Are black holes really holes? Guests: Hair stylist and hair archaeologist Janet Stephens; Scrunchie queen Rommy Revson. Entomologists Dino Martins and Piotr Naskrecki have ant-swers. Memory researcher Charan Ranganath, director of the Dynamic Memory Lab, fills in the blanks about the memory in question. Plus, a Teeny, Glorious Car Hack. Guests: Flamingo expert Felicity Arengo and anesthetist Kate Leslie. Plus, Your Cleanspiracies, ELT gets to the bottom of a familiar aroma -- thrift store smell. ELT goes down the anthole to find the antswer. A few years ago, listener Annie asked ELT to settle a longstanding family debate: exactly how old is Winnie-the-Pooh? ELTâs resident flamingo expert tells us whatâs really happening in that viral pic. After weeks of social distancing, call us and tell us the thing youâre missing most and why itâs important to you. Listener Diksha wants to know: when an animal species is endangered, how do we know when itâs really gone? From Gimlet Media, hosted by Flora Lichtman. Baseball and Organ Music: Howâd That Happen? Should you fear the tray table? Listeners Marmie and Ryan have a quarantine quibble: How many times should you shuffle a deck of playing cards? Guest: Ex-CIA operative Robert Baer. Plus, we meet the man who defied all odds to bring us the bag that cinches. Anesthesia and a Mysterious Chili Cheese Fry Craving. Why Are Some People Mosquito Magnets? We asked you, the ELT family, to share your favorite underutilized words -- words that you love and want other listeners to love too. If you found millions of dollars worth of buried treasure, what would you do next? ELT talks to the âJacques Cousteau of glow,â a scientist who has spent decades deep diving for answers. Sketch artist Kelly Lawson from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation walks us through the process. Plus, Science Vs. host Wendy Zukerman joins Flora for ⦠ELT investigates why we cry, and whether wet cheeks were once très chic. Paleoanthropologists Melanie Chang and Genevieve von Petzinger help bust our biggest cavemen myths â and tell us what our ancestors were really like. Can it be true? ELT tracks down the inventor of this tiny, brilliant car hack. Marco Auriti, pasta guy and senior sales manager at De Cecco, reveals the truth. 378.8K monthly listeners. Flora has a 6- to 9-pound piece of news to drop! Guests: professor of horticulture and pumpkin expert Steve Reiners; farmer and corn maze designer Angie Treinen. Guests: Cheerleading researcher and professor at the University of Alabama Natalie Adams; Barbara Hazlewood; Sharita Richardson, cheerleading researcher, instructional coach at North Carolina A&T State University, and ... As monuments glorifying white supremacy are taken down, we want to hear from you: Who do you want to see celebrated in their place? The Beatles radio show âEvery Little Thingâ is a one-hour weekly program that encompasses all the works of the Beatlesâ group and solo-careers. Professional frog counter and disease ecologist Jamie Voyles has answers. Every Little Thing was my first read by Jordan Bates and I really enjoyed it. Call 833-RING-ELT or In honor of 420, ELT takes a trip to black hole country. In this panel discussion, recorded at the 2018 Aspen Ideas Festival, Flora talks with writer Jennifer Ackerman and crow expert Alex Taylor about the genius of birds.Â, Clowns and Crows: Weirder and Scarier Than You Think. Plus, is washing your clothes better than freezing them? Why do some songs get stuck in our heads? How do nailpolish colors get their names? Plus, A Trash Bag Moonshot. Weâre revisiting one of our favorite episodes this week. Every Little Thing. The trouble with the library cataloging system. Limbo: The Haunting Backstory of Getting Low. Listener Taylor was making a medieval stew when she noticed a prominent ingredient was missing from the recipe: potatoes. Turn over the rock, peek through the keyhole, go down the rabbit hole. Plus, do you really need to warm up your car? Flora stages a fact intervention with Prashanth. Guests: Kathryn Boor, Cornell University; Ian Shaw, University of Canterbury; Renée Goodrich-Schneider, University of Florida. Does an orchestraâs triangle player get the same pay as a violinist? Or sounds like? Buried Treasure: How to Make the Most of Your Booty. And one of the first scientists to hoist herself into the treetops describes life in the canopy.