Comedy Bang Bang: The Podcast - Bonus Bang: John Hodgman, Paul F. Tompkins, Will Hines (More-imony Tony)

Episode Date: January 9, 2025

This is episode 1 of our "More-imony Tony" series, originally #584 titled “Weirdamony Alimony Tony” airing January 27th, 2019. Humorist John Hodgman (Judge John Hodgman, Vacationland) joins Scott ...to talk about secret families, what he did to prepare for officiating a wedding, and his career as the character “Monica Geller” on Friends. Then, Alimony Tony stops by to sing some of his parody songs. Later, odds and ends man Rupert Sharp drops by to promote his home services. Get access to all the podcasts you love, music channels and radio shows with the SiriusXM App! Get 3 months free using this show link: https://siriusxm.com/cbb 

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey everyone, Scott Aukerman here, host of Comedy Bang Bang, and it's 2025. And you know what that means, in this case. It means that bonus bangs are back! That's right, we're kicking off a new series of bonus bangs. These of course are the episodes taken out from behind the paywall and given to you to listen to anew. And this is a new series that we are calling Morimony Tony. That's right, this is gonna be a series centering
Starting point is 00:00:32 on the beloved Paul F. Tompkins character, Alimony Tony, the parody singer who loves just a little too much, just in time for Valentine's Day. This is an exciting series and it begins right there at the beginning. Our first episode is number 584. It's called Weirdamoney, Alamony Tony, released originally on January 27th, 2019, just six short years ago. And the people involved are John Hodgman, Will Hines as Rupert Sharp, and of course, Paul F. Tompkins
Starting point is 00:01:07 in his first appearance as Alamone Tony. Now, Paul, a little behind the scenes info and tidbit regarding this episode, he came in prepared to do another character. He says he believes it was Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber. And when he, you'll hear what happens when he hears the name Alamone Tony, he switched gears midstream to mix metaphors and Alamone Tony was born. Alamone Tony here,
Starting point is 00:01:33 he drops by to debut a few of his parody songs and you'll hear exactly how it got started. Now, if you like what you hear and you want to hear the entire CBB archive, you can become a subscriber at cbbworld.com where you can find every single episode we've ever recorded as well as every live episode, including our 2024 tour. And we're gonna be back Monday with a brand new episode of Comedy Bang Bang. Until then, enjoy Comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang Comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang, comedy bang bang Magneto only sips mojito, Zincognito, I think he might have a drinking problem Come and eat bagpies Come and eat bagpies Bagpies I love doing it so much. I love doing court orders so much. My court ordered obligations. Oh, somebody mentioned my name! Oh, Alamoni Tony!
Starting point is 00:02:45 It's me, Alamoni Tony! Oh, thank you so much for the catchphrase submission. I love playing Alamoni! How many ex-wives do you have, Alamoni Tony? As many as I can get. How many is that? It's seven. I love playing Alamoni.
Starting point is 00:02:53 I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni.
Starting point is 00:03:01 I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. I love playing Alamoni. Tony thank you so much for the catchphrase of this is love How many ex-wives do you have alimony Tony as many as I can get how many is that it's seven? I love seven x-y. Why are all they're all beautiful? I'm sorry. It didn't work out. It's my problem Maybe I got arrested development. I need to grow up You sound a lot like my other friend Buddy. What's his name? Velasco?
Starting point is 00:03:27 How should I know? He's your friend. Are you sure I don't sound different enough? To hang around? I don't sound different enough to hang around? I don't think you sound different enough to hang around. Let me clear my throat. When in the court... Hey, that's me, Alamody Tote.
Starting point is 00:03:42 Oh, hey! There you are. I love Peg Alamoni. There is something going around that changes voices that way. I always wonder about someone like you who's a serial marrier, why do you marry so many women? I mean, maybe you have issues that preclude you, you know, necessitating getting married. You know, I used to think that I got married for love because I just have so much love
Starting point is 00:04:04 in my heart, but now I realize I love Peg alimony. That's what it is. It's the best. That's why they call me Alimony Tony. How much in alimony are you paying per month now? Well let's see, let's see per month I'm gonna say it's somewhere in the neighborhood of $12,000. $12,000? So it's up among the seven X, Ys. No, each. Oh my gosh, so we're talking $84,000? I am providing alimony so they may live in the matter which they become accustomed to. Oh my God, you're paying like almost a million dollars
Starting point is 00:04:35 a year in alimony then. Oh shit, I never did the math. How much money do you make every year? What have I done? Are you independently wealthy? I'm independently wealthy. Oh, I see, okay. How much money do you have in the bank?
Starting point is 00:04:46 My mother invented gaseous paper. No, I've heard of liquid paper, but gaseous paper. What's that? Okay, liquid paper is something that Mike Nesmith's mom invented, yeah. From the monkeys? That's right, yes. What a fun bit of trivia.
Starting point is 00:04:59 No, I invented, my mother invented gaseous paper, which NASA uses in the space program. Oh, I see. Did you also invent something akin to, did you invent VH1? Like Mike Nesmith invented MTV? I invented VH2. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Yes. Certainly less popular. Well, it's been very nice meeting you. Well, okay. I might be back later. Okay. Who knows? Will you be back to pick us up later?
