park. I'm going to go with B. You're going to go with big bone lick? You're right. Oh wow. Hundreds of years ago, pioneers and others discovered big bones there that were from mastodons and other prehistoric fauna. And also, living animals came there to lick salt. So, big bone lick. Alright, here's your last question. If you get this right, you win. So, be careful when you search for National Historic Landmarks online, because a Google search using AI told us that what is on the list of National Historic Landmarks? A, baby land general hospital, the fake hospital where cabbage patch kids dolls are quote, born. B, a tree Nicholas Cage hit with his car in 1987. Or C, a 40 foot high floating head of Daniel Boone. Whoa. I don't think it's Nicholas Cage. I'm going to go with cabbage patch kids. You're right again, boy. Yeah. Baby land general hospital is a real place in Georgia where you can go and pretend to get a just born cabbage patch kid. But it is not as far as we can tell, actually on the list of National Historic Landmarks. It will be now. I guess so. Yes. Also, how did Phil do in our quiz? Phil, you get a weight weight trophy that you can keep for yourself. You're a winner today. Yes. Take it home. It's just a tote bag. Phil Prichard is the keeper of the Stanley Cup, which you can see teams buy for this year in the NHL Playoff start on April 18. And now you know what's at stake. It'll be exciting for you. Phil Prichard, thank you so much for joining us on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Guys, thank you for having me. Thank you, Phil. Take care. And just a minute and learn of the secret to squeaky clean romance in our listener limber challenge called One Triple Eight, Whitway to Journeys 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 WISE, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart. Get WISE. Download the WISE app today or visit WISE.com. T's and C's apply. 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 Alonzo Bowden, Dose Sloan, and Adam Burke. And here again is your host at the Student Baker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segal. Thank you, Alzo. And just a minute for those of you who like your games easy and your rhymes approximate, it's our listener limber challenge. If you'd like to play, give us a call. One Triple Eight, Wait, Wait, That's One Triple Eight, Nine Two Four, Eight Nine Two Four. And now, panel, it is time, once again, for the game we call... The Trump Dump. Some weeks, news from the Trump administration comes out faster than you can say 25th Amendment. And what we do is we just collect it, round it up in one place, and we ask you about it, rapid fire, true, false style. Get yours right, you get a point. You all ready to play? Yeah. Here we go. Alonzo, true or false. In a sermon at the Pentagon, Pete Hegseth read a Bible verse he said it was from the book of Mark when actually it was from the book of Ezekiel. It was from the book of Pulp Fiction. It was, it was from the movie Pulp Fiction. Dulce, true or false. When addressing reporters about the war, Treasury Secretary Scott Besant mistakenly referred to the Strait of Hormuz as the Strait of Vermouth. True. Right. Adam, true or false. A new biography of RFK Jr. says he once cut off a dead raccoon's penis on a family vacation to quote, study it later. True. That is true. Alonzo, according to the biography, RFK later wrote in his journal quote, I was standing there cutting the penis out of a road killed raccoon thinking about how weird some of my family members have turned out to be. I'm going true. You're right again. Dulce. True or false. Donald Trump was criticized for skipping Iran negotiations to watch a UFC fight with vanilla ice. True. That is true. And Adam, true or false, after the fight, Donald Trump told the winner, you're the toughest fighter I've ever seen. I bet you could beat Iran all by yourself unquote. True. No, that is false. He said to the fighter quote, you could be a model. You look so good. You're too good looking to be a fighter. You're some fighter. You're a beautiful guy. You know, you know the disembodied raccoon penis? Yes, I do. Is that what we're supposed to take instead of Tylenol? Probably. And that's it for this week's Trump Dump. We'll be back with another edition before you know it and before you want it. Now panel, some questions about the week's news for you. Adam, two pilots were scolded this week after air traffic controllers at National Airport