Summary
This episode of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! features a news quiz with panelists Shane O'Neill, Amy Dickinson, and Alonzo Bowden, guest Renée Rapp discussing her Mean Girls role and new album 'Bite Me', and segments on Canada geese management, binge-watching health benefits, and viral office etiquette disputes.
Insights
- Binge-watching entire TV series provides psychological benefits by enabling viewers to engage with complex narratives that help contextualize daily life challenges
- Music criticism is becoming increasingly risk-averse due to fan retaliation, with publications refusing to credit reviewers to protect them from online harassment
- Familects (family-specific dialects) are linguistically recognized phenomena that create in-group communication and bonding among family members
- Vintage photo booth technology is experiencing a cultural resurgence as consumers seek tactile, analog experiences in digital-first environments
- Sungazing trends on TikTok demonstrate how misinformation about ancient practices spreads rapidly despite serious health risks
Trends
Wellness misinformation spreading via social media (sungazing, organ transplant immortality claims)Fan-driven accountability creating chilling effects on professional criticism and media coverageNostalgia-driven consumer behavior favoring analog technologies (photo booths, real candles) over digital alternativesCelebrity crush culture focused on middle-aged men in positions of power and authorityNon-lethal wildlife management using multi-technology approaches (drones, lasers, dogs)Workplace communication norms shifting around personal habits and narration in shared spacesAI-generated content infiltrating e-commerce platforms without disclosure or detectionTherapeutic benefits of narrative-driven entertainment gaining scientific validation
Topics
Binge-watching and mental health benefitsMusic criticism and online harassmentFamilect linguisticsCanada geese management in CaliforniaTwilight Saga cultural impactSungazing health risksPhoto booth resurgenceWorkplace etiquette and lunch narrationAI-generated content in retailFish neurobiology and pleasureCandlelight in restaurantsFederal funding disputes with universitiesAntitrust regulation of tech companiesCelebrity culture and parasocial relationshipsVaccine requirement policy changes
Companies
Netflix
Mentioned as likely funder of binge-watching health study that validates prolonged TV consumption
Napoleon Grill Company
Customer support phone number mistakenly listed on website, leading to retired couple answering calls for 6 months
The Washington Post
Employs panelist Shane O'Neill as Style Memo newsletter writer
Paste Magazine
Published anonymous scathing review of Taylor Swift's 'The Tortured Poets Department' due to fear of Swiftie retaliation
The New Yorker
Published article arguing music critics need to be meaner in their reviews
NPR
Broadcaster and producer of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! show
WBEZ Chicago
Co-producer and broadcast partner of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!
Newsmax
Sued Fox News claiming it holds monopoly on right-wing television news
Fox News
Defendant in Newsmax antitrust lawsuit over right-wing TV news market dominance
McDonald's
UK operations saw leadership change after nearly two years; Jack Daniels boycott mentioned in Canada
Jack Daniels
Experienced 60% sales drop due to boycott in Canada
Google
Ruled in antitrust case that it will not be required to sell off Chrome web browser
Harvard University
Subject of White House federal funding suspension ruled illegal by judge
SNL
Saturday Night Live announced five new cast members this week
Sheehan
Clothing company launching investigation into AI-generated image of accused murderer Luigi Mangione on website
People
Renée Rapp
Guest discussing her role as Regina George in Mean Girls movie and new album 'Bite Me'
Peter Segal
Host of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! news quiz show
Bill Curtis
Voice announcer and quiz reader for Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!
Shane O'Neill
Panelist and Style Memo newsletter writer for Washington Post
Amy Dickinson
Panelist and founder of Freeville Literary Society; Ask Amy Newsletter on Substack
Alonzo Bowden
Panelist performing at Beale Street Theater in Kingman, Arizona and Grand Comedy Club in San Diego
Vladimir Putin
Caught on hot mic discussing organ transplants and immortality at Beijing summit with Xi Jinping
Xi Jinping
Met with Putin at Beijing summit where they discussed organ harvesting and immortality
Stephanie Meyer
Author of Twilight series; chose Forks, Washington as setting based on rainiest place in US
Kalefa Sana
New Yorker music critic arguing that critics need to be meaner in their reviews
Taylor Swift
Subject of anonymous scathing review by Paste Magazine of her album 'The Tortured Poets Department'
Mark Cuban
Subject of Renée Rapp's celebrity crush discussed on Stephen Colbert
Luigi Mangione
AI-generated image of him appeared on Sheehan clothing company website without disclosure
Quotes
"Human organs can be continuously transplanted. People could even become immortal."
Vladimir Putin•Opening segment
"Binge watching entire series of TV rather than just like little TikToks or intermittent episodes helps you imagine complicated alternate narratives"
Panel discussion•Quiz segment
"Critics need to get mean again, according to the New Yorker's music critic"
Kalefa Sana•News quiz
"Sylvia Plath did not stick her head in an oven for this"
Paste Magazine review•Taylor Swift discussion
"Butch lesbians with jobs, girl. That's what I like."