Starting point is 00:05:21 Ha ha ha, Simpsons. All right, well, Alamone Tony everyone. Had two very distinct voices. I'm gonna go out in the lobby. Okay. And then when you need me, I'm gonna come back in. Okay, sure. I'm presuming you need me.
Starting point is 00:05:34 Is that where the after party is, out in the lobby? The after party's always out in the lobby. Alright. Let's get to our first guest. My name's Scott Aukerman, by the way. Comedy Bang Bang for another week. Is it this door? Is it? Yeah, that one, that's a window actually you're looking at.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Yeah, it's a new studio you may not be familiar with. Yeah. Okay, this is one of those circles. Usually doors are not see-through. Now this handle isn't round. No, it's a rectangular handle, I guess. It's a velociraptor handle. That's a velociraptor, we need to be able to.
Starting point is 00:05:58 Oh sure, from Jurassic Park 2. So if a velociraptor can figure it out, I'm sure you can. I believe it's from Jurassic Park 1, by the way. Alamone Tony hunts and packs. If only. I wish it was someone else to share the burden of this alamone, but I love playing it. Do you have a wingman? What's that?
Starting point is 00:06:14 Do you have a wingman, speaking of dinosaurs? What? Do dinosaurs have wingmen? They have wings, man. They're called pterodactyls. Velociraptors and pterodactyls team up. I picked you. Are these movies about dinosaurs dating?
Starting point is 00:06:22 All right, we'll see you later. All right. Welcome back to the show. I'm going to go to bed. I'm going to goors and pterodactyls team up. I picked you. So these movies are about dinosaurs dating? Alright, we'll see you later. Alright. Welcome to the show. Scott Aukerman for another week of Comedy Bang Bang. And what a week it is.
Starting point is 00:06:35 A little later we have an odds and ends man. That's very exciting. An odds and ends man maybe is how you say it? Ends man, ends man. And that's very exciting. Plus an old friend will drop by. Plus Alamone Tony is out there in the lobby anytime we need juicing up.
Starting point is 00:06:49 And before we do that though. The podcast is the podcast lobby. Okay, now I'm catching the reference. Now you are. Yeah, I'm the young man still. He is a young man and one of our, still. When do you turn into an old man? When I...
Starting point is 00:07:06 Is it a mental thing or is it when your physical body starts to decline? I think it happened this morning. Really, what happened this morning? I looked in the mirror and I saw I was wearing a trucker hat and a beard and I'm like, that's wrong. You are wearing a trucker hat and your trucker hat says pizza slice on it.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Extra cheese. Double cheese, I believe. Double cheese, I'll look. It's hard to see up there on your hat. I'm not looking through a mirror all the time. Yeah, that's true. Just this morning when I realized I'm too old to be dressed like this.
Starting point is 00:07:31 I mean, you're wearing a hoodie, a trucker hat, and you are, as far as I know, you're not from the greatest generation, necessarily. Why am I Alamo and Tony all of a sudden? Hey, Alamo! Hey! Did someone call my name? Alamo and Tony, someone's impersonating you. Oh, hi, I'm a new poster.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Oh, hello. This has never happened to me before. Not to me. You know, which of us is the real Alamo-dy Tony? What does my hat say? Scott, don't shoot me! I'm the real Alamo-dy Tony! Put down that gun!
Starting point is 00:08:00 Why did you mention your favorite television show? Shoot him, I'm the real Alamo-dy Tony! Extra cheese! Double cheese! Wait a don't I'm lactose intolerant. So clearly I'm the real alamo I'm just gonna shoot both of you Which one of you is bleeding green Alright, yeah, John Hodgman is here, one of our favorite guests. Hello. Hello, I'll be back later, hello.
Starting point is 00:08:29 To pick me up? Yes, of course. The Simpsons? That's right. It's so good to see you, John. You're one of our favorite guests. And as far as I know, you have nothing to promote, is that correct?
Starting point is 00:08:37 You're one of my favorite hosts. Well, I have only the same things to promote all the time. Why do people come on this show and they're like, I wanna come on a certain week because I got this thing I got to talk about. No, you're just like, let me on. I'm in town.
Starting point is 00:08:49 Yeah. I was in town for a wedding. Mm-hmm. And I'm missing you. Did you get married? What's that? Did you get married? I love paying alimony.
Starting point is 00:08:57 Of course. It would be your alimony, Tony. But please don't tell my wife, yes, I got married again. Wow. Have you ever met anyone who had a secret family? I am a person with a secret family. You are? Yes, I am.
Starting point is 00:09:07 Have you met anyone else is what I guess what I'm? Well, we don't travel in circles. Really? So the people who have secret families, there's not some sort of message board to connect to talk about the issues of like, oh, I tried to hide it this way. Kind of got secret in the name.
Starting point is 00:09:21 That's a good point. The first rule of secret families. My secret family is a lovely couple that lives here in Los Angeles. Okay, no wonder you're here all the time. That I stay with when I used to have work here. And I began spending more time with this family, this lovely young childless couple. Did it start as a roommate situation and then just... They were friends.
