Loi Dunk
All good + No problem = Loi Dunk. Barbara and Teja bring lighthearted humor and fun facts for uncertain times. Media, technology, weird news, geeky stuff, comedy.
New name, same us!
(Formerly Date Night and Living Forward.)
Loi Dunk
Hooves and Harmonics | A Meandering Pet Zebra | The World's Tiniest Violin
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In this Loi Dunk: Weird News episode, Teja introduces us to a pet zebra in Tennessee who decided to treat himself to a little solo adventure, including a scenic trot through town and dinner in a meadow. Who doesn't like a little alone time?
Yes, you can have a pet zebra in Tennessee. Should you? That’s a different question. Find out what other weird pets are or aren't allowed in Tennessee.
Barbara brings in a story that’s musical and microscopic. Nanoscientists have built the world’s tiniest violin, smaller than a human hair. It's not just an expression anymore. It's the perfect gift for the emotionally dramatic flea in your life.
Find us on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok: @loidunk
You know what I find weird about weird news is that in order to find weird news, you either have to have weird friends or weird people in your neighborhood or at the coffee shop telling you weird things, or you have to read about it in weird places that have weird news as opposed to experiencing weird news.
SPEAKER_00I don't want to experience weird news. No. Experiencing weird news is bad.
SPEAKER_02Why is that?
SPEAKER_00Well, I mean, come on. You never you don't want something like unpredictably weird to start happening to you every single day.
SPEAKER_02I didn't say every single day.
SPEAKER_00I mean you wake up, you roll out of bed, and then weird. Woo! Let's go!
SPEAKER_02So you want to wake up every morning bored. Like imagine waking up in the morning, you're like, kind of bored. Oh, but but means your dreams are just gray about cardboard, like the history of cardboard. I dreamt last night about the history of cardboard.
SPEAKER_00You know, you mentioned the history of cardboard a lot. Do you even know anything really about cardboard? Yes, I do. Why? Because cardboard.
SPEAKER_02When I was teaching television production, there's a course I taught called uh uh short form documentary film production.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02And I had the students do once, one semester, particular semester, I had them do research and do their own version of a short form documentary on the history of cardboard. And we learned a lot about it.
SPEAKER_00I'm sure you did.
SPEAKER_02I chose a what would be a very important thing. Well, they each had a different role. Like one did the research, one did the filming, one did the clean role research.
SPEAKER_00Oh, I see. I thought you were watching like 12 individual hour-long documentaries about the history of cardboard.
SPEAKER_01Ken Burns! 2025 Ken Burns documentary series. The history of cardboard.
SPEAKER_00But that's not usually how his documentaries go.
SPEAKER_02No, they don't.
SPEAKER_00But you know you run out of ideas at some point laid back than that.
SPEAKER_02That would be weird.
SPEAKER_00But but you brought some weird news today, and I brought some weird news. I mean, I'm not sure that mine is weird as much as interesting, but again, living in interesting time.
SPEAKER_02I think it's the definition of weird too. Like what's weird?
SPEAKER_00Oh, okay.
SPEAKER_02Right?
SPEAKER_00True. True. Okay. Hit us with your weird news.
SPEAKER_02Okay, my weird news is a runaway pet zebra had been captured in Tennessee.
SPEAKER_00Pet zebra.
SPEAKER_02A pet zebra. So I have a lot of questions here.
SPEAKER_00I have so many questions.
SPEAKER_02First, and there's a picture of the zebra having been caught in a harness, and the zebra looks quite comfortable.
SPEAKER_00Actually, yeah, that looks like one of those little hanging chairs. My mom had one of those. It was this hanging chair, and you just kind of sink into it. Yeah. Like a sprang mantis cocoon and sway.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, this this zebra looks really comfortable.
SPEAKER_00So actually.
SPEAKER_02This runaway pet zebra was on the loose for more than a week in Tennessee.
SPEAKER_00I'm still stuck on the word pet. I mean, like, because you can have pet zebras in Tennessee.