Renée Rapp•Guest interview
Full Transcript
Come in PR and nobody be easy Chicago. This is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me The NPR News Quiz. I'm the voice so big it won't fit in the overhead compartment. Bill Curtis and here is your host at the Studebaker Theater at the Fine Arts Building in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segal. Thank you Bill, thank you everybody. Great to be back home. It's early fall in Chicago, it's really the best time here. We got bright skies, cool breezes off the lake, we got both football and baseball and we just want to give a big warm welcome to all the visiting National Guardsmen from Texas and Oklahoma. Hey everybody, welcome. Oh no. We love them. Everybody have a great time, enjoy yourselves and make sure you order ketchup on your hot dogs. We love when you do that. Later on we're going to be talking to actor and pop star Renee Rapp but first we want to hear your singing. So give us a call. The number is 1-888-WAIT-WAIT. That's 1-888-924-8924. That's welcome. Our first listener contestant. Hi you are on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Hi, I'm Abby. I'm calling from Chicago. Hey. What do you do here in the greatest city in the world? I am a flight attendant. Oh wow. Yeah. Yeah. What is the number one annoyance to flight attendants such as yourself? Oh God. I think it has to be the shoes and socks off. Oh. Like flights under like two hours. We don't need to be that comfortable. Right. I can't. Well thank you for your service, Abby. Let me introduce you to our panel this week. First up say hello to the writer of the Style Memo newsletter for the Washington Post. It's Shane O'Neill. Hello Abby. How are you? Hi. Good. Next we welcome back the founder of the Freeville Literary Society and Free Cinema. Her asking Amy Newsletter is on Substack. It's Amy Dickinson. Hi Abby. Hi. And comedian you can see at the Beale Street Theater in Kingman, Arizona, September 27th and at Grand Comedy Club in San Diego, October 4th. It's Alonzo Bowden. Hello Abby. So Abby you're going to play Who's Bill this time? Bill Curtis of course is going to read you three quotations from this week's news. If you can correctly identify or explain two of them you will win our prize. Any voice from our show you might choose for your voicemail. Are you ready to go? I think so. Yeah. All right. Here we go. Your first quote is from Vladimir Putin caught on a hut mic at a big summit this week talking about wellness. Human organs can be continuously transplanted. People could even become immortal. That was just one of the creepy things overheard as Putin talked with what other world leader at their big summit in Beijing this week. Ooh. I might need a hit. Well it was in Beijing and he was talking to another world leader. That's exactly the president of China. Yeah, Xi Jinping, president of China. They got together. They got together without us. A lot of people got worried when the US's two biggest global enemies met in an unprecedented show of unity. Would they gang up on us? So it is reassuring that apparently all they talked about was harvesting our organs so that they could stay in power forever. When you talk about not reading a room you have leaders that nobody wants around tomorrow talking about how to live forever. That's true. And you have to remember they're doing all this weird talk about like organ harvesting through a translator of course, right? You should have seen like this translator's face when Putin said, no, you need a nice youthful donor. Like this guy here. Do you think that they knew the mic was on and this was just a beautiful troll of Trump? Like they're talking about how to live forever and he's not there. Do you know how much that would drive him nuts? We do know that our president is jealous of those guys so maybe he's trying to get in on this. That's what it turns out they were throwing out the residence at the White House throwing out the windows. It was Trump's old organs. I mean I would like to hear Vladimir Putin saying, fame, I'm going to live forever. I'm going to learn how to fly. The New York Times article on this points out that there is no evidence that replacing a person's organs one by one and in fact extend a person's life which is why Putin is planning to surprise some lucky person and do it all at once. All right, Abby here is your next quote. It's about new research into a habit that many of us have. Just one more episode. Just one more episode. That was science blog summing up a new study, a real one that finds out that what habit is actually good for you? Binge watching. Binge watching, yes. It's good for you. Sitting on the couch and binge watching TV for hours at a time is good for your health. This is great news. Bed sores are the new abs. So this study had to be funded by Netflix. Probably, yes. Yes, an Intor Dash, yes. It's an interesting collaboration in silence. No, the idea, all right, follow along here, is that binge watching entire series of TV rather than just like little TikToks or intermittent episodes. It helps you imagine complicated alternate narratives to get involved in that can help you escape or give context to the pains of your daily life, right? So for example, is your boss just incredibly annoying? Why not take just a long mental stroll down the happy corridors of severance? Or, you know, if you're tired of dressing like a human being, you can watch Emily in Paris and get all sorts of things. Exactly. Yeah. But now that we know that binge watching is good for you, it's ruined. It's like one more thing we have to be guilty about not doing. Oh, man, I need to get in my 10,000 minutes of screen time. Oh, sorry, I wasn't paying attention. I just heard binging was good for you and I was texting my dealers. I understand. I understand. Do Americans need another reason to lay on the couch all day? Like, aren't we good enough