in D.C. heard what coming over the radio from the cockpit? It wouldn't by any chance be the sound of like a cat meowing. Yes, indeed. Meowing and barking. Air traffic control in D.C. heard meowing and barking coming from an active cockpit out there on the tarmac, but there were no pets on the airplane. It was the pilots doing the meowing and barking. Air traffic told them they needed to be more professional and this is true. In reaction, the pilots barked and meowed even more. And things got even worse when the pilots got the zoomies. That's a small space? This was recorded and so the air traffic control was then heard telling the pilots, and this is true, this is why you still fly a regional jet. Damn! Major air traffic control guess, man. That is shade. That is coal. That is coal. Not the American Eagle. They could have tagged it with four-spirit airlines. That's true. The airplane only got 30 seats and we know why. When they said that, did the pilots start growling? Errr. Anyway, for those interested in this, the pilots in the story are now available for adoption at your local D.C. S.J. S.J. S.J. S.J. Coming up, it's lightning-filled in the blank, but first it's the game where you have to listen for the rhyme. If you'd like to play on air, call or leave a message at 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-8-8-9-2-4-8-9-2-4. You can see us most weeks right here at the Studebaker Theater in downtown Chicago, or catch us on the road in Austin, Texas at Bass Concert Hall on the 4th of June. And if you like our show, but wish it was actually sort of a different show, you can check out our comedy grab bag stand-up show at the Bell House in Brooklyn on April 24th. Josh Gondelman will be hosting. He'll be joined by our very own Peter Gross and some exciting special guests. For tickets and information to all our live events, go to nprpresents.org. Hi, Aaron. Wait, wait, don't tell me. Hi. Hi, who's this? This is Tracy Clark Johnson. Hello, Tracy Clark Johnson. How are you? Where are you calling from? I am calling from Richmond Hill, Georgia. Wow. Where is Richmond Hill? So Richmond Hill is about 30 minutes from Savannah, Georgia, and I was there at the Johnny Mercer Theater recently and saw you guys live. Yeah, that's great. I'm so glad we were there just recently. Had a great time. Well, welcome back, I guess, then, Tracy. Alzo Slade is going to read for you three news-related lemuricks with the last word or phrase missing from each. If you can fill in that last word or phrase correctly, two of the lemuricks will be a winner. You ready to play? I am ready to play. Let's do it. Here's your first lemurick. On our dates, we get down on all fours. That's because we are scrubbing the floors. We do laundry and shop, clean the windows and mop. We get frisky by doing our chores. Yes, chores, the hot new trend in dating. It's chore mats, where instead of going out, you stay home and do, quote, regular housework or daily life chores. Sounds boring? Okay. But have you ever felt the electricity of folding a fitted sheet with somebody new? Hands are everywhere. According to one psychologist, having a chore mats is a good way to make mundane tasks more exciting. Okay, taxes are a drag, but chore mats are your taxes and they become a neurotic adventure. Hey, honey, this is Charles Schwab. He just is going to watch. You know, if you feel electricity with someone while folding laundry, just use one of those dryer sheets. Yeah, exactly. I'll see you again. Listen, I might be judged for saying this, but it's given broke. It's given broke. Here's the thing. Listen, I love to go on a little, you know, let's go shopping. We'll do like a little, like, run an errand that doesn't consist of me cleaning your, I just got here. I mean, I've been told sex is a chore before. Is that what they mean? Pretty much. I mean, let's face it, you know, people present themselves one way when they're on a date, but you see a different side of them when you're doing chores. You can even create special bonding moments like when the man says, let's take it slow. It's my first time cleaning a bathtub. Here is your next limerick. This protein filled energy belt, sir, is refreshing when temperatures swell, sir. The bubbly cold drink comes in yellow and pink. Beyond meat is now making a... Seltzer. Yeah, seltzer. If you love Beyond Burgers and Beyond Chicken, the fake meat, you're the kind of freak who's going to love Beyond Seltzer. The new sparkling beverage