Starting point is 00:09:41 And I was tired of spending money, so I thought I would stay with friends. That money, man, like you get a bunch of it. Yeah. And then suddenly you're like, oh, I gotta give some of it to this person, some of it to this person. Tell me about it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:55 Alamoni, tell me about it. Are you listening? No, no, I'm reading a magazine. May I just say the new studios here are lovely, but need some work and sound. Exactly, a little insulation problem. May I just say the new studios here are lovely but need some work and sound. Exactly, little insulation problem. John Hodgman, you know him from such things as his own podcast.
Starting point is 00:10:12 The Judge John Hodgman podcast. It's available weekly. The Judge Sean Hoffman podcast. The Han Judgment podcast. The Han Shod Firstman podcast. John Hodgman. The Who's on First Podcast. Who's on First?. Who's On First?
Starting point is 00:10:25 Like why was that ever a thing? You know, because like who's on first and what's on first? Like these are not names. Second. No, of course. You know what I mean? It's like how did this become a thing where people were confused like, oh, that's so funny that he's confused by what?
Starting point is 00:10:42 Right. Well, Vaudeville Times people were dumb. And Vaudeville Times, and also they loved. I think they appreciated the craft of it. The wordplay, if you will. It's not even wordplay, though, because these are not names. Who could be construed as a name? Right.
Starting point is 00:10:57 But what? What? Second base. What'd you say? Second base. That's right. What'd you say? Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:11:04 And who's on third base? No, I don't know. Oh, I don't know. See, that's? Second base. That's right. What'd you say? Yes, exactly. And who's on third base? No, I don't know. Oh, I don't know. See, that's the thing. I don't know is on third base. I don't know. That should be updated, shouldn't it? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Naturally. Naturally. Home run. That's exactly right. Grand Rule Double. Field goal. Judge Sean Hoffman is here. And you say you're in town for a wedding.
Starting point is 00:11:26 I was in town to see a friend get married and then I came back to visit my secret family. You did watch this friend get married. I witnessed it. You saw it. I made it legal. The very act of you witnessing it made it legal. Did you sign any sort of documents or? I signed a thing at the hotel authorizing a pre-authorization.
Starting point is 00:11:46 Credit cards? Okay. That counts. And that makes it a legal wedding. No, as a friend, I was not officiating. You have officiated weddings previously. I officiated a wedding for my friends, Jean Grey and Quele Chris. Okay.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And is that the only one that you've ever done? That's the only one because, you know, as Judge John Hodgman, my podcast, it comes out at www.weeklyonmrcpnfun.org. Lots of people, because I'm a fake internet judge, fans of the show, and there are a few, who are getting married, will sometimes say, well, you preside at our wedding. And I say, absolutely not. You are, A, I'm not working for free for you, and B, your wedding is not a joke. Right, and were they to pay you and treat it seriously, would you be in the market for that?
Starting point is 00:12:30 Well, then someone, I said that once on the podcast as well, and then someone wrote in and said, I wasn't joking when I asked you, and I can pay you some money. Some money, anytime anyone says I can pay you some money. No, I think it was a fairly generous offer. Pay me all the money. Right.
Starting point is 00:12:44 But I still- Everything you have! I still, I still, I still decided not to do it because there were strangers. There were strangers to you. It could be a honey trap. For the third family. Yeah. It could be a murder plan.
Starting point is 00:12:59 That's true. I also think I've done it once myself. Not for strangers, truly. No, no, no, for two of my best friends. And I don't think that, and I was talking to their parents the other day, and they were wondering if I would ever do another one. And I was saying, I don't know that I would ever
Starting point is 00:13:14 do another one because I'm not close to anyone else who's not married. Yeah. You know, I'm not that close, as close as I am to them. It feels strange to do it just for some rando or for someone who's just an acquaintance. Or even if it's a, even and especially if it's a close friend, it's heavy. It's a heavy. It was a lot of responsibility.
Starting point is 00:13:33 And I'm very lazy. What did you do to prepare? I can tell you what I did and let's compare and contrast. I interviewed them. I got all the details. Compare. Okay, compare. No, no, I'm saying. details. Compare. Okay, compare. No, no, I'm saying.
Starting point is 00:13:46 It's comparable? No, that's a compare, not a contrast. I did the same, compare. You did the same. Okay, got it. Okay, I filled in all the details. You know how when you get to know someone and someone's dating someone, you kind of get the details over time, they'll fill you in, but you don't sit down and really hear
Starting point is 00:14:02 their whole story as told from the beginning to the end. You kind of get it piecemeal is what I'm trying to say. But you do that as an officiant. As an officiant, you want to sit them down and you got to get the story of their relationship. You want to tell the story of their love. Right. Compare. Compare. I kiss them both upon the forehead. Compare.