at that without another saying, yeah, this is really good. Can't you just say I'm an American and just lay down? Right. Exactly. Just own it. Just lay down. You don't need an excuse. I mean, my brain is so rotted from TikTok that like when I watch a full 30 minutes of cops, I'm like, yeah, good for me. Yeah. I have achieved something. Yeah. All right, Abby, your last quote is actually a 1970 review of a classic Bob Dylan album titled Self Portrait. What is this crap? That was just one of the reviews cited by a writer in the New Yorker this week who's arguing that critics these days need to be what? Meaner. Yes, meaner. Critics need to get mean again, according to the New Yorker's music critic, Kalefa Sana, that no talent hack. He's absolutely right. The only problem with the world right now is that everybody is just too nice. But you know, I agree. Like lots of criticism, so-called, you know, critics, they really just tell you the story. Right. You know, it's been ages since I've read. Well, probably since my last book came out. Exactly. I read a real slam. It's true. I don't know about other critics. I can say in sports this has happened. Like Stephen A. Smith has brought in this thing of the sportscaster, sports announcer, whether being so critical. And the problem is you didn't play. Right. How can you tell somebody whether they're good at it or not? You haven't been there. I mean, as a counter to that, I occasionally will critique things or write reviews of things. I would say shut up. Yeah. All right. Well, you shut up. No, you shut up. You shut up. This is the good old day. There we go. This is the Algonquin round table. Exactly. Pretty much. So it was like, part of the problem these days, of course, is the online community of fans and how mean they can be. Right. For example, this is true. The Music Magazine Paste wrote a scathing review of Taylor Swift's recent album, The Tortured Poets Department, but they refused to admit who wrote it because they were afraid of retaliation against that person by Swifties. You did not mess. I mean, really, you don't mess with Swifties. Absolutely not. They are vicious. And if they ever found out who wrote the line, and this is real from that review, quote, Sylvia Plath did not stick her head in an oven for this, unquote, we'd have the first ever person in the witness protection program for music criticism. Wow. Bill, how did Abby do in our quiz? Our fly the tendon hit 30,000 feet and she hasn't come down yet. Is that good? That sounds good. That's good. That's a winner, three in a row. Well done, Abby. Thank you. Bye, Mike. Bye, Mike. Bye, Mike. Right now, panel, time for you to answer some questions about this week's news. Amy saying they will use drones, dogs, and even lasers as city council in California thinks they finally have a plan to manage what? It has to be about toddlers. It isn't. Dang. Dogs. It is an animal. They came from the north, from Canada. Geese. Geese, yes. The DM geese. For years, Foster City, California has been trying to get the Canada geese out of its parks. Canada geese, as I'm sure you all know, poop every 20 minutes. They're also horrible attitudes. Better than bird that makes you think, you know, God does make mistakes. So now the city has come up with a solution after many years. They've got a big elaborate plan. It uses drones, dogs, and lasers. They're hoping to make the parks inhospitable to geese. They're calling the plan non-lethal, but when asked about that, they said, oh, no. You mean for the geese? Oh, no, we're killing them. When geese are pooping all over your city and not the neighboring cities, you might want to look at your city. That's true. Like, what are we doing that the geese have found us such a nice target? I just love that the plan was hatched. They were like, we got to solve this geese problem. We're going to ask the weird kid from sixth grade for a plan. Like, lasers and dogs, and drones, robot dogs. Shoot them all with the lasers. The dogs have lasers and the drones have dogs. Yeah, that's what we're going to do. I'm actually doing that. Coming up, do the right thing in our Bluff the Listener game called 1-888-888-888. We'll be back in a minute with more of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me from NPR. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curtis. We are playing this week with Shane O'Neill, Amy Dickinson, and Alonzo Bowden. Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and Thanks and where we also have eats. You do. But you're Minnesota nice. You would never use like lasers, drones, and dogs in the geese, would you? Never, no. No. Well. I love Minnesota. Clark, welcome to the show. You're gonna play our game in which you have to tell truth from fiction. Bill, what is Clark's topic? Good Samaritan in the news. Sometimes a hero steps forward to help when no one else will, which is great because I certainly wanna do it. I'm busy. Our panelists are gonna tell you about a good Samaritan we found in the news this week. Pick the one who's telling the truth and you will win our prize, the weight-weight winner of your choice in your voicemail. Are you ready to play? I sure am. All right, first let's hear from Amy Dickinson. Mariana Comienovic and Jim Claessen are a retired couple living in rural British Columbia whose phone started ringing off the hook last spring. And these strangers calling them from all across Canada wanted to know one thing. How do I use my new grill? The couple figured out that the Napoleon Grill Company has mistakenly listed their telephone number on their customer support page. But instead of complaining, well, they just answered the questions for six months. They gave out grilling advice, technical fixes that they had researched themselves, and genially shot the breeze about rural life in Canada and I suppose how the oilers were doing this year. So eventually the grill company sorted