Â. Does that person sitting next to you on the airplane REALLY work in IT? ELT Help Line #: (347) 464-9626. Zooarchaeologist Angela Perri digs up the answers. Thanks to caller Kyle. An earworm expert explains how to unstick that song thatâs stuck in your head, and why it got lodged there in the first place. ð¸. ELT goes down under, to expose one of the most impressive butts in the animal kingdom. Listener Gab is clumsy â white sweaters, stemmed wine glasses, and sharp edges are off the table. ELT gets the low-down on auction talk from a professional auctioneer. Flora and fact buddy Prashanth talk about spiders, which leads to a cargo short investigation. Plus, a look at lottery history, and your strangest raffle winnings. ELT talks to the professional cheerleader who first got fans out of their seats. Itâs not all smiles and ponytails. ELT explores the secret world of the Citizensâ Stamp Advisory Committee, the group that decides what gets stuck on Americaâs envelopes. We track down the original bubblegum flavor formula, and find out whatâs in there. Potato biologist Maria Scurrah and journalist Charles Mann explain the potatoâs twisting route to stewpot domination. Guest: Daniel Erlacher, sports scientist at the University of Bern, Switzerland. Thanks to caller Steven. Special thanks to Carl Gabbard and Michael Wade. ELT listeners help him name that tune and put this mystery to rest. Cheese: Why Do We Worship Rotten Milk? It is the fourth track on side two of their 1977 album Exodus and was released as a single in 1980. The couple place their bets and go all-in with applied mathematician Steven Strogatz and a full house of card-world VIPs. Why would a garden-gloved thief lift a water lily from a botanical garden in London? Plus, a centuries-old scientific debate: why ice is slippery.Guests: Tunnel engineer Dr. Gary Brierley (aka Dr. Mole), and ice scientist Dr. Miquel Salmeron, physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. ELT tackles listenersâ twin questions and investigates some burning twin-spiracies. EVERY LITTLE THING is now proudly heard on the AMERICAN FORCES NETWORK, broadcasting to our troops and their families overseas in Europe, Asia, Japan, and South Korea!!! Listener Amy gets lost a lot. ELT learns how to spot a spy in the wild. Listener Gwen wants to know why sheâs never seen an armadillo alive. She’ll be out on parental leave for a little while. Do twins communicate in the womb? The history of the worldâs most iconic movie scream. Guest: Clifford Johnson, professor of physics at the University of Southern California. Forks: One Utensilâs Battle for Respect. Plus, tips for sneaking your weed onboard, from a former TSA agent. Listener Gĩtaũ has a serious problem: every so often his home in rural Kenya is invaded by an army of ants. Live in caves? A professional word nerd tells us which of your submissions have the best chance of making it into the big book. Listener Charlotte has been rewatching âThe Sopranosâ and the punches keep hitting her ear. Thanks to Erica, Dallas, Ryan, Mary, Nasja, David, Samantha, and everyone who called to share their worst moments. Listener Ryan wants to know: Does any of it ever fall down to Earth? ELT exposes the roots of tooth care. Plus, we revisit the eclipse. Plus, a #YESflamingo campaign update. Guests: navigation and orientation researcher Giuseppe Iaria; former London cab driver David Styles. Raccoon expert Suzanne MacDonald tells us whatâs really going on with that signature raccoon rinse. Those small joys you canât stop thinking about, in the midst of such big sadness. A team of microbiologists weigh in. They coat the floors, climb the walls, and rain down on Gĩtaũ and his family while they sleep. Plus, lobsters pee from their faces, koalas have human-like fingerprints, and other cocktail party fodder from our fact buddy exchange. Does swearing make you more powerful? Can swearing make you stronger? Flavor scientists explain why this particular combination is so appealing -- or not. 23 talking about this. Your stories made us laugh, cry and ge... Floraâs sister Ruth claims last yearâs jack-oâ-lantern seeds sprouted... a litter of decorative gourds. 540 Followers. Flora is away this week, so weâre revisiting one of our favorite episodes â about a summer visitor no one wants. Happy 420, dudes. Flora continues to champion the flamingo. Plus, Science Vs. host Wendy Zukerman joins Flora for an important wombat-butt update. Plus, how the best navigators in the world get around. Caller Liz has a cherished childhood memory about a special meal with her great-grandmother. And a gigantic thank you to everyone risking their own health to keep the rest of us safe. Special thanks to Nathan Cole and danke schön to caller Laszlo. Cleaning expert Jolie Kerr tells us when itâs OK to use your own saliva as a cleaning agent, and addresses some listener âcleanspiraciesâ like: Will vodka clean my clothes? Why is pumpkin spice a thing? Flora and Katherine answer questions from listeners. Learn More, This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. GÄ©taÅ© wants to know: Why are these ants torturing us? The episode is set in 1983, 10 years after the end of the first season. Plus, Best Pet Vocalist, How did goldfish come to dominate our fish bowls and pet stores? 