BILL KURTIS: From NPR and WBEZ Chicago, this is WAIT WAIT... DON'T TELL ME, the NPR news quiz. I'm legendary anchorman Bill Kurtis. And here's your host at the Chase Bank Auditorium in Chicago, Peter Sagal.
PETER SAGAL, HOST:
Thank you, Bill. Thank you so much, everybody. Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
SAGAL: If the Internet has taught us anything, it's that you want less news and more cats. So on today's show, we're going to make like the crazy cat ladies we are and hoard all kinds of animals. We're going to listen back to our favorite furry and feathered stories from recent shows.
KURTIS: And for our canine listeners, we'll be broadcasting fart jokes at a frequency only you can hear.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Let's get started. We'll begin with some questions about other species that we've asked our human panelists over the years.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
SAGAL: Paula, when people talk about romance, they often talk about lovebirds. But according to a new study, it turns out that not only are birds not very romantic, but they often do what?
PAULA POUNDSTONE: Kill each other.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: That's true, but we knew that. This is more about romance.
POUNDSTONE: About romance?
SAGAL: Yeah.
POUNDSTONE: They often...
SAGAL: Or lack thereof.
POUNDSTONE: Lose one another's phone numbers.
(LAUGHTER)
CARL KASELL, BYLINE: Or simply don't call back.
POUNDSTONE: Yeah.
SAGAL: Yeah. I'll give you a hint. Well...
POUNDSTONE: They retweet. They retweet a lot.
(LAUGHTER, APPLAUSE)
SAGAL: I'll give you a hint.
POUNDSTONE: Yeah.
SAGAL: Generally speaking, in most cases, the early bird gets half the worm and hatchling visitation rights every other weekend.
POUNDSTONE: They break up?
SAGAL: They break up. They get divorced. Yeah.
(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)
POUNDSTONE: Birds - lovebirds get divorced?
SAGAL: Apparently, yeah. That's true.
POUNDSTONE: I think that makes all the sense in the world.
SAGAL: Well, according to a study in the journal Current Biology, bird relationships - just as messed up as human ones. Birds tend to cheat on each other, and they even get divorced, leading to generations of latchkey eggs.
(LAUGHTER)
POUNDSTONE: What's the value of knowing that birds divorce?
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Well, what they're trying to do is they're trying to ascertain the mating habits of birds. And what they have discovered is - remember...
POUNDSTONE: Why?
(LAUGHTER)
KASELL: I mean, what business is it of theirs?
POUNDSTONE: Honestly.
SAGAL: What's the purpose of any advance in human knowledge?
POUNDSTONE: But why do you want to know the mating habits of birds?
KASELL: I mean, don't ask, don't tell is what I say.
POUNDSTONE: Really.
(LAUGHTER)
POUNDSTONE: Leave them alone.
KASELL: Yeah.
POUNDSTONE: Can a bird not have a little bit of privacy?
SAGAL: Well, remember we used to think sometimes, like...
POUNDSTONE: (Imitating bird chirping).
(LAUGHTER)
POUNDSTONE: No. What did we used to think?
SAGAL: We used to think that birds mated for life, like swans. Swans...
POUNDSTONE: I never thought that.
(LAUGHTER)
POUNDSTONE: What do you mean, we? I never even gave the length of a bird's relationship any thought at all, frankly.
(LAUGHTER)
KASELL: And how do you tell swans apart? I mean, you see two of them going by together, you know? I mean...
POUNDSTONE: Yeah. Yeah, look at them. They're still together, aren't they?
(LAUGHTER)
KASELL: How do you know that's the same swan?
POUNDSTONE: How the hell do they do it? Look at them.
KASELL: They're busy out there spray painting the swan. They don't know. They're birds.
(LAUGHTER)
KASELL: Not a lot going on upstairs.
POUNDSTONE: You know, my manager - her car used to park on the street. And every day for a long time, there was a bird that was breaking his little beak on her rearview mirror because it would see itself and go, you know, try to make out.
(LAUGHTER)
POUNDSTONE: That's not a bright animal.
ROXANNE ROBERTS: It could be a teenager.
POUNDSTONE: Yeah, it could...