out the glitch. But in recognition for their faithful service, they named the couple Honorary Customer Service Ambassadors and gave them a brand new grill. And what are they doing with it? They're hosting the staff of Napoleon Grills to a cookout. Now that's service. A couple in Canada who unwittingly became the customer support line for a grill company and just went ahead and did it. Your next story of somebody doing the right thing comes from Alonzo Bowden. Andy Keen loved the gym. He loved the workout, the vibe, and of course the results. What he couldn't stand was lazy people not putting their weights away. Nothing was more frustrating than getting a 25 pound dumbbell and having to search for the other one. So Andy decided to do something about it. He started putting the weights away. He soon realized he was getting a full body workout just carrying weights back to the racks. His good deed was paying off. Soon his entire workout routine was cleaning the gym. He was even picking up treadmills to get rid of the dust bunnies underneath. The man was yoke. And soon his gains were an inspiration to many. His habit was picked up when someone posted on Instagram, look at this guy being so considerate at the gym. Something that's never been said before. Now cleaning up the gym is the new hot fitness trend. Andy says it's a problem because now all the weights are already put away. So his next goal is cardio while returning shopping carts from the grocery store parking lot. A man starts putting the weights back at the gym and creates a whole new fitness craze. Your last story of people helping people comes from Shane O'Neill. Skip Lindstrom of Race Scene Wisconsin had noticed that some of his neighbors were having a hard time keeping up their front yards. I grew up on this block and keeping a neat lawn was always a point of pride for us, Skip said. Then he added, unprompted, also, don't you wish it were Christmas every single day? You see, Skip is kind of a Christmas freak, but he also likes helping his neighbors. So Skip started knocking on his neighbors' doors. I'd say, hey, let me tidy up your lawn. And they'd say, sorry, I can't afford to help. And I'd say, no, no, no, I'll do it for free. Also, don't you wish it were Christmas every single day? For neighbors in need, Skip will mow your lawn, poleweeds, trim edges, and prune bushes. All he asks in return is permission to decorate your house in Christmas lights that will stay up your round. Oh, god. I don't much care for Christmas, said Roger L. Roy, standing next to a seven-foot inflatable Santa Claus on an 85-degree day in late August. But for free longcare? Yeah, I guess. One by one, everyone on the block got on board. Now, Skip is finally mounting his most ambitious design yet, giant letters tacked under the facade of every house on that block that spell out Christmas every day. It's a labor of love, but it's cutting into the time he has for landscaping. In fact, several of the lawns on his block are starting to look a little overgrown. All right, so here are your stories of somebody doing the right thing for once. Is it from Amy Dickinson, a couple in Canada, who unwittingly became the customer service agents for a grill company and just kept it up? From Alonzo Bodin, a guy who started picking up the weights in his own gym and started a whole new fitness craze by doing so. Or from Shane O'Neill, a Wisconsin man who took care of everybody's lawn just in return for it being Christmas every day. Which of these is the real story of somebody doing good? Well, I'm tempted by the Wisconsin man, but I think that the couple in Vancouver are more Minnesota Knights, so I'm going to go with them. Yeah, and there is a strong bond between Canada Knights and Minnesota Knights, so I can see how you went there. You betcha. Oh, yeah. Oh, I love it. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, all right. Well, to see if you're right, let's listen to this. It is actually one of the do-gooders themselves. We were actually getting sometimes up to 20 phone calls a day. That was Mariana Komlianovich talking to the CDC about her time as a part-time grill fixer. Congratulations, Clark. You got it right. You earned a point for Amy just for telling the truth, and you've won our prize, The Voice of Your Choice and Your Voice Mail. Well done, sir. Congratulations. Thank you. Thank you for playing with us today. Take care. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. It's OK. And now the game we call Not My Job. Singer and actor Renee Rapp starred as the meanest mean girl, Regina George, in the musical movie version of Mean Girls. She's also released a hit album of her own songs. And if you want to know what she thinks of her sudden, deserved, massive fame as a pop star, her latest album is called Bite Me. Renee Rapp, welcome to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Thank you. Thank you. I'm so excited to talk to you. I loved you in the Mean Girls movie. I loved your first album. But mainly, I am so excited to know that an absolute, genuine, double A grade pop star was a theater kid. Yeah. Yeah, it's my roots. It is. It's my roots. Like, how young were you when you first got into theater? I wasn't really into theater immediately. I was always a huge fan of pop stars and a huge fan of singers and musicians. And then I was just so, I think, annoying to be around for my family that they were like, well, you would do well in the theater. Clearly. And they were right. Yes. You'll have rehearsal late into the evening. So we won't see you anymore. Exactly. Yes, I can't be around for too long, which was nice. But I did. I missed a lot because I was in theater. I missed the death of my first pet. I missed the death of my hamster. My mom had to braid that on her own because I was in a thrilling production of Annie. Did the sun come up the next day, Renee? Just asking. The sun absolutely came