347 likes. Every Little Thing A Bulletin Board of Glory⢠nomination from comedian Josh Gondelman takes ELT down a trashy rabbit hole, to a time before sanitation workers, when pigs roamed the streets. Guest: prop master Lynda Reiss. Listener Paige heard a rumor: we only breathe through one nostril. The average tree squirrel can bury up to 10,000 nuts every fall. How rules can keep us from descending into chaos. ELT gets to the bottom of this pumper stumper. And what are they actually saying? Tips for being the #1 guest in the history of the universe. Listener Amy gets lost a lot. ELT investigates. 1 EVERY LITTLE THING 15th Anniversary Concert Tour 2011-2012 ORDINARY 2 Every Little Thing Concert Tour 2013 -ON AND ON- 3 Every Little Thing Concert Tour 2014 ï½FUN-FAREï½ ã§ã¼ã¦ã¤ã³ãã¦ã«æ ãå§¿ãè¦ã¦ æãããã¯ç¡æã®æè©æ¤ç´¢ãµã¼ãã¹ã§ãã Flora is away this week at a flamingo fanciers convention, so weâre revisiting one of our favorite shows â a two-part, deep dive into cheerleading. Who decides what a cheerleader looks like? How do U.S. postage stamps come to be? Caller Jeremy has a problem: fruit flies have moved into his apartment, and he needs to know how they got there. The Cha Cha Slide: How One Uncle Changed Weddings Forever, DJ Casper tells us the origin story of the Cha Cha Slide. Foley artist and Emmy Award-winning sound editor Joanna Fang shares her punch recipe. Listener Emily is dying to know: what are actors actually using when they do drugs on screen? Directed by Amy Berg. Plus, your most ingenious MacGyver stories. Guest: Elizabeth Margulis, cognitive scientist and musicologist. ELT investigates. This weekend, SpaceX and NASA successfully launched the first crewed spacecraft from U.S. soil in almost a decade. Plus, meet the technician who makes movie starsâ teeth look terrible. Every Wednesday from 8:00 pm to 9:00 pm With Ken Michaels Kenâs Beatles show, âEvery Little Thingâ is a 1-hour salute to the Beatles, mixing their group and solo-recordings with all Beatles related music (cover versions, tribute songs, family members, side projects etc.) We asked you to tell us about a meal you can't forget. Plus, ELT goes deep into the Mesozoic to find out what dinosaurs looked (and tasted) like. Can swearing make you stronger? Animal behaviorist and pro squirrel watcher Mikel Maria Delgado tells us what it looks like and where to find it. permanently? ELT gets to the bottom of a familiar aroma with cleaning expert Jolie Kerr. Invisible actors create worlds of sound in everything you watch - from Jaws to The Wire. A new show from Gimlet Media, hosted by Flora Lichtman.. 22 Tracks. An expert locates some answers. Are you out working to make sure those of us stuck at home have what we need? Guest: Kiki Patsch, California State University Channel Islands. TSA Treasure Chest: What Happens To Your Confiscated Stuff? Plus, tips for sneaking your weed onboard from a former TSA agent. In the time of âpuzzle and chill,â listener Myco needs to know: how are jigsaw puzzles made? Why donât we gobble turkey eggs like we do chicken eggs? Special thanks to Graham Thiele, Bruce Owen, Alan Covey, and Gary Urton. But she isnât sure it really happened. We've updated our Terms of Service. We dive into the history of Americaâs favorite finned pet. Then, a question from the Help Line about aircraft patrol. Plus, why are clouds of terrifying black birds gathering in listener Amandaâs neighborhood every evening? ELT investigates listener cleanspiracies with expert cleaner Jolie Kerr.Â, Waterphone: The Sound That Haunts Hollywood. Plus, a centuries-old scientific debate: why ice is slippery. Should you leave your sponge out to dry . Blood flow researcher Ole Hensel has answers. ELT traces the delicious and X-rated history of cheese. Plus, a spooky Face ID mystery, and a peek under the husk of corn mazes. How did they make the dinosaur roars in the Jurassic Park movies? Kan ses på NRK-app Søk Rondo eller prøv:https://tv.nrk.no/serie/rondo/FKUN19001093/19-11-1993 Plus, practical tips for dealing with new-found millions, and a nationwide treasure hunt, ELT-style. On ⦠Thanks to caller âanonymous.