Difference between revisions of "997: Wait Wait"
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| The 5th row, 3rd paper is a reference to stories and myths in which an entity known as an {{tvtropes|EldritchAbomination|Eldritch Abomination}} can be summoned, awoken, or alerted to someone's presence when its name is spoken. A well-known example of this is the entity Cthulhu in the Lovecraft mythos. | | The 5th row, 3rd paper is a reference to stories and myths in which an entity known as an {{tvtropes|EldritchAbomination|Eldritch Abomination}} can be summoned, awoken, or alerted to someone's presence when its name is spoken. A well-known example of this is the entity Cthulhu in the Lovecraft mythos. | ||
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| − | | | + | | This American Life is a weekly public radio podcast which has a different theme each week and puts together a collection of stories on said topic. |
Two years later another New Years comic, [[1311: 2014]], took a similar look at what could happen in 2014, just as this does for 2012. Interesting enough the title of that comic (just the year it was looking at) is more related to the title of the next comic after this one, which is also a New Year comic, and the title is also just the number of the year: [[998: 2012]]. | Two years later another New Years comic, [[1311: 2014]], took a similar look at what could happen in 2014, just as this does for 2012. Interesting enough the title of that comic (just the year it was looking at) is more related to the title of the next comic after this one, which is also a New Year comic, and the title is also just the number of the year: [[998: 2012]]. | ||
Revision as of 13:10, 16 December 2025
| Wait Wait |
![]() Title text: You can't stab Carl Kasell. He sounds all slow and stentorian, but he moves like a snake. |
Explanation
| This is one of 55 incomplete explanations: Provide a detailed explanation for all panels. If you can fix this issue, edit the page! |
Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me is an hour-long weekly radio news panel game show produced by Chicago Public Radio and National Public Radio. The show is hosted by playwright and actor Peter Sagal. Each episode ends with the panelists making up a potential future news story, usually with implausible "facts". This comic is making puns on the title of the show based on what Peter Sagal might have done that was newsworthy.
Carl Kasell, who also served as the news anchor on Morning Edition, was the show's official judge and scorekeeper until May 2014 (after this comic was published), when he retired and was replaced by Bill Kurtis.
| Headline Explanation | Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Row 1 | The 1st row, 3rd paper mocks classic celebrity scandal articles. In this example, Peter Sagal confesses his feelings towards Kermit the Frog. | The 1st row, 4th paper may refer to the Laugh Factory Incident of 2006. | |||
| Row 2 | One meaning of "axe" is "end, cancel, or dismiss suddenly and ruthlessly." In the second row, first headline, NPR is canceling Wait Wait. | In the second row, second headline, it's imagined that Sagal stabbed Carl Kasell on air after being interrupted by him. | Poison ivy has an irritating oil on its leaves called urushiol that causes an itchy, irritating rash on the contact site. In the 3rd paper on the 2nd row, Sagal touched some poison ivy with his face, and is urging people to not look at his unsightly rash. | The 4th paper of the 2nd row may be inspired by a segment of Wait Wait in January 2011 in which actor Jesse Eisenberg revealed he had made a Facebook account under Sagal's name, and later deleted it. | |
| Row 3 | Lakshmi Singh is NPR's national midday newscaster. In the 3rd row, 1st paper, it's revealed that Sagal had an affair with Singh. | In the 2nd paper on the 3rd row, Sagal's wife divorces him over his affair with Singh. | The 3rd row, 3rd paper references a protest at UC Davis (on the campus of University of California, Davis) in early 2012 in which sitting, peaceful protesters were calmly pepper-sprayed in their faces by a police officer. That spawned an internet meme of epic proportions. | ||
| Row 4 | The 4th row, 2nd paper is a reference to the movie Ghostbusters. | The 4th row, 3rd paper is a reference to Granny Weatherwax of Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels; Granny Weatherwax is a witch who carries a sign saying "I ATEN'T DED"[sic] while having out-of-body experiences. | |||
| Row 5 | The 5th row, 2nd paper references an internet meme in which someone leaves out the verb in the sentence. The implication is that the verb is something bad, but which bad thing is left as an exercise to stew in the reader's mind. See the I Accidentally ___ meme for more information. | The 5th row, 3rd paper is a reference to stories and myths in which an entity known as an Eldritch Abomination can be summoned, awoken, or alerted to someone's presence when its name is spoken. A well-known example of this is the entity Cthulhu in the Lovecraft mythos. | This American Life is a weekly public radio podcast which has a different theme each week and puts together a collection of stories on said topic.
Two years later another New Years comic, 1311: 2014, took a similar look at what could happen in 2014, just as this does for 2012. Interesting enough the title of that comic (just the year it was looking at) is more related to the title of the next comic after this one, which is also a New Year comic, and the title is also just the number of the year: 998: 2012. Transcript
DiscussionThe 5th Row, 3rd paper, "Wait Wait ... don't speak its name" may refer to the Lovecraftian Eldetr God Hastur, also known as "He Who is Not to be Named." Eldritch was a favorite Lovecraft word used extensively in the Cthulhu Mythos. 74.120.13.132 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
Is there a real kneed for this: (sic) in stories about Granny Weatherwax? I used Google News BEFORE it was clickbait (talk) 06:42, 22 January 2015 (UTC)
"Don't Dissect Me" reminds me of a Stephen King short story, Autopsy Room Four, from the collection Everything's Eventual. Boct1584 (talk) 14:47, 1 April 2015 (UTC) Can we have a table for this? 108.162.245.40 22:44, 30 November 2016 (UTC) I think that the first one implies that he is the hostage, not the gunman. Anyone else think so? 172.68.174.64 16:48, 17 January 2019 (UTC) Yeah, I agree, Sagal's the hostage.172.68.65.150 00:46, 21 August 2019 (UTC) Anyone else feels that this explanation would deserve an incomplete tag? --Lupo (talk) 10:50, 18 December 2019 (UTC) Could row 5 panel 2 be referencing the "You'll Be OK" comic (https://pbfcomics.com/comics/youll-be-ok/) by the Perry Bible Fellowship, which is one of the linked comic sites at the bottom of the xkcd page? Because the sub-heading coule read "Peter Sagal accidetanlly *OK*", if you read across to the little picture. 108.162.250.127 04:31, 21 January 2020 (UTC) Hadley Row 3, panel 5 "cash-for-tote-bags" is almost certainly a reference to a classic Bloom County comic strip story arc in which the corrupt Senator Bedfellow is arrested for trading in black market "Bill the Cat" tote bags. I couldn't find a copy of that strip online, but it's referenced in this Bloom County wiki entry, including a picture very similar to these of a newspaper headline comic panel: https://bloomcounty.fandom.com/wiki/Senator_Bedfellow 162.158.154.151 15:43, 25 March 2023 (UTC) |