contains not only vitamins and electrolytes, but also 10 to 20 grams of pea protein. Incidentally, drink enough of this and you will also pea protein. I've never been asked, would you like your water medium rare? I think what happened is it was just like, okay, we've got all this protein that we used to make the fake meat, right? We're not selling the fake meat, so we need to make drinks. But I think there was some guy who was like, well, Seltzer's popular. This is like a real Crystal Pepsi situation. Right. Because like, well, Seltzer's popular. Yeah, because that did so well. Exactly. It's just going to taste like hot dog water because in that case, I'm in. All right. Here is your last limerick. My sweet tooth has one holy grail. It's when seasonal candies on sale. Some treats grow a crust. That is really a must. I prefer to eat peeps that are stale. Stale, yes, Easter has come and gone. But according to many candy lovers, this is exactly when you want to eat your leftover peeps when they are stale. People say the candy is best when the outside has gotten crunchy, but the inside is still soft. Just like a real bird. What? And if the word stale is kind of throwing you off, one Redditor said, quote, calling them aged is much fancier. That's true. That's why I always pair my four week old peeps with a 2020 bottle of Nesquik. First of all, peeps is nasty. Second, it's like I've never understood the peep. And you know now the peep people was like, oh, we can do this other times of the year. So now they got July 4 peeps. Oh, really? They got sent. Yeah, they just put it. Are they called we the peeps? They're not. Idiots. Also, how did Tracy do on our quiz? I forgot to pronounce the full name. Tracy Clark Johnson. Sorry, excuse me. Got three out of three. She's the winner. Thank you, guys. Well done. Thank you, sis. Welcome, guys. Love y'all. This message comes from WISE, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart. Get WISE. Download the WISE app today or visit WISE.com. T's and C's apply. 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. Do you need to correct the answer now with two points? Also, can you give us the scores? Absolutely. Dose is kicking butt with five points. Alonzo has four. And Adam is pulling up the rear with three. Okay. All right, Adam, you're in third place. You're up first. The clock will start when they begin your first question. Fill in the blank. According to a new poll, only 25% of Americans see the war with blank as a success. Iran? Right. On Sunday, Peter Magyar defeated Viktor Orban to become the next prime minister of blank. Is it Turkey? No, it's Hungary. I know. In order to highlight a city's failing infrastructure, a politician in South Africa blanked. Oh, didn't he like take a bath in a pothole or something? You're so, yeah, based on what you gave me, he went snorkeling in a pothole. He was deep enough to snorkel in. This week's soccer fans were outraged over reports that train tickets to see a blank game in New Jersey may cost more than $100. The World Cup. Right, on Tuesday, Lux Maxing Influencer blank was admitted to the hospital for an apparent overdose. I hate that I know this. Clavicular. Yes, at an Easter celebration in South Korea, the man playing Jesus, who was supposed to be lifted 20 feet in the air by a crane. At the climax, ended up blanking. I saw this. He just kept going. Yes, he ended up flying. He flew into the air to the height of a skyscraper. And what might be the most amazing video anybody has ever seen, the man playing Jesus at an outdoor event at the moment of his resurrection. And a scent to heaven starts to ascend from the stage and then pretty much actually goes to heaven. He just keeps going. What was he attached to? He was attached to a cable that was being held by a... Raised by a crane. Like the Lord. Yeah, by the Lord. And everyone watching thought it was the rapture. I promise that if you haven't watched the video, you're watching this and going, well, obviously he can't keep going higher. He goes higher. He did. He passed the Artemis crew on the other way. Whoa. Also, how did Adam do in our quiz? He got five right for 10 points, total of 13. All right. Alonzo, you are up next, fill in the blank. On Wednesday, Russia conducted a large-scale drone strike against blank. Ukraine? Right. According to the IRS, this year's average blank refund is higher than last year. Tax. Right. This week, outbreaks of blank continue to spread throughout the