Starting point is 00:14:22 And then upon the tip of their penises. Contrast. When I go to the wedding, I want to sit and watch the show. I don't want to be the show. You don't want to be the show. When you go to a concert, are you ever hoping they call you on stage? No, that time has passed. Have you ever been called upon stage during a concert? During a concert? Like, just asked to strap on a guitar? Oh you know what happened? I was in the front row of that Bruce Springsteen concert and he called me up to dance. Wait a minute are you Courtney Cox? I am. Okay I think John has a disease where he thinks he's Courtney Cox. Hey can I ask how many seasons of Friends you starred in? All of them. God damn it
Starting point is 00:14:59 he's got it. Can't get anything past me. I'm paying a lot of alimony to you. Maybe I can ask you because in a previous episode I asked these questions thinking they had no answer, but did you, apparently fans have alerted to me to the fact that these were all answered on the show, so I'll ask you. By the way, very, very confusing setup, but I'm with you. Did you have the apartment first and then you met Chandler and Joey and became friends with them? Or did they move into the same building
Starting point is 00:15:30 across the hall from you because you guys were already friends? Well, you know, originally my, my, my, I'm not the character, you understand? Yes, but you've said all the lines, so you must know. I'm Courtney Cox. Yeah, you must know so much about it. I'm not like a Geller, right?
Starting point is 00:15:42 No, I know that. So you know, I've had a career since, you know, Cougar Town, all right? Just, okay, yeah. So if you want me to ask- If you ask Cougar Town questions as well. It was not my apartment, it was a set. I just wanted you to understand.
Starting point is 00:15:52 Sure, but in the narrative of the show- In the Franziverse? Yeah, the Franziverse. All right. Now we can talk. Okay, great. Yeah, so originally I lived there with Phoebe Buffay. You did?
Starting point is 00:16:01 Yeah. I didn't know Phoebe lived in that apartment. Every one of the friends lived in the apartment at one point or another. Really? Okay, because Chandler and Joey, they swapped apartments. Okay, so you lived with Phoebe there first? Then what happened? Then she moved out. And then I was looking for a roommate. And then my old friend from high school, Jennifer Aniston's character. Wait, that's the detail you don't know?
Starting point is 00:16:25 Rachel! They named a haircut after her! I thought she was named after the haircut. Okay, I'm not sure which happened first. That's another question that I don't know. Which happened first, the haircut or the baby? Well, that's another unanswerable question. Right. Then Rachel came in, I guess, her name is.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Yeah, but she came in after her wedding. She ran from the altar and was looking for a place to live. Yeah, yeah, but we haven't gotten to the question, which is. Who lived there first? No, not who lived there first. Third base. Did you? All right, I'll never know.
Starting point is 00:17:05 John, you're one of America's great raconteurs. Oh, thank you very much. We've talked about your book. Vacationland. Vacationland. I wanted to say Adventureland, but it's Vacationland. No, Adventureland is a movie by Greg Metola. Greg Metola.
Starting point is 00:17:19 Thank you, Greg. Greg is someone I know and now I feel really bad. Hi, Greg. And it's a wonderful book. I know you're not here to plug anything, but I love the book so much that I, and as a matter of fact, as I was walking in to this very studio, a person who's doing another show,
Starting point is 00:17:37 I was asked me who was on the show. A lot is going on here. Lots going on here. A hub of some serious media activity. They asked me who was on the show and I said, John, and she said to me, have you ever read his book, Vacationland? It's so wonderful. And I said, well, I read it as well.
Starting point is 00:17:51 And I thought the same thing and we agreed. Great, let me ask you some trivia questions about my book, Vacationland. Yeah. Now bear in mind, I read this Labor Day of 2017. That has come out in paperback since and is available now. Okay. It's actually available in paperback.
Starting point is 00:18:08 Ask me these questions. No, I don't have any. You have some sort of a canoe. I remember that. Oh. And you bought it at an auction. Well, see, you know plenty. Sure, that's all you need to know.
Starting point is 00:18:16 If you want to find out what the real story is, check out Vacationland. Thank you very much. Is there a chapter where you believe you're Courtney Cox and you just tell stories about David Arquette? Well, you know, I'm working on a new book now and I think half of it will be my memories of working on Friends. What if you turned in your book to your publisher and it was all just fake Courtney Cox memoir chapters?
Starting point is 00:18:40 I have a feeling they'd be very pleased. Just to get anything. Yeah, well, well that's true. John, anything else we can talk about before we bring in our guest? Well, I'm just really glad to be here. As you say, I have nothing to plug. I was in town for a wedding,
Starting point is 00:18:54 and I wanted to see my secret family. You wanna plug that wedding at all? You wanna plug the idea of marriage? Yeah, I'm waiting for the past. Everybody, take it seriously. Don't hire a podcaster to do it. You've taken it very seriously. You've you've been married for what I had to guess okay well this is great okay you and this ties into the guessing your age sure
Starting point is 00:19:13 you're so do you want a hint yeah give me one here 47 years old okay so if you say you're 47 you're a known liar that's right so I'm a, you're a known liar. That's right. So. I'm a vampire. You're also a vampire. You're 365 years old. Vampires can't tell the truth. As many years as there are days in a year. That's right. Do vampires celebrate the 365?
Starting point is 00:19:34 I'm working very hard. Thank you for drawing out this question because I'm working very hard to remember the answer. As to how old you are or how many years you've been married? I believe this is 2018, correct? It's 2019. Oh, hang on.
