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October 23, 2009
Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me! at Carnegie Hall
Public radio nerds descended on Carnegie Hall last night for this week's taping of Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me!, the NPR news quiz show. It's one of the most popular shows on NPR, which makes sense: it's weirder than The Daily Show, and sometimes I think it's funnier in a loose, improvy sort of way.
I was lucky enough to go, and thought I'd share a few highlights. The live show ran for two and a half hours, and will get cut down to 45 minutes for Saturday's broadcast, so some of the really funny stuff is going to have to get cut:
- For those of you wondering what the outgoing message that Carl Kasell records for your voicemail if you win, they played a sample. The winners get to script the message, and this one ended with Carl singing "What's New, Pussycat?" like a sonorous baritone Tom Jones.
- The special guest for the "Not My Job" segment was Brian Williams, who's been on the show a few times. That guy is a riot. There was some immediate adversarial jabbing between host Peter Sagal and Williams over the mainstream media's Balloon Boy coverage: Williams said he was (conveniently) on vacation for the whole thing, and made some lame excuse for all the media attention like "people were concerned and really cared about that kid in the homemade UFO" or something, but Sagal went for integrity points by ripping TV news outlets. Well, NPR covered it, too, but at least they covered the media reaction, not the actual balloon.
- Peter Sagal brought up the fight between the Obama administration and Fox News, which Williams thought was a bad fight to pick. Everyone has to work together in politics and news, he said. Making distinctions between network news and cable news is meaningless: he said the evening news is "like The Munsters." Heh. It was the weirdest comment of the night.
- Then Brian Williams shared an anecdote from the 90's when he was a White House correspondent, about an unflattering piece he did on Bill Clinton. One night while Brian Williams was making dinner at home with his wife, he was in the process of pouring the pasta into the colander when Clinton called him, mad as hell, and started berating him mid-pasta pour. His point was that Presidents have always gone after individual reporters; his pissed-off Clinton impersonation was perfect.
- Music Brian Williams is into lately: Deer Tick and The Republic Tigers and other stuff listed on his embarrassingly titled BriTunes page on MSNBC.
- Williams was so funny and quick, I think everyone had to remind themselves that he has a day job as a news anchor. After he left the stage Paula Poundstone said, "What a waste of talent!"
- Peter Sagal wrote a screenplay that ended up becoming Dirty Dancing 2: Havana Nights.
Mind-blowing trivia: both Roger Sterling and Betty Draper from Mad Men were in Dirty Dancing 2: Havana Nights!
Tune in Saturday for the show.
categories:
Celebrities, Media, NYC, Politics, Robot-on-the-Spot
posted by amy at 3:11 PM | #
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Comments
"His point was that Presidents have always gone after individual reporters"
Ah, NO! Only elitist 'I'm above the law' egomaniacs stoop to that level. It's our nation, not the presidents!!! Anyone that's uses Clinton as the bar of morality is clueless as to just how arrogant a bastard he was to use the most sacrosanct office in the land to get a blow job.
Posted by: Tom at November 1, 2009 12:43 PM
As we've seen in his many Daily Show appearance, Brian Williams is a funny, funny man. One of those characters where the square-jawed handsomeness only increases the comedy.
Posted by: That Fuzzy Bastarrd at October 24, 2009 12:41 PM