country. Miesel? Right. According to a new study, people taking weight loss drug blank reported it dulled their emotions. The GLP-1? Yeah. In the like this week, Toronto's CN Tower lit up periwinkle blue in honor of blank. Oh, I don't know, Canada. No, in honor of irritable bowel syndrome awareness month. How did I not know that? Clearly you weren't aware of it. On Thursday, health officials in the U.S. warned of a new blank resistant bacteria. Vaccine? Well, I'll give it to you, drug resistant. According to a new study, blank song closely parallels the patterns of human speech. Bird? No, whale song. This week, a woman with a knee injury who was promised an empty row on her flight was surprised to find the seats filled and more surprised when one of her seat mates blanked. Had a bad knee? No, gave her a 30 minute foot massage. Is that legal? Apparently, the unexpected extra passenger quote noticed the woman tending to her hurt knee and insisted that she keep her leg up and begin a 30 plus minute reflexology massage. So the next time you're annoyed when the person next to you in a flight wants to talk, just remember, it could be worse. Alzo, how did Alonzo do an arquist? All right, he got five right for 10 more points. He has now a total of 14 and the lead. All right. So how many then? Does Dulce need to win? She needs five to win. Okay, Dulce, this is for the game. Fill in the blank. On Wednesday, a jury ruled that Live Nation and blank operated as a monopoly to dominate the ticketing industry. True? Live Nation and blank, another company. Oh, ticket master. Right. On Tuesday, the Justice Department moved to dismiss the seditious conspiracy convictions against certain participants in the blank riot. January 6th. Right. This week, runners in the recent Milwaukee Marathon were surprised to discover that the designers of the medal they received had blanked. Stolen the medals. No, the designers of the medal they received had misspelled the word marathon on it. During their historic mission to the blank, the crew of the Artemis 2 returned home this last week. Yes, this week, the designers of a new Nintendo game said they spent a large part of the nine-year development cycle getting blank just right. They're ramen recipe. No, getting the fart sounds in the game just right. Tomodachi Life, Living the Dream is this new cozy town simulator, kind of like Animal Crossing, except all the cute animals are just ripping ass all the time. The designers spent years working on the fart sounds with most programmers worried they weren't cartoonish enough. There's still a little realism left in the final product, though any time your character lets out a fart, they immediately say, that wasn't me. Also, did Dulce do well enough to win? No, not really. No. She got three right for six more points total of 11, which means Alonzo wins. Congratulations, Alonzo Dode. This week's champion. In just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict after all the food left behind in fridges, what will be the next reason Airbnb is in the news. But first, let me tell you all that, wait, wait, don't tell me, is a production of NPR and WBZ, Chicago, an association with urgent hair cut productions, Doug Berman, Benevolent Overlord, Philip Gotica writes our limericks, our public address announcers, Paul Friedman, thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theater. BJ Liedemann, composer, our theme, our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Morabos, and Lillian King. Special thanks to Mohanad El-Shehih and Monica Hickey. Peter Gwynne is the official guardian of the Weight Weight Cup. Emma Choi is our vibe curator, technical directionist from Moreno-Wyder, CFOs Colin Miller, our production managers, Robert Newhouse, our senior producer, Zian Chilag, and the executive producer. Wait, wait, don't tell me, is Mike Danforth, now panel, what's the next big Airbnb story in the news? Alonzo Boden. Airbnb on the Moon. Don't say Sloan. Kid B&B, where you can adopt annoying kids left behind on vacation. And Adam Burke, they'll also start offering discount flights with a new company called Airbnb. And if any of that happens, we'll ask you about it on Weight Weight, don't tell me. Thank you Alonzo Slade, thanks also to Alonzo Boden, don't say Sloan. Thanks to all of you for listening, thanks to our fabulous audience here at the Smith & Baker Theater. Great to see you all, I'm Peter Sagle, we'll see you next week. This message comes from Avallera.