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'Wait Wait' for March 2, 2024: Live in Austin with Danny Brown!

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'Wait Wait' for March 2, 2024: Live in Austin with Danny Brown!

This week’s show was recorded at the Bass Concert Hall in Austin, with host Peter Sagal, judge and scorekeeper Bill Kurtis, Not My Job guest Danny Brown and panelists Peter Grosz, Alzo Slade and Karen Chee. Click the audio link above to hear the whole show.

Danny Brown performs at the Growlers 6 festival at the LA Waterfront on Oct. 28, 2017, in San Pedro, Calif.

Who’s Bill This Time
Lunar Tripper; MLB’s VPL; Merriam-Webster Gives Us Something To Talk About

Panel Questions
Mini Minimalists

Bluff The Listener
Our panelists read three stories about a winner suffering a setback, only one of which is true.

Not My Job: We quiz rapper Danny Brown on author Dan Brown
Danny Brown reshaped Detroit’s rap scene with XXX, and in 2021, moved to Austin to do it all again. His new album Quaranta is an exploration of addiction and aging. He may be the greatest Danny Brown, but what does he know about best-selling author Dan Brown?

Panel Questions
Home Shopping At Home; We Give One Last Hoot

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Limericks
Chioke I’Anson reads three news-related limericks: The Truth About Old Grapes; Breaking The Breakfast Rule; The Honda Accordion

Lightning Fill In The Blank
All the news we couldn’t fit anywhere else

Predictions
Our panelists predict, now that they’ve given us permission to end sentences with prepositions, what will Merriam-Webster allow us to do next.

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Why Gen Z is movie-maxxing : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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Why Gen Z is movie-maxxing : Pop Culture Happy Hour

Inde Navarrette and Michael Johnston in Obsession.

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Two big horror films, Obsession and Backrooms, just smashed all box office expectations. So much of their success has been driven by Gen Z, which is now the biggest moviegoing demographic. But what makes a movie a Gen Z movie? Today we’re bringing you an episode of NPR’s It’s Been a Minute. Host Brittany Luse talks about this trend with Sam Adams and Reanna Cruz. 

If you want to hear more about these movies, check out these episodes: 

In ‘Obsession,’ love hurts. It really, really, really hurts.

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‘Backrooms’ brings YouTube horror to the big screen

Zendaya brings ‘The Drama,’ we bring the spoilers

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10 new books you won’t want to miss in July

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10 new books you won’t want to miss in July

I regret to inform you I’ll need to keep this introduction brief. Not because there’s any lack of things to say about July’s crop of notable new releases; it features award-winning journalists and several different flavors of anxiety about our bleak ecological future and data-dominated present, as well as the welcome returns of several beloved novelists.

No, these books certainly deserve some love, dear readers. It’s just that I’m finding it a bit tough to type while bearhugging a box fan. And since it seems that may be my last best chance to get through this latest U.S. heat wave here on the east coast without sweating through my shirt, I feel some urgency to get back at it.

So enough with the ado. With any luck, you’ll soon be cracking open one of these great reads on the beach — or in front of a decent air-conditioning unit, at any rate.

You Won’t Get Free of It: Stories of Mothers and Daughters, by Rachel Aviv

You Won’t Get Free of It: Stories of Mothers and Daughters, by Rachel Aviv (July 7)

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Aviv, New Yorker staff writer and finalist for this year’s Pulitzer Prize, has a fairly extensive purview in her role as reporter at large. Still, when reviewing her latest work, Aviv noticed a crucial throughline: “I realized that, to some degree, I’d been writing about mother-daughter pairs for the last decade,” she explained to the Paris Review. Seeing this, she decided to collect and revise half a dozen of those stories, which cover ground from a daughter’s troubling fugue states to the immigrant nannies who must leave their own children behind, to Alice Munro’s daughter, whose claims of sexual abuse went unheeded yet regularly resurfaced in her mother’s fiction.

Country People, by Daniel Mason

Country People, by Daniel Mason (July 7)

In Mason’s first novel since North Woods, 2023’s critical darling and book club stalwart, readers are plopped right back in the New England woods but the time scale has shrunk considerably. Whereas North Woods spanned centuries, his new novel confines itself to a single year, during which Miles, loving family man and lackadaisical Ph.D. candidate, plans to finally buckle down on that derelict degree of his and reassert his worth to one and all! At least, that’s the idea. But plans don’t stand much of a chance when there are eccentric neighbors to befriend and mysterious local legends to investigate.

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Jessica McCormack: How a Challenger Is Seizing the Jewellery Opportunity

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Jessica McCormack: How a Challenger Is Seizing the Jewellery Opportunity
The London-based independent jewellery label, which sells high-end pieces for everyday wear, has boosted sales by leveraging jewellery as a means of self expression. Chief executive Leonie Brantberg details in our latest report ‘Face to Face With Luxury Clients’ the brand’s strategy and expansion plans.
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