KASELL: It could be a teenage bird. That's true.
POUNDSTONE: It could've said, this is a different bird from yesterday.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: He's back, maybe.
POUNDSTONE: Look at me. Every bird wants me.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "ROCKIN' ROBIN")
MICHAEL JACKSON: (Singing) Tweedily deedily dee. Tweedily deedily dee. Tweedily deedily dee. Tweedily deedily dee. Tweedily deedily dee. Tweedily deedily dee. Tweet, tweet.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
SAGAL: Roy, according to research published in the science journal Nature, it was just 380 million years ago that two lonely sea creatures did what for the first time?
ROY BLOUNT JR.: Two lonely schoolteachers?
(LAUGHTER)
BLOUNT: Sea creatures. Sea creatures.
SAGAL: Sea creatures. Sea creatures. Sea creatures.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: I guess your version could've happened as well.
BLOUNT: I had an answer for the schoolteachers. I don't know.
KEN JENNINGS: Well, a lot of sea creatures are found in schools.
BLOUNT: There you go. That's true. That's true. I think I read this. I think it - was it intercourse?
SAGAL: You're right, yes.
(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)
SAGAL: Scientists...
BLOUNT: I was going to say that for the schoolteachers.
(LAUGHTER)
BLOUNT: I should've just gone ahead and answered.
SAGAL: Yeah.
BLOUNT: And we could've moved on by now.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Scientists have wondered where mating actually evolved, and they now believe it was longer ago than they thought. They've been studying the fossils of the shark-like placoderms - that's a now-extinct fish. And they found what they believe to be fossilized evidence that those ancient fish actually mated. Prior to this discovery, most researchers believed copulation began sometime around 1964...
(LAUGHTER)
BLOUNT: Yeah.
SAGAL: ...On or around the release of the first Rolling Stones record.
BLOUNT: That's right. There we go.
(LAUGHTER)
ROBERTS: They can't just say that. Like, oh, they think it happened. And what makes them think that?
SAGAL: Well, good question. There are two things.
ROBERTS: OK.
SAGAL: First of all, they found some rather complicated technical anatomical features in the fossils that are common to fish that were able to do that. And also, they found a fossilized letter from a magazine called Placoderm Forum.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: And it starts, this has never happened before, but...
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: So you know.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "UNDER THE SEA")
SAMUEL E. WRIGHT: (Singing) Under the sea. Under the sea. Darling, it's better down where it's wetter, take it from me.
SAGAL: Ken, this week, we learned about a North Carolina couple headed to Hawaii to have their baby. They're headed there because they want their baby to be delivered by what?
JENNINGS: I did see this. They want the baby delivered by dolphins.
SAGAL: That's correct.
(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)
SAGAL: It's dolphin-assisted childbirth.
(LAUGHTER)
JENNINGS: Wow.
SAGAL: The couple will stay at the Sirius Institute, a group organized with the purpose of, quote, "dolphinizing" the planet and taking money from crazy people.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: The idea is that the couple will swim with a dolphin pod. They'll be there in the water. And when the time comes for the baby to be born, the dolphins will help with the birth.
BLOUNT: I happen to know about dolphins...
SAGAL: All right.
BLOUNT: ...A little bit, which is that that's how they - you have a midwife dolphin who swims along with the - no, seriously - expecting dolphin. And when the cubs - they breathe air, dolphins, you know?
SAGAL: I know that, yes.
BLOUNT: So when the baby comes out, the midwife dolphin...
AMY DICKINSON: Wow.
BLOUNT: ...Flips it up in the air so its first breath is of air, not water. Now how they do with a baby, I don't know.
DICKINSON: Right.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: So you're telling me, like, this woman's going to give birth in the water, and the dolphin's going to flip the infant?
(LAUGHTER)
DICKINSON: Now, but...
SAGAL: So they'll know the baby is born watching from the shore when all of a sudden, it's like, oh, there she blows.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Newborn infant. Like a Polaris missile headed for the top of the water.
JENNINGS: You got to get the shark in at the end to cut the cord, and then everybody's happy.
(LAUGHTER)
JENNINGS: And do the circumcision.