â. ELT talks to some pro organ players to find out how organs and ballparks got together. Directed by John Lee Hancock. Â, Who Made âThe Waveâ a Thing? Plus, the Scariest Creature Under the Sea, If you dug up the graves of our founding fathers, what would you find? Meet the hosts who’ll be filling in while she’s away. ELT talks trash with Lottie Williams, the only person known to have been hit by falling space debris, and Ted Muelhaupt, director of the Center for Orbital and Reentry Debris Study. Thanks to callers Myco and Amanda. At Every Little Thing, we strive to find a balanced mix of basics and statement pieces to compliment anyoneâs closet. Every Little Thing Listener GÄ©taÅ© has a serious problem: every so often his home in rural Kenya is invaded by an army of ants. Call 60 Minutes? Which section do the other musicians love to hate? Marmie says three, while Ryan says four or more. Guests: Comedian and rabbit expert Amy Sedaris; Jim Correll, plant pathologist, University of Arkansas; geologist and sinkhole expert David Wilshaw. Caller Austin had a fragment of a song stuck in his head, and he needed our assistance. Why do we cry? Plus, pro-tips for developing your auctioneer chant. Behind the Pompoms: Cheerleadingâs Checkered Past. Caller Shannon is at a loss for words when it comes to describing her favorite vegetable -- corn. Plus, Is That Bug Threatening Me? Guests: Cognitive scientist Ben Bergen, author of What the F***; Gwen Whittle, supervising sound editor at Skywalker Sound. Does that person sitting next to you on the plane REALLY work in IT? Producer Christine Driscoll meets an alleyway plant dealer and discovers an industry right under our noses. Â. Guest: pain researcher Stuart Derbyshire. Sinkholes: How Scared Should I Be? Guests: Biologist Marcus Stensmyr, Lund University. Now we need your help picking a winner. A police sketch artist reveals how she turns your fuzzy memory into a sharp drawing. Tucked into your carâs dashboard is a tiny arrow that points to the side of the car with the gas tank cap. Guest: biologist and ocean researcher Edie Widder. Guest: record-holding NASA astronaut Christina Koch. ELT unravels the surprising story of pants. Plus, how to make a new flavor, and ELT listeners pitch their ideas for the next flavor fad.Â, Garbage: What Did We Do Before the Bag? Wear leopard-print one-shouldered dresses? Rhinologist Simon Gane fills us in on COVID-related smell loss. Plus, a processed cheese expert on making the most of the dairy aisle. And is there a way to unstick them? Tooth Worms and Tooth Pullers: Dentistryâs Rotten History. There's always more to it. Guest: Jolie Kerr, of Ask a Clean Person. Can Gab learn to be less clumsy? In part one of a two-part episode, ELT flips through the history of cheerleading and meets the man who held cheerleading in the pompom of his hand.Â. Plus, a tunnel follow up with Dr. Mole: where do the emergency exits in underwater tunnels go? Jalopnik senior editor Jason Torchinsky sets the record straight about this heady hack. And you delivered. Sell it on eBay? ELT unearths the tale of the largest buried treasure ever found in North America. As it started to come back, she noticed something strange â fruity things smelled like burnt hair and condoms. Fear, pride, relief, anger â ELT listeners who deliver packages, stock shelves, and drive buses share how their lives have changed during the pandemic. Plus, Discovering the 8th Continent, How did cold uncooked eggs become a festive beverage? Howâd it become a way of life? To help get you in the mood, weâre dusting off an episode from our archive. For a lot of us, the holidays wonât be the same this year. Listen to Every Little Thing on Spotify. When did organ music and baseball become a thing? Plus, we talk to someone who turns the âmother f*ckersâ into âmanhole coversâ for the TV versions of movies. Veterinarian Justine Lee is here with answers. Does swearing make you more powerful? Take it to the bank? ELT tackles a fat question. Plus, can tiny eyes see things we canât? The song reached the Top 20 in the UK, peaking at number 17. Is your roommate trying to kill you? ELT introduces How to Save a Planet, a new Gimlet Media podcast hosted by journalist Alex Blumberg and scientist and policy nerd Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson. Did cavemen really carry clubs? Plus, Whatâs the Next Big Flavor Fad? ELT finds out whether some people really can feel your pain. Every Little Thing. Guests: Fashion historian Suzanne Shapiro, author of Nails: The Story of the Modern Manicure; Suzi Weiss-Fischmann, co-founder and Brand Ambassador of OPI Products Inc., and author of Iâm Not Really a Waitress. Thanks to caller Chiara, and to Phillip Clauer and Christine Alvarado for their eggs-pertise. Get to know your most intimate animal companions.