out tomorrow. And I took myself back to that damn tin bucket and did a hard knock life 10 times better and in lieu of my hamster's death. Wow. Yeah. I love that even at 10, you were able to take that tragedy of the loss of your hamster and transform it into art. Absolutely. I was like, how can I make this about myself? Your first album, Snow Angels, came out a few years ago. Massive hit. Your new album out this summer is called Bite Me. And it has songs. These are just the titles that you wrote the lyrics to. Mad. Leave me alone. Why is she still here? I can't have you around me anymore. And I think I like you better when you're gone. So Renee, we just met, but is everything OK? No. No. At the time, no, not at all. I was just at such a point in my life where everyone felt so, how do you say it, politely? Everyone was just so annoying to be around. And I was so fed up with myself. I was fed up with my work life. I was like, I don't have fun anymore. And I wanted to write an album that was like, I want everyone to get and stay the hell away from me. And I kind of did exactly that. Like, it is just, it is thematically the title. Bite Me. Just. Yeah. I was like, because I can't say, like, you know, I'm not really sure if I can cuss. But so if you need to bleep me out, it's OK. I can't really say, like, get the f*** off my back in a title. Because then, like, everything is going to censor me. You know? And then that just won't sell, girl. So I had to find a way. Glad you leavened your rage and bitterness with a little bit of commercial sense. I think that's fine. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. People say that I'm on media training. That's censored. So watch it. OK. It's an amazing record. And the songs are stunning and fun and crazy. And great. And I recommend it to everybody. Thank you. I want to ask you one more thing. You were on Stephen Colbert recently. And you talked about, I was deeply surprised, because I thought I knew you from your work, about your massive crush on Mark Cuban. Whoa. The billionaire. Oh, whoa. I know. I understand that this doesn't really seem like my thing. No. You know, it's a boy. It's one thing. I have a very specific brand of that age of white boy that really does it for me for some reason. There's a thing there that they do that I'm super into. It's kind of like he to me is the equivalent to Jason Sudeikis on Ted Lasso. And then there's this other guy who also is kind of in that. I'm forgetting his name off the top of my head. But he plays the evil brother in Game of Thrones. He's Cersei Lannister. You know the incest? He's the boy. Oh, that guy. Yeah, OK. I know who you mean. Nicholas Costa Waldo, that guy. Love. You know what? Yes, I'm so obsessed with him. I saw him at a game one time, I think. I went up to him and he didn't even get a word. I was like, love you. You're so cute. There's something about you that really gets me going and walks away immediately. So then you fall in that category of that bracket of white men. I love them. And there's so few middle-aged men that I like. Sure. I don't mean to be presumptuous here, but these are all middle-aged men with full heads of hair wearing dark suits. If you squint, those are just butch lesbians. Butch lesbians with jobs, girl. That's what I like. That's what I like. Well, it is an absolute joy to talk to you, Renee. And we have, in fact, asked you here to play a game we're calling Bite Me, Edward Cullen. Please, Bite Me. So your new album, as we have mentioned, your new album is called Bite Me, which, of course, immediately reminded us of the Twilight Vampire Saga. Answer three questions about those moody, damp vampires. Oh, God. No, and you will win a prize for one of our listeners, the voice of anyone from our show. They might choose for their voicemail. Bill, who was Renee Rapp playing for? Jack Owens of Dead Verk, Colorado. OK. OK. I just have to ask, before we get started, I think you're in the right demographic for her. Were you a fan of the Twilight Saga at any time? I loved Twilight as a Kid. Rob Hatson also goes in that guy right by the end. I knew it. I loved Twilight as a Kid. I cannot tell you the last time I watched Twilight, though. All right. Yeah. Here's your first question, Renee. Twilight takes place, the book's end, eventually, in the movie in the very real town of Forks, Washington, which has been a tourist destination ever since the first book Twilight was published. Author Stephanie Meyer knew the book had to be set in Forks, Washington, why? A, she was paid to do so by the Forks, Washington Chamber of Commerce and Tourist Bureau. B, she googled Rainiest Place in the US, and it was what came up. Or C, her plan was to set the sequel book in Spoons, Washington, then Knives, and finally Sporks. I love a Spork, but I think that, like B, that feels like something a writer would do. It is something that that writer, in fact, did. Because. I'm up. Yeah. She's writing about vampires. Vampires don't like sunlight, so why wouldn't they live in the rainiest, cloudiest place they could find? Here is your next question. In addition to the town of Forks, the Twilight books made an unexpected star out of somebody else. Who was it? A, the books editor whose note, why not just make mummies sexy, was accidentally published in the first edition? B, a man whose real name was Edward Cullen, who was cast in a reality dating show called Searching for My Bella Swan. Or C, the hand model holding an apple on the cover of the books, who spun her fame into an apple-scented hand lotion brand called Hands of Twilight. The third one sounds ridiculous, like the hand thing. But that's so prominent on the cover. And a good hand goes a long way. So maybe the third one? You're right again, Renee. That's what happened. We all remember that the cover of the books has hands holding an apple of various kinds, and sure, that woman went on to have