Lifestyle
Why Did the Chicken Cross the Road? To Get to Its Summer Home.
But, he said, if you really want them, make sure to watch out for any signs of illness, like lethargy or decreased appetite. If you see any, stay away. “If they are sick, you need to not touch them whatsoever,” Dr. Hopkins said. “And if you really have to, you need to use protective equipment.” (He said it was safe to touch chickens as long as they were not sick, but he did recommend taking precautions: “Even if you are refilling an outdoor bird feeder, go outside and feed them and then come inside and wash your hands with soap and water. Don’t touch your eyes and mouth.”)
And while egg prices have received a lot of press coverage, these rentals will not help save money. Prices vary by location, but in Long Island, for example, it costs $1,195 to rent four chickens for three months from Rent the Chicken. If the chickens produce up to 28 dozen eggs in total, each dozen would have to cost about $42 to break even financially.
Rental companies say their clients are after the certainty of having fresh eggs, not cheap prices. And they do not want to wait until summer.
“When people make their reservations now, they are like, ‘How soon can we get the chickens?’” Ms. Tompkins of Rent the Chicken said. “There is more of an urgency.”
“I started getting calls around January,” said Mr. DeFrancesco of Farmer Joe’s Gardens, whose calls normally start in the spring. “I think what we are seeing is people wanting to have some security with their food sources. They want to know where their food is coming from and have some control over it.”
Michelle Woeber, 56, an environmental scientist who lives outside Pittsburgh, is entering her fifth season with Rent the Chicken and can’t wait for her chickens to be delivered in the next month. (She tries to get the same hens — Mabel, Helga, Sapphire and Ethel — every year. “You get to know their personalities,” she said.)
Lifestyle
Sunday Puzzle: Major U.S. cities
Sunday Puzzle
NPR
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NPR
On-air challenge
I’m going to read you some sentences. Each sentence conceals the name of a major U.S. city in consecutive letters. As a hint, the answer’s state also appears in the sentence. Every answer has at least six letters. (Ex. The Kentucky bodybuilders will be flexing tonight. –> LEXINGTON)
1. Space enthusiasts in Oregon support landing on Mars.
2. Contact your insurance branch or agent in Alaska.
3. The Ohio company has a sale from today to next Sunday.
4. The Colorado trial ended in a sudden verdict.
5. Fans voted the Virginia tennis matches a peak experience.
6. I bought a shamrock for decorating my house in Illinois.
7. All the Connecticut things they knew have now changed.
8. Can you help a software developer in Texas?
Last week’s challenge
Last week’s challenge came from Mike Reiss, who’s a showrunner, writer, and producer for “The Simpsons.” Think of a famous living singer. The last two letters of his first name and the first two letters of his last name spell a bird. Change the first letter of the singer’s first name. Then the first three letters of that first name and the last five letters of his last name together spell another bird. What singer is this?
Challenge answer
Placido Domingo
Winner
Brock Hammill of Corvallis, Montana.
This week’s challenge
This week’s challenge comes from Robert Flood, of Allen, Texas. Name a famous female singer of the past (five letters in the first name, seven letters in the last name). Remove the last letter of her first name and you can rearrange all the remaining letters to name the capital of a country (six letters) and a food product that its nation is famous for (five letters).
If you know the answer to the challenge, submit it below by Thursday, December 18 at 3 p.m. ET. Listeners whose answers are selected win a chance to play the on-air puzzle.
Lifestyle
The Frayed Edge: Are Fashion’s Sustainability Efforts Misplaced?
Lifestyle
‘Wait Wait’ for December 13, 2025: With Not My Job guest Lucy Dacus
Lucy Dacus performs at Spotlight: Lucy Dacus at GRAMMY Museum L.A. Live on October 08, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)
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Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images
This week’s show was recorded in Chicago with host Peter Sagal, guest judge and scorekeeper Alzo Slade, Not My Job guest Lucy Dacus and panelists Adam Burke, Helen Hong, and Tom Bodett. Click the audio link above to hear the whole show.
Who’s Alzo This Time
Mega Media Merger; Cars, They’re Just Like Us; The Swag Gap
Panel Questions
An Hourly Marriage
Bluff The Listener
Our panelists tell three stories about a new TV show making headlines, only one of which is true.
Not My Job: Lucy Dacus answers our questions about boy geniuses
Singer-songwriter Lucy Dacus, one third of the supergroup boygenius, plays our game called, “boygenius, meet Boy Geniuses” Three questions about child prodigies.
Panel Questions
Bedroom Rules; Japan Solves its Bear Problem
Limericks
Alzo Slade reads three news-related limericks: NHL Superlatives; Terrible Mouthwash; The Most Holy and Most Stylish
Lightning Fill In The Blank
All the news we couldn’t fit anywhere else
Predictions
Our panelists predict what will be the next big merger in the news.
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