SPEAKER_02How often do pets first, how often do pets run away?
SPEAKER_00I'm sure quite frequently.
SPEAKER_02Right? And then how many pet zebras run away?
SPEAKER_00Well, how many people have pet zebras is my question.
SPEAKER_02Right. So that means that that zebra ran away for a good reason. Like I could see a good portion of people who have dogs or cats or rabbits that may run away. You know, maybe they don't have such a good home life. But if you went out of your way to get a pet zebra from halfway around the planet.
SPEAKER_00Okay, I need more pet. Why would it run away? I don't well, I don't know. Tell me more.
SPEAKER_02Well, so Ed, the zebra, the zebra's name is Ed.
SPEAKER_00Oh, okay.
SPEAKER_02Was captured safely after being located in a pasture, of course, because where else would it be? A mall. Uh near a subdivision in the Christiana community in central Tennessee.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02All right. Ed was airlifted and flown by helicopter back to the waiting animals trailer, the sheriff's office said in his statement. So here was.
SPEAKER_00So he's got his own trailer. Yes. He's got his. Bring me my bring me my my favorite. I'm not just a pig. My favorite smoothie. And uh can my close please have my hoofs shined. Thank you very much.
SPEAKER_02Well, if you're a zebra and you're hiding for a week, so here's my question.
SPEAKER_00But he wasn't hiding, he was right out there in the pasture the whole time. He probably bought it.
SPEAKER_03Bought the pasture?
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
unknownYou know?
SPEAKER_00Bought the farm. Pasture. Time to get out on his own, buy his own place.
SPEAKER_02A bit of crypto.
SPEAKER_00He's a bit yeah.
SPEAKER_02But see, zebras have stripes for a reason. Right? Zebras have stripes for a reason. What I learned, I only learned this yesterday, that some animals, like tigers, I think it is, tigers, don't see color the same way humans do. So um, like gazelles don't see color also the same way humans do. So that when a tiger is hiding in the serengeti, even though a tiger is, is it the tiger or the which one is kind of yellowish and yeah, tiger. Uh kind of yellowish and black. The other animals that are the that are the prey don't see the yellow.
SPEAKER_00Oh, that's unfortunate.
SPEAKER_02So the the tiger is able to camouflage itself in the serengeti in the bushes or whatever, because the the shade of gray or dark.
SPEAKER_00Can I give them a little glasses or something?
SPEAKER_02Like night night vision glasses?
SPEAKER_00Like the kind yeah.
SPEAKER_02That'd be so cool.
SPEAKER_00Only for yellow. It's not night vision. They can see yellow all of a sudden.
SPEAKER_02But hold on, this zebra is hiding for a week.
SPEAKER_00He was out in plain sight in pasture.
SPEAKER_02How do you hide with black and white stripes? In Tennessee.
SPEAKER_00Was it snowing? Even was it still be black and white.
SPEAKER_02It's like stripes.
SPEAKER_00I know.
SPEAKER_02You'd have to be hiding like either like in a in a prison cell, like you know, just kind of like between the bars.
SPEAKER_00Postmodern pasture?
SPEAKER_02Well. I'm just saying that how do you hide for a week? It'd be pretty obvious. It'd be pretty obvious if you were striped white and black.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02That you would be easily, easily seen in a pasture.
SPEAKER_00And on the subway and anywhere else, because that would be really weird. But it's not really weird for a zebra. Zebra's just chilling out in the pasture.
SPEAKER_02No, but he ran away.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_02So clearly he's running away from something. Maybe.
SPEAKER_00Why do we think he ran away? Well, it says there. Why don't we think maybe he just wanted to go out to eat instead of eating at home?
SPEAKER_02I mean, we've all found in a pasture.
SPEAKER_00He just felt like going out that night. Didn't want takeout to bring in. He just wanted to hang out and, you know, have someone else cook for a change. I think that makes sense.
SPEAKER_02The last sentence says the zebra was spotted and filmed running alongside Interstate 24, forcing deputies to shut the roadway, but Ed escaped into the wooded area.
