Inspired by @depthsofwikipedia, this week we dive deeper into three of our favorite weird Wikipedia pages. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
From Gimlet.
This is reply all.
I'm Emanuel Jochi.
And I'm Alex Goldman.
And, Alex, you and I are joined, actually, by a new producer who's been working with us for the past couple months.
Her name is Kim Nadyfeyn Peterseh.
Hello, Kim.
Good job, Emmanuel.
You pronounce that so well.
Oh, good job on, like, your last name.
Yeah, I wasn't even gonna attempt it.
I mean, I've said it in the credits, like, several times.
That's true.
So I am so excited to be here now because I wanted to talk to you guys about this one idea that I had for a thing that we could do on the show today.
The idea comes from this social media account, and it's called depths of Wikipedia.
And I have spent the last few months just eating this thing up.
And I like it so much because I know that Wikipedia can be really dry and kind of, like, go on forever.
But the person behind this particular account does all of this work to surface the most obscure, strange hidden gems in the Wikipedia universe.
And I recently had the joy of talking to the person who made this.
Okay, I want to start with a question that might be formal, but I like it, which is.