a sort of semi-famous career. Although in a New York magazine profile, it's said of her, quote, she doesn't understand why she's not more famous. I quote, of course, of course, that is something only a hand model would say. You're right. You're doing really well, Renee. We have one more question for you. First screenplay for the movie adaptation of the first book, Twilight, was thrown out and replaced with a version that was much closer to the book. That's what got made. That's a bit of a shame, because the abandoned screenplay included which of these scenes? A, Bella revealing her father was Frankenstein's monster. B, Bella writing a jet ski being chased by the FBI. Or C, a climactic scene as the vampires attack the Red Cross's largest blood bank. Oh my god. OK, once again, I see it all at even the jet ski. Sure. I'm kind of liking that. I'm liking that, because I'm not sure that I know enough about Blue Cross Blue Shield. So let's go with the jet ski. You're right again, Renee. Very good. So in that original big chase scenes, lots of action. In that script, Bella also blows away vampires with a shotgun for some reason. It turns out that the studio was told, or they had the idea, let's make this more appealing to boys. Anyway. Love. Love it. Bill, how did Renee Rapp do in our quiz? I can't believe it, but she got them all right. What a winner. You're amazing. Renee Rapp's fabulous new album is Bite Me. She's on tour, supporting it this fall. See her if you can. Renee Rapp, thank you so much for joining us. And wait, wait, don't tell me. What a pleasure to talk to you. Bye-bye. Take care. Thank you, guys. Thanks for having me. Thank you. Bye. In just a minute, your Goldfish has a secret. Find out what it is in our listener limerick challenge called One Triple Eight. 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. From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz. I'm Bill Curley. We are playing this week with Alonzo Boatenshane O'Neill and Amy Dickinson. Here again is your host at the Stuttdermaker Theater in Chicago, Illinois, Peter Segal. Thank you, Bill. Thanks, everybody. In just a minute, due to recent cuts to NPR funding, we can no longer afford complete limericks. So we are relying on you to finish them for us. If you'd like to play, give us a call. One Triple Eight, wait, wait. That's 1-888-924-8924. But right now, panel, some questions for you from the Weeks News. Alonzo, this week, The Washington Post reported on what they call familect. Familect is like a dialect, but it's only spoken among whom. Family members. Right, family members. We all have this. According to linguists, families often develop their own secret language or familect. Usually, it's words or phrases only understandable to the family. It's a way of making fun of a toddler's speech impediment for the rest of his natural life. I always thought sit down and shut up was universal. Really? I never took it as just my family was given those instructions, but I guess so. I thought you were talking about accents coming from families. Oh, me like. Well, my sister, she has a pretty non-regional accent when she's talking to adults. But every time she yells at her kids, she'll be like, so anyway, this week at the bank, you get back here right now, Lucy. So then I said, it only comes out when she's yelling. It's the familect. The familect. Familect also sounds like a dairy replacement product. It does. True. Discussive. Shane, this week's viral office dispute that everybody is arguing over is whether it is OK to do what while eating your lunch in the office? Sit at your desk? No, everybody does that. It's not a problem. Oh, say, guess what I'm eating? You're getting closer. Let me demonstrate. If I were doing it to be like now, I am opening up the Tupperware. Oh, get a load of that lovely fishy smell. What, narrating? Narrating their lunch. Yes. A Reddit poster asked people if the poster was in the wrong for telling a co-worker that her habit of doing play by play for her own lunch was annoying. The woman, the co-worker, says things like, and these are all true, or at least allegedly true, from the poster, spicy little pickle today. And what's that? You're just a sad sandwich. Don't worry, I'm going to eat you anyway. OK, let's give this baby carrot a crunch. OK, but does she stop at lunch or in the afternoons is she like, I'm pretending to type, but I'm shopping? Shane, people across the country are lining up around the block to get into bars just to take what? Just to take a break from the heat to get to the city. No, no, it's nice now. A handful of peanuts. No. Just to take some time to check in on your local bartender. Not so sweet. I'll give you a hint. No, none of those things are right. It's like people are like, wow, how'd you get your eyes closed in all four pictures? People are lining up for bars to take group photos? In a? Oh, in a photo booth. Yes, in photo booths. Oh, yeah, great, yeah. Vintage photo booths are back. They're popping up in bars, restaurants, freestanding on sidewalks. They're everywhere. This is not a surprise if you've been to anyone's apartment ever and looked at their fridge. The photos are great because they're just blurry enough to make everyone look amazing. And you can always look back in the memory of being like, after picture three, we didn't really know what to do anymore. You never know. Yeah, I know. It's like, yeah. That last picture. It's a terrible thing. You've done all your great stuff. That's when I take off my shirt. Oh, me too. I actually checked into a hotel in Salt Lake City recently. And after I finished checking in, they were like, and if you want, you get one free strip at the photo booth. And I could not imagine anything more depressing than taking a photo booth, but I'm like all alone. That's because I can't drink. That's what that's about. You got to make do. You got to make do. That's considered a