![]() ![]() "We know our demographic, and we appreciate you giving up your place in line for Harry Potter," Sagal tells the throng filling the lawn. They have come to Millennium Park for a special taping of National Public Radio's weekly news-based quiz show on a comfortably cool Thursday evening in mid-July, a few days after the popular alternative-rock festival catered to an entirely different kind of crowd. Don't Tell Me! The gathering of approximately 10,000 people cheer and hoot for Sagal, who looks tiny standing under the Pritzker Pavilion's massive gray steel curves and protruding blocks of orange wood. "Well, eat your heart out, Pitchfork Festival!" exclaims the host of Wait Wait. ![]() ![]() Peter Sagal is having a rock-star moment. "More than we want to admit, many of us might want to dabble in such experiences," he says. Up close and personal: Sagal explores risqué behavior in The Book of Vice. ![]()
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