SAGAL: Oh, God.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: A shark mohel.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Here comes a little shark with a yarmulke. I love it.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "DOLPHIN SONG")
LIAM LYNCH: (Singing) Man, it's really great to be a dolphin 'cause dolphins get to play and splash around. Oh, yes, we do. We love to play all day and jump. And when we're splashing, we love to swim and play and goof around. That's what we do. Now when you take a bath, you'll be laughing.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
SAGAL: A shoplifter trying to make a clean getaway from a Seattle Linens 'N' Things...
(SOUNDBITE OF GONG)
SAGAL: ...Was foiled when his girlfriend blank.
TOM BODETT: Told him he'd snatched the wrong colored towels.
SAGAL: No. Dropped her pet duck.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Well, here's a warning to all you wannabe criminals.
ADAM FELBER: How many times did I tell her before we did this job? We rehearsed it time and time again. Don't drop the duck, I said.
(LAUGHTER)
FELBER: Just hold - all you got to do is hold on to the duck, and this works.
(LAUGHTER)
FELBER: Jeez. I can't believe it.
BODETT: You'd think you could belt the duck to you and then, you know, it'd be like a hands-free sort of thing then.
FELBER: Next time I knock over a linen store, no ducks.
(LAUGHTER)
FELBER: In retrospect, that was the most deeply flawed part of our plan.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: The Seattle man robbed the store while his girlfriend and her duck, Peepers...
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: ...Shopped at the Petco next-door, you see. When the girlfriend dropped Peepers in the parking lot during the getaway, helpful Petco employees rushed to Peepers' assistance. That caused a chain reaction of crashes and accidents that completely fouled up the heist.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
SAGAL: Faith, 23 states now have legalized medical marijuana. Nevada would like to go a step further. The state is now considering a bill that would legalize medical cannabis for what?
FAITH SALIE: Pets.
SAGAL: Yes, for pets.
(SOUNDBITE OF BELL, APPLAUSE)
SAGAL: When Rover has a tummy ache, instead of eating grass, he can smoke it.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Vets who support the bill say marijuana is a great treatment for animals' aches, pains and their strange inability to really appreciate the Grateful Dead.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: Owners whose dogs have used medical marijuana report their walks have never been shorter...
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: ...Or taken longer.
(LAUGHTER)
SAGAL: And we know there are going to be a lot of thrown sticks you just never get back.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
SAGAL: In an attempt to control squirrel populations in Palisades Park, Calif., officials are blanking.
DICKINSON: Injecting them with...
(SOUNDBITE OF GONG)
DICKINSON: ...Contraceptive hormones.
SAGAL: You're right.
DICKINSON: Ha.
(SOUNDBITE OF BELL)
BODETT: Was that a guess?
DICKINSON: I did read the paper.
BODETT: Wow.
SAGAL: That's exactly right.
BODETT: That's awesome.
(APPLAUSE)
SAGAL: Yeah. They have too many squirrels. They want to do something humane. They're going to inject birth control hormones into the squirrels. Officials decided on using injections after they discovered that their earlier plan had failed because the female squirrels were storing the birth control pills in trees and forgetting where they put them.
(LAUGHTER)
DICKINSON: Couldn't they just get, like, the Beverly Hillbillies to come over and shoot some?
SAGAL: No, this is California. They don't do that.
DICKINSON: Oh.
BODETT: Yeah. I know. You know, any place but California, if you could catch a squirrel and hold him still long enough to give him a contraceptive shot, he could also just kill him.
DICKINSON: Right. That's what I'm thinking.
(LAUGHTER)
DICKINSON: You can wring its little neck.
(LAUGHTER)
DICKINSON: Not that you would, but...
SAGAL: No, no, no, no. This is California. They gave the squirrels family planning. They did counseling.
DICKINSON: I know. And a talking-to
SAGAL: Yeah. A talking-to.
DICKINSON: A very stern talking-to.
FELBER: A little pamphlet - tiny little pamphlet.
DICKINSON: Tiny.
FELBER: Post-it sized pamphlet...
DICKINSON: Right.
FELBER: ...Entitled Straight Talk About Nuts.
DICKINSON: Right. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.