Starting point is 00:19:48 Let me go back to my spreadsheet. Do you know what month you got married in? I'm always fascinated by people who get married in like December or January or one of those months. September. September, everyone gets married in September. I got married in September. What day?
Starting point is 00:20:02 The 11th. Me too. No, no, sorry, sorry, sorry, 13th. Also me. Did you get married on September 11th? No, September 25th. 25th? Okay.
Starting point is 00:20:13 And in the year 1999. 1999, that is the... This will be our 20th anniversary. 20th anniversary, congratulations. Thank you very much. And good guess, by the way. I did not guess, you just merely told me. Well, I don't remember.
Starting point is 00:20:26 That said, you are a liar. I don't remember how things go. That's wonderful. Thank you very much. What is the 20th anniversary? You know how like, when your parents are off. Jell-O. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:35 Jell-O. Just Jell-O. Jell-O and Jell-O salads, that's the gift for the 20th. Is that because Bill Cosby was married to Camille for? I don't know who you're talking about. Have we stricken him from the record? Who? First guest.
Starting point is 00:20:50 Let's get to our first guest. And when I say first guest, I mean because you are a guest of honor and not really a guest, more of a peer. Yeah, because I have nothing to plug. I get it. I'm a deadbeat who just came to a podcast for no goddamn reason. Oh, what's this? Excuse me, who are you?
Starting point is 00:21:05 It's me, Alamone Tony. Oh, okay. You were in shadow there. I was doing my warm-ups. Oh, okay. Why are you warming up? Well, because I'm going to be a guest on your show. Oh, you are?
Starting point is 00:21:13 Yes. Alamone Tony, you're going to be a guest on the show? That's correct. Okay, he... Isn't there another guest schedule? I didn't see anyone out there. I didn't see anyone out there in the lobby. We have the odds and endsman coming up, but you know him from the show.
Starting point is 00:21:21 He's a great guy. He's a great guy. He's a great guy. He's a great guy. He's a great guy. He's a great guy. He's a great guy. He's a great guy. Okay, he... Isn't there another guest scheduled? I didn't see anyone out there. I didn't see anyone out there in the lobby. We have the odds and ends man coming up, but uh, you know him from the catchphrase at the top of today's show. Please welcome Alamoni Tony.
Starting point is 00:21:33 Hello everyone. Scott, thank you very much for using my catchphrase. It's my pleasure when it's that good. It's difficult not to use. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. What do you do? Are you, other than you're independently wealthy, you're the son of, in the gaseous paper. Of the heir to the gaseous paper fortune.
Starting point is 00:21:53 Do you do anything yourself other than write catchphrases or? I'm a bit of a weird Al. I don't know quite what that means. You write parody songs? Yes, I write parody songs. Okay. Are you, you're certainly not as successful. songs? Yes, I'd write parody songs. Okay. You're certainly not as successful.
Starting point is 00:22:08 Here's one, here's one. Because I was listening to, you know, guess Mr. Hodgman talking about himself. He's, uh, he's a liar, a vampire, he's an old town crier. That's from? It's like, I'm a joker, I'm a toker. Yes, the Steve Miller Man song, The Joker.
Starting point is 00:22:26 Right? Right? Some people call him Maurice. Who, the Joker? Yeah, some people call the Joker Maurice. Why do they do that? That is canon in the Batman universe. It's canon in the DCU.
Starting point is 00:22:40 Some people refer to the Joker as Maurice. It's mostly on the Gotham police scanners. Okay. Check out Maurice. They don't want to tip off. We got a report of Maurice. He's pouring laughing gas into the bank. That would tip off, I think.
Starting point is 00:22:56 Heads up, the smoker is there. So you do this for a living, or have you ever been paid for it? One out of 12, we have a midnight toker and the gold depository, I don't know. What are some other places where they keep valuable things? There were so many places in Gotham to rob. Isn't that strange?
Starting point is 00:23:15 Like everyone was just keeping valuable stuff in all of these buildings in Gotham. What do you think the Joker's overhead was? Because he certainly had a lot of stuff. He had a lot of employees as well. Yeah, staff. A lot of henchmen. That he would then turn into,
Starting point is 00:23:29 they would have garish smiles. You know what, this could be naive of me, but I always assumed the henchmen did it for the love. Like, unpaid interns. They had other jobs, but they were henchmen. They do it for exposure? They believed, well, they believed in the Joker's cause. For exposure, that's funny.
Starting point is 00:23:44 They, we got to unionize henchmen. Exposure to the Joker's gas. For exposure, that's funny. We've got to unionize Hedgeman. Exposure to the Joker's cast, of course. That's right. Because they like to laugh. Just like myself and the listeners of this program. Also did the Joker have to kill the people? Because being incapacitated by laughter is... That's torturous in and of itself.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Well you've already taken care of it. Like people can't do anything. They're laughing, you know? And it's also, I, I think, not to tell the Joker how to do his job. I think it's funnier. It's interesting to me, the Joker, he, he kills people, which is like the least funny thing you can do,
Starting point is 00:24:17 but he finds it, he finds it funny, which is hilarious. Very twisted. You know, I mean, maybe that's the ironic part of the whole Joker lore. If he just made people laugh, he would be a clown. Okay, but being, yeah. What are you saying? You're saying that maybe he could be robbing banks by doing who's on first to distract the guards with this incredible language. So he does who's on first to distract the guards and then what? His henchmen go in there and slip into the vault?