SPEAKER_00All right, now hold on. Okay. Our pet zebras Oh boy. Legal in Tennessee. In Tennessee. Yes. It is legal to own a zebra as a pet. Okay, hold on. Tennessee.com. Ooh! Zebras, Kangaroos, Giraffes. Okay, this is the Tennessean. And this was updated June 3rd, 2025. And uh uh what story was yours from?
SPEAKER_02Uh this is Associated Press, of course.
SPEAKER_00Oh, okay. Well, this is the Tennessean. And oh, I see. They're referencing the zebra on the loose.
SPEAKER_03See?
SPEAKER_00Okay. Yes, a pet zebra. Okay, so blah blah blah blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, missing zebra, blah blah blah, picture of zebra, blah blah blah. Are they allowed as pets in Tennessee? Yes.
SPEAKER_03See?
SPEAKER_00So what's so if you can own a zebra, what's not allowed in Tennessee? The list might surprise you. Okay, animals you can own in Tennessee. Okay, and animals you can't own in Tennessee. All right. So are you ready?
SPEAKER_02Yes, go for it.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Which list is this one from? Can you own ferrets and chinchillas in Tennessee?
SPEAKER_02Can you own ferrets and chinchillas in Tennessee? Ferrets are the little and then chinchillas are like they're kind of like ferrets. So can you own ferrets and chinchillas in Tennessee?
SPEAKER_00In Tennessee.
SPEAKER_02No.
SPEAKER_00You can own ferrets and chinchillas in Tennessee.
SPEAKER_02Okay.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Alright.
SPEAKER_02If you're gonna own a zebra or a giraffe in Tennessee, hippopotamus. No.
SPEAKER_00You cannot own a hippopotamus in Tennessee. All right. Okay.
SPEAKER_02Can you imagine why? Can you imagine a hippopotami running away?
SPEAKER_00How about um a turtle measuring four inches or less?
SPEAKER_02Four inches or less, yes.
SPEAKER_00No.
SPEAKER_02No.
SPEAKER_00Due to possible salmonella contamination. What? Native turtle species are also prohibited.
SPEAKER_02Who eats turtles?
SPEAKER_00No, it's a pet.
SPEAKER_02But salmonella poisoning? Oh, that the turtle will get salmon?
SPEAKER_00No, that it can spread salmonella.
SPEAKER_02You can spread salmonella through a turtle shell?
SPEAKER_00Apparently.
SPEAKER_02Oh.
SPEAKER_00I don't I don't know. Okay. Alright. Llama, alpaco, alpaca, guanacos, vicunas, camels, giraffes, and bison. Yes or no?
SPEAKER_02Yes.
SPEAKER_00Yes, you can.
SPEAKER_02Bison?
SPEAKER_00You can own a bison in Tennessee. I'm gonna go to Tennessee and buy a bison.
SPEAKER_02I think I I'd like a giraffe.
SPEAKER_00Really?
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. For maybe like three days.
SPEAKER_00You could also get an ostrich.
SPEAKER_02If all of if you have a pet ostrich. So they can stick their head in it? You know, that's I'm not sure if that's a I think that's well, it might be true. But so if you own an ostrich and a zebra and a giraffe and a pet turtle over four inches long, and chinchilla, and they all run away on the same day.
SPEAKER_00Hmm. I think that you'll catch the turtle first. Alright, well, that was very interesting. Okay. I learned something.
SPEAKER_03What's your weirdness?
SPEAKER_00And now we're definitely gonna learn something.
SPEAKER_03Oh boy. Because you're Are you belittling my story?
SPEAKER_00No. I'm just saying, you know what how it is when someone starts telling you about their problems.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00And you think that their problem may be a bit of a first world problem.
SPEAKER_02A bit of a first world problem.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. And you say, aww, I'm plucking me, I'm playing the world's tiniest violin. And then you do this, right? Yeah. Sometimes people do this, right? Okay. In truth, the world's smallest violin.