crazy night in Salt Lake. Oh, yeah. Look, honey, we went out, got a little nutty, made a graven image of ourselves. Coming up, it's lightning fill in the blank. But first is 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 see us most weeks right here at the Studebaker Theater in Chicago. Or you can catch us. Yes, it is a wonderful place. Thank you for coming. You can also catch us on the road. We'll be in St. Louis, September 18. And if that's too hard to get to, we'll be in Honolulu on October 9th and 10th. Tickets and info are at nprpresents.org. Hi, Yaron. Wait, wait, don't tell me. Hi, this is Heidi from Detroit. Hey, Heidi from Detroit, one of my favorite places. What do you do there? I'm a pediatrics resident with authority health at Children's Hospital in Michigan. Oh, wow. Oh, man. Yeah, you're going to make fun of that, aren't I? Yeah, OK. What do you do for fun? I play violin. I hang out with my kids. I teach my dog how to talk with buttons. Oh, so you like buy into that theory that you can teach your pets to talk by pressing buttons? Well, he asks us for a toothbrush after he has his food. He has to go on walks to go outside to go to the bathroom. He knows the difference between poop and pee. Wow. Has he ever, like, I don't know, insulted you? Yes. Really, how? Well, we used to have a lot more buttons. And one time, I was, yeah, they got removed. And he was being a little obnoxious and asking for treats. And I told him no. And then he pressed the mom button. And then he told me to go outside. Oh. Wow. Oh, my. Wow. That's amazing. Heidi, welcome to the show. Bill Curtis is going to read you three news-related lemurics with a last-word or phrase missing from each. If you can fill in that last-word or phrase correctly and two of the lemurics will be a winner. You ready to play? Of course. Here we go. Here's your first lemuric. When day's ending or barely begun, don't gaze at the skies just for fun. That act is unwise. It scorches your eyes. It's bad just to stare at the sun. Right, exactly right. Millions of people are apparently into the new trend of sungazing by replacing their morning coffee with staring directly into the sun. Proponents on TikTok naturally claim it increases your energy, boosts your serotonin, and improves your sleep. Plus, plus, now you're blind and can stay home from work. Oh, God. No. Oh, that's insane. It is pretty nuts. Practitioners say sungazing is an ancient Egyptian practice. They're all dead. They're all dead, though. Yeah, look what happened to them. So is marrying your sister. It's true. Here is your next lemuric. The chest in my tank holds much treacherer. There's joy there that's far beyond measure. There's fish there to grime me, and shudders rush through me. We fish can enjoy immense pleasure. Pleasure, yes, yes. Fish experience pleasure and seek it out. I honestly can't tell if it makes me feel better or worse about eating tuna now that I know it spent its life on a thrilling erotic journey. So here's what happened. Scientists observed that fish who had their parasites cleaned off by these other cleaner fish kept returning to the same spot in the reef even when they no longer had parasites, leading scientists to believe that their behavior was driven solely by the pleasure of the experience. They're into it. Well, we found Nemo, but you're not going to like when we tell you where. All right, here's your last lemuric. Wax drips look like marks from a vandal, and the flames can be awkward to handle. But flickering light makes our food look just right. So some restaurants brought back the candle. Yes, the candle. Candles, real candles with real flames are coming back to restaurants. Great news for Romantics. Horrible news for anyone in long billowing sleeves. Restaurant owners are getting rid of those fake electric little lights, right, tea lights embracing the real flame. They say nothing else can set an ambiance quite like a real candle. Sure, it gets wax all over the table, but now you can immediately know if your date is a heavy breather. And as an older person who went on some first dates, I hardly endorse candlelight. Let me just say that. I look much better. Yes. Much better. And the date does too. Well, that's why I always just turn on the flashlight on my phone, just to make sure on the first day. I want to know what complexion. I remember when I was a kid, I thought like one of those Qianti bottles was like the endless amount of wax was like the height of fashion. Yeah, total class. I remember trying to make one at home so I could have a little romantic dinner if anybody would ever deign to date me. But you were doing it out of like a milk carton. Probably, yeah, it didn't really work. Bill, how did Heidi do on our quiz? Heidi was a close listener and a perfect score. Congratulations. Thank you. Thank you so much for playing. Now it is time for our final game, Lightning Fill and the Blank. Each of our players will have 60 seconds in which to answer as many Fill and the Blank questions as they can. Each correct answer now worth two points. Bill, can you give us the scores? I think I can. Shane and Amy each have three. Alonzo has two. OK. That means that Alonzo, you are in second place, so you are going to go first. Here we go. The clock will start when I begin your first question, Fill and the Blank. Following upheavals at the CDC, Blank was called to testify before a Senate panel. RFK Junior. Right. On Thursday, Washington, DC, sued the White House over its deployment of blank troops in the district. National Guard. Right. For the first time in four years, there were fewer blanks than there are job seekers. Jobs. Yeah, job openings. On Thursday, President Trump asked the Supreme Court to overturn a ruling calling most of his global blanks illegal. Terrace. Right. This week, clothing company Sheehan said they would launch an investigation to discover why their website featured