Starting point is 00:24:45 Here's another thing about the Joker. He's called the Joker, but he's dressed like a clown. I mean, clowns don't do jokes. You know what I mean? He has a face sort of like the Joker on the playing cards. Is that what he's supposed to dress like, you think? He's supposed to have the hats with the three bells on it? Like a jester.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Like a motley. A jester's motley. Yes, exactly. Motley, is that what- Yes, that's right. That's the outfit of the jester. I'll defer to alimony Tony. The jester's motley.
Starting point is 00:25:11 The jester's motley. Alimony Tony. Does anyone ever call you weird alimony Tony? I wish they would. But no one does. I wish they would call me weird-a-mony alimony Tony. Weird-a-mony alimony. Well, I will weird-a-mony alimony Tony.
Starting point is 00:25:24 Oh, I like the sound of that. I like Saint-Odo-Maki. Tell us about some of your other hits, or your other, at least, parodies, if they're not hits. Well, they're not hits. No one knows that I do this. It's a real shame. Is this your debut?
Starting point is 00:25:36 Well, I've put them on YouTube. Public debut. Oh, really? Yes. What would be a private debut? I guess doing it around the house for yourself. Or even your loved ones. Oh, that was so many loved ones. Oh, seven.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Do you know, I've been married in seven of the 12 months. Oh, okay. Each ex-wife I married in a different month of the year. Which ones have you not been married in? I have not been married in January. Okay. December. Okay.
Starting point is 00:26:01 October. All right. July. Okay. One more. May. Right. May. October, October, July. Okay. One more. May. May.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Wow. Do you hope to get married in every month? Is that something that you discuss with your eyes? That's the plan. That is what I want to do. And of course, you know, when you're getting married, you say to your prospective wife, I'd like to get married in this month.
Starting point is 00:26:23 And she says, well, I always hope for this month. And then you could bring out the big guns and say, well, another wife I married, we got married in that month. I want this to be special. So you're not telling them, I hope to get married in every month because I would think the next four of your wives would know that the marriage would be over soon. Well, there you have it.
Starting point is 00:26:39 I made that mistake once and only once. May I ask you a question now, Money Tony? Of course you may. I've been married for a certain number of years that I already forget. Almost 20. It's been a while. It's been a while.
Starting point is 00:26:49 In my secret family, I am the son of the secret family. I'm not the husband in the secret family. Right. So it's been a while since I've been on the market. How does an independently wealthy novelty songwriter without a particular audience find a future wife? Well, you've got gotta put yourself out there. And a lot of times I find that I take the advice
Starting point is 00:27:09 of a movie I once saw and I meet women in the supermarket. Which movie was that? I believe it was Barry Levinson's Tin Men. Oh, Tin Men. And what I will do is I'll go up and down the aisles looking lonely and sad. That's very attractive to women. Yes. Someone who's lonely and sad. Well, to a certain type of woman. That's very attractive to women. Yes.
Starting point is 00:27:25 Someone who's lonely and sad. Well, to a certain type of woman. That's true. A certain vulnerable type. There's someone out there for everyone and I found seven of those. You're hoping for the full dozen. Yes, from your lips to God's ears.
Starting point is 00:27:37 And then if you get five more, you'll be paying 60 more thousand dollars a month. Unless I can restructure this alimony deal. Right. Because now we're talking, this is gonna cause a dent. How much money do you have in the bank? Let's see, in the bank, I have- Do you keep some in the bank
Starting point is 00:27:57 and some in the gold depository? I have money- You better watch out for the smoker. I have money. Oh, but weep, wow. I have money in several different places out for the smoker. I have money. Oh, but weep, oh wow. I have money in several different places and of course in several different investments. Not all of it is liquid, some of it is gaseous.
Starting point is 00:28:14 I have gaseous money that's floating all around as we speak. That money I keep with me at all times. It's in the cloud. That's my mad money. It's in the cloud. Yes, it's in the cloud. Precious chemicals or? I love precious chemicals. It's in the cloud. Yes, it's in the cloud. Precious chemicals or?
Starting point is 00:28:25 I love precious chemicals. Liquid gold. Liquid gold. I love it. I love it. I have, of course I have a safe deposit box at the bank. Of course. Where I keep a lot of jewels, gold bars,
Starting point is 00:28:41 gold nuggets, gold ingots. So were you to liquidate all of your assets, how much money do you think that we're talking? In cash. gold bars, gold nuggets, gold ingots. So were you to liquidate all of your assets, how much money do you think that we're talking? In cash, US dollars? Probably north of a trillion dollars. A trillion dollars? So no wonder, giving away a million dollars a year,
Starting point is 00:28:58 who cares? Will you marry me? And then divorce me and give me alimony? Can I preside over the ceremony because I feel like you are my really good friend at this point. Scott, marriage is very serious, it's not a joke. That's right it is. Can I interview you about your love first?