SPEAKER_02Yes. Oh.
SPEAKER_00Can't be seen without a microscope.
SPEAKER_02What?
SPEAKER_00Yes. So I am back on the. So is it a real violin?
SPEAKER_02Like a violin violin? It's a violin.
SPEAKER_00Mozart, if he was really small, he'd have to be like really, really small. Really small.
SPEAKER_02Okay.
SPEAKER_00Um because this is uh they used nanotechnology.
SPEAKER_02No, to build a violin, is it made of wood?
SPEAKER_00I think it I don't know. Uh oh no, no, platinum, platinum, platinum. Platinum. It's a platinum violin that measures thirty-five by thirteen microns.
SPEAKER_02How uh uh uh compare inch to micron. All right, to know twenty-five thousand four hundred microns equals one inch. Twenty-five thousand four hundred microns equals one inch.
SPEAKER_00And how big is this thing? Thirty-five by thirteen microns. Okay, so thirty-five microns is a measurement unit equal to one millionth of a meter. Oh my gosh.
SPEAKER_02How do you make something that small? Well, I guess supercomputers have right.
SPEAKER_00Well, they made it. So, so, all right, so a human hair may range from 17 to 180 microns, which is actually a much, much wider range than I would have anticipated. Although looking at some people's hair is very thick. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02And my hair is okay, keep going because I know where you're going with that. Yeah. You're looking at me directly.
SPEAKER_00The shaft of the hair.
SPEAKER_02I feel the heat on my head right now.
SPEAKER_00The shaft of the hair is between 17 and 180 microns.
SPEAKER_02Okay.
SPEAKER_00Diameter.
SPEAKER_02So they made that violin smaller than the width of a hair.
SPEAKER_00Yes.
unknownOh wow.
SPEAKER_02Does it play?
SPEAKER_00It didn't say.
SPEAKER_02And is it accurate? Do you have to tune it?
SPEAKER_00They said that they built.
SPEAKER_02How large would the orchestra be?
SPEAKER_00Well, that would be even smaller than a flea orchestra.
SPEAKER_02Can you imagine if if if Mozart was given a violin that big?
SPEAKER_00He'd probably he'd accidentally step on it and then it'd be whit gone.
SPEAKER_02That'd be the end of it.
SPEAKER_00Yes. But it's apparently nanolithography. Technology that allows scient scientists to build and study nanoscale objects and structures.
SPEAKER_02Wow. Have they built anything else that's small? Like, can they build a you know, like an electric toothbrush? Or like really little teeth, baby teeth?
SPEAKER_00Maybe. Maybe, yeah. Or, you know, they can build this tiny, tiny violin and like have a paramecium play it or something.
SPEAKER_02Paramecium are very new musical.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00I mean, paramecium, people really just haven't had the paramecium market in mind when they make stuff. And I think that it's a shame.
SPEAKER_02Wow, it is definitely a shame. And when paramecium get hurt, who goes to get them?
unknownWho?
SPEAKER_02Paramedics. It's not funny.
SPEAKER_00Okay. And I guess that wraps up our weird news. Look what you've got to know.
SPEAKER_02I know. See, that's the problem with these things. There's always a metaphor behind this.
SPEAKER_00Oh.
SPEAKER_02Like if you get a squishy thing and it's a hamster, then it's like, oh, the poor hamster. You know, but if it's a brain, it's gonna like, yeah, yeah, that's what my brain does. Yeah, I'm so tired. I'm exhausted. This is stressful.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Yeah. No, anything that's squishy, I just squish. I'm the queen of fidget toys.
SPEAKER_02Yes. That's why going to the movies with you can be a little trying sometimes.
SPEAKER_00You know at the movies how people say I don't, but I don't do it.
SPEAKER_02No, I don't do candy wrappers.
SPEAKER_00I don't do candy wrappers.
SPEAKER_02Oh, not candy, but other stuff. Like paramecium paramecium poop?
SPEAKER_00That it made while playing the world's tiniest.