blank modeling a shirt. Trump? No. Accused murderer Luigi Mangione. He didn't realize it was AI. On Wednesday, Newsmax sued blanks, claiming it holds a monopoly on right wing TV. Fox. Right. Fox News. This week, visitors to gambling capital blank dropped for the sixth straight month. Las Vegas. Las Vegas, following a car crash in Los Angeles, the ambulance transporting the victim also crashed, and then the crash investigator arriving at the scene to assist the crash to ambulance blanks. Wait, the car crashed? Car crashed. The ambulance crashed. Car crashed. The investigator showed up and crashed. Exactly. After an ambulance crashed attempting to transport victims of another crash, the LA Fire Department rushed to the scene and promptly crashed. No, that was fast and furious 12. Exactly. And everyone went, oh, no, sorry. You gave it away, people. Yeah. I was funny. I was like, that guy looks just like Vin Diesel. I should have known. Bill, how did Alonzo do in our quiz? Perfect. Seven, right. 14 more points. 36. All right. Well, very nicely done. Hard to catch. All right. Let's pick Amy to go next. Here we go, Amy. Fill in the blank. On Tuesday, Florida announced plans to end all blank requirements for schoolchildren. Immunization. Right. Vaccine amid mounting pressure. The House Oversight Committee released more documents related to blank. Jeffrey Epstein. Right. On Monday, the US conducted a strike against a boat allegedly used by a cartel from blank. Venezuela. Right. This week, a citizen watchdog group created to prevent pickpocketing in Venice was sued by blank for harassment. Pickpockets. Right. On Tuesday, long-running sketch show blank announced five new cast members. SNL? Yes, Internet Live. On Wednesday, the prize for winning the blank route who an estimated $1.7 billion. Lottery? Well, I'll give it to you. The Powerball. This week, a man in New Jersey went viral after he was filmed blanking at a town hall meeting. Blanking. He was actually blanking. You know, he was, many people do that. This guy was break dancing. During the town hall meeting on tax questions, a man named Will Filly got up to the podium and silently started doing the robot and then a backspin. Best part of the article about this is, quote, when he finished, Filly gestured for applause, but received none. Wow. And then he did the sad robot. Bill, how did Amy do in our quiz? Some big scores. Six right, 12 more points in total of 15. Trails by only one. All right, so how many then does Shane need to take this and win it all? Seven. Seven. That's a big order here, Shane. Here we go. This is for the game. On Wednesday, a judge ruled that it was illegal for the White House to suspend federal funding to blank university. Harvard. Right, in the Landmark Antitrust Ruling, search giant blank was told it will not have to sell off its Chrome web browser. Google. Right, this week for governors of California, Washington, and Oregon formed an alliance to help coordinate health guidelines separate from the blank. CDC? Right, according to a new study, eating foods with artificial blanks can age the brain by a year and a half. Colors? Sweeteners. Sweeteners is right. After almost two years on the job, blank stepped down as the head of McDonald's in the UK. Mr. McDonald. No. Highly skilled professional executive named Zoe Hamburger. This week, the company behind Jack Daniels said they saw a 60% drop in sales thanks to a boycott in blank. Partying. Oh, a boycott in Kentucky? No, Canada. We're not buying our stuff. On Thursday, legendary fashion designer blank passed away at the age of 91. Rest in peace, Armani. Yes, this week a couple in the UK were stunned when, for the second time in a month, their lost cat was discovered in blank. Mr. McDonald's house. No, discovered in a pub 30 miles away from their house. Walking 30 miles to a bar twice is a commitment, but who can blame it? Not everybody knows how to pour milk. Just right. Bill, did Shane do well enough to win? Well, he got five right. 10 more points. Total of 13. Alonzo wins. Yeah, Alonzo. A rare occurrence. Thank you. Just a minute, we're going to ask our panelists to predict. Now that we've heard from she and Putin, what will be the next hot mic moment in the news? But first, let me tell you all. Wait, wait, don't tell me. It's a production of NPR and WBEZ Chicago, an association with urgent haircut productions, Doug Berman, Benevolent Overlord, Philip Gotka, writes our limericks, our public address announcers, Paul Friedman, our tour manager, Shane Adomel, thanks to the staff and crew at the Studebaker Theater. BJ Litterman composed our theme. Our program is produced by Jennifer Mills, Miles Dornbos, and Lillian King. Special thanks this week to Blythe Robertson and Monica Hickey, Peter Gwynne is our ball boy. Our visual host is Emma Choi. Technical direction is from Lorna White, our CFO is Colin Miller, our production manager is Robert Newhouse, our senior producer is Ian Chilock, and the executive producer of Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, is Mr. Mike Huttmike Danforth. Now, panel, what will get caught on a Huttmike next? Alonzo Bowden. JD Vance will be overheard saying, look at those ankles. This job is mine. Amy Dickinson. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be caught on a Huttmike at the Dunkadonis drive-thru ordering a box of munchkins with a light dusting of cocaine. And Shane O'Neill. In private, Bernie Sanders talks like a valley girl. And if any of that happens, panel, we're going to ask you about it on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me. Thank you so much, Bill Curtis. Thanks also to Alonzo Bowden, Amy Dickinson, and Shane O'Neill. Thanks to our fabulous audience here at the Sudabekner Theater here in downtown Chicago, Illinois. And thanks to all of you for listening wherever you might be. A bitter signal. We'll see you next week. [?]. This is NPR.