Starting point is 00:29:15 You can kiss me on my forehead but not the other place. I wish that I could John but I have to marry for love. I have to marry for love even though I know I will eventually get divorced. What are you looking for in a partner? I like a lady with brown hair. I thought you said you were marrying for love. You're just in the tune for the brown hair.
Starting point is 00:29:34 I love brown hair. Wait a minute, Scott. That's just one criterion. Thank you. You know, he's just beginning a list. Would you like to hear the criterion collection? Of course, criteria? It's not all going to necessarily be superficial.
Starting point is 00:29:47 Why is it the criteria collection called criteria? The criteria, exactly. Ridiculous. Anyway, brown hair number one with a bullet. I like a lady with a bullet. Then way down below is number two. Then a steep drop off to number two is a sense of humor. I like-
Starting point is 00:30:01 When you say a sense of humor, everyone has a sense of humor, but it's their own particular sense of humor. That's you mean one like yours Yes, exactly where I say things and they laugh at it will we both agree. That's funny Someone who loves Popular songs reworked with new words. Okay, so so far you've mentioned someone's physical attributes What am I the I love my curvy wife guy come on I just said brown hair that's not that big So far you've mentioned someone's physical attributes and two things that they like about you. What am I, the I love my curvy wife guy? Come on, I just said brown hair.
Starting point is 00:30:28 That's not that big a deal. What's number four, her being curvy? I don't mind it. I don't mind a little, a guy with a little meat on the bones. I don't mind a gal who has, you know, very thick bones. Thick bones and then not a lot of meat or? One or the other, either very thin bones with a ton of meat or very stringy meat
Starting point is 00:30:53 with super thick bones. You just like a certain shape, however it gets there, doesn't matter to you. Exactly, exactly. Well, because I buy them, I bought my wife's clothing. Okay. And that's very nice of you. I keep a closet because there's nothing like it
Starting point is 00:31:09 when you bring a lady home. And you say, I've got a whole closet of clothing for you. Try it on, hon. Try it on. Well, she has to fit the clothes because when we get divorced, I keep the clothes in the house. That's right. Is that in the prenup?
Starting point is 00:31:21 Do you ever sign a prenup? I always sign a prenup. Okay. And part of this prenup is I'm going to prenup. Okay. Always sign a prenup. And part of this prenup is I'm going to give you. I'm definitely going to give you money. $12,000 a month. Oh yes, the prenup is very brief.
Starting point is 00:31:32 It simply states, should we get divorced, you will get $12,000 a month. And I gotta keep those clothes. I gotta keep those clothes. Gotta keep those clothes. Is it worded like that? I gotta keep those clothes. It's an asterisk. There's a lot of legal mumbo jumbo at the bottom of the, I gotta keep those clothes. Is it worded like that? I gotta keep those clothes. It's an asterisk.
Starting point is 00:31:45 There's a lot of legal mumbo jumbo that the bottom is, I gotta get those clothes. Has the wardrobe evolved and been added to since wife one? Or is it just wife one's wardrobe? What year was the first? It's updated as the fashions change. So you throw some out? Well, I can't bear to do that.
Starting point is 00:32:01 It expands. I treat them like the American flag and I burn them. Once they are no longer fit for service. I have a ceremony where I burn them. I play a bug to do that. It expands. I treat them like the American flag and I burn them. Once they are no longer fit for service. I have a ceremony where I burn them. I play a bugle. Yeah. And I burn them on top of the oven. So you play the bugle as well.
Starting point is 00:32:14 So you are a musician. I play one song of the bugle that is Taps. Oh, beautiful song. Did you? Beautiful song. Have you ever written funny lyrics for Taps? Of course I have. Let's hear some.
Starting point is 00:32:24 Burning clothes. Burning clothes, burning clothes, burning clothes. So you know this song. Yes, I'm a big fan. I didn't know where that came from. I saw it on YouTube. Well, that explains the one view. Well, too, I watched it.
Starting point is 00:33:01 I don't know how I came across it, what led me there. I got down into a YouTube hole. Were you searching song parodies? I may have been. You just typed the words song parodies into YouTube, and then you looked at every single listing and got down to buying. I did not look up the word weirdamoney, though.
Starting point is 00:33:19 So I didn't get to it there. I'd like people to look up the word weirdamoney. Weirdamoney, alamoney, Tony. Weirdamoney, alamoney, Tony, that's me. So you, when was your first wife? What year? When was your first wife? When did you get married to your first wife?
Starting point is 00:33:34 You know what I mean. 1998. Whoa, so you, so it's been 20 years. We had a very brief marriage, it only lasted a year. Then I think she married someone else. She did, who is this? What was her name? Her name was Catherine. Catherine I think she married someone else. She did, who is this? What was her name? Her name was Catherine.
Starting point is 00:33:45 Catherine? Wait, what? Yeah. Huh? What's that? Nothing, just that happens to be my wife's name. Oh. When did you get married?
Starting point is 00:33:56 September 25th, 1999. Oh, that's very interesting. And she has brown hair. Oh, mm-hmm. Can I ask you a question, John? Does she have big bones with a little bit of meat, or does she have tiny bones with a lot of meat? This is how all women can be described, one or the other.
Starting point is 00:34:14 It's strange, I don't think about women that way. So you couldn't even hazard a guess, publicly. I've not seen a cross section of her body. Okay. You gotta see that cross section of her body. No. In year 20, you gotta get there. I wish that that was a thing that you could see
Starting point is 00:34:29 before you get involved with someone. Did you see a cross section of their body? That's the 21st anniversary present, actually. Each member of the marriage gives each other a full body scan, MRI. One time I tried to marry a Chinese prisoner because I was hoping I could get to see a cross section of her body. Whoa, all right.
Starting point is 00:34:45 What was your wife's maiden name, if I may ask? And did she change it to Hodgman? No, and no. I may not ask the former, and she did not change it to Hodgman? Correct. So you could try guessing again, you're a good guesser. I've ruled out one.
Starting point is 00:35:05 Which one? Hodgeman. Hodgeman. Okay, is it Hodgewoman? How did you do that? That would be, now this is strange. Oh my goodness. Because I was married to a woman named Katherine Hodgewoman.
Starting point is 00:35:17 Katherine Hodgewoman was your previous first wife. This is too much of a coincidence. I'm speechless. As am I coincidence. I'm speechless. As am I, although I'm talking. All of a sudden I realize that my wife gets $12,000 a month. Just walking around money? I have no knowledge of.
Starting point is 00:35:39 She hasn't shared it with you? Wait a second, wait a second. I'm remembering now, all those checks coming back to me, unopened, returned to sender. Address unknown? She wanted nothing to do with me after we got divorced. Well, I love my wife very much, but that was dumb. Your curvy wife?
Starting point is 00:35:59 I want that money. I'm sorry, John the Dias cast. Catherine said no, she doesn't want the money. Hang on, I'm going to text her. Okay, sure. Do you mind if I send her a picture of you? I don't mind at all. I love having my picture taken. Oh, wow, you're really posing.
Starting point is 00:36:12 Well, I'm only turning. Hitting all those poses, all those angles. Damn. That's what it's about. It's about tiny micro adjustments. That's the key to getting your picture taken and getting it over with. Dear Kath, were you married to this man by any chance? Also, we need eggs. She probably would only know me as Tony.
Starting point is 00:36:34 I didn't say your name. She wouldn't know you by picture, by sight? He sent a picture. She would only know Tony? She would only know Tony. Did you disguise your face? Yeah, we got married in the dark, and we lived in the dark for a picture. She would only know Tony? Did you disguise your face? Yeah, we got married in the dark, and we lived in the dark for a year.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Is it one of those like dark restaurants? Yes, exactly. I thought that's the way to live. The greatest first blind date. Exactly. That was our first date. Almost literally blind. That was our first date.
Starting point is 00:36:59 In 1998, we went to one of those completely dark restaurants. Right, and you said, let's keep this going. We had such a wonderful time. I said, why should we tap it with this? I never want to find out if your hair is brown or not. So. Yeah, given, if this is true for all your wives,
Starting point is 00:37:10 really the color of the hair really is immaterial. No, that was just the book. I don't do the same thing. I don't live with all these women in the dark. Oh no, of course not. You don't do the same thing among your seven wives. You just make them wear the same clothes. Each of my relationships is unique.
Starting point is 00:37:23 John, have you gotten text back? No, because I put my phone on airplane mode because I respect the studio. Oh, okay, we're never gonna get an answer then. Put my phone on airplane mode, do da, do da. There's another. That was your other one that I went to. Oh, you saw that one too?
Starting point is 00:37:37 Yeah, yeah, I'm the second view. Wow, well. I can't send a text, I can't get emails. I put my phone on airplane mode, now I'm going to cry. I just took off airplane mode. A lot of your songs end with, now I'm going to cry. Most of them do, yes. I think it's a funny punchline, and you don't see it coming.
Starting point is 00:37:57 Although, the more videos that you watch, you kind of do see it coming. It's very repetitive. If you watch the entire playlist, yes, you will see, you will... But then it becomes that comedy of, oh, he does it every time. Oh, it's very repetitive. If you watch the entire playlist, yes, you will see, you will, but then it becomes that comedy of, oh, he does it every time. Oh, it's so many times that. And then I'll put one in there where I don't do it, and then they're like, okay.
Starting point is 00:38:11 Oh, he's done with it now. And then I do it again. Oh, so funny. Exactly. I just took my phone off of airplane mode. Okay. And oh my gosh, I'm getting a lot of text that have stacked up. Really?
Starting point is 00:38:22 Yeah. Oh, wow. Bum, bum, bum, bum. It's really blowing up here. Wow. It's not true. I just want to seem popular. But no, Catherine wrote back and she said, I'm really not sure. Hang on, I gotta write back to her.
Starting point is 00:38:36 Sure. Oh, that's our shortstop. Send. Classic comedy. Now that's a joke a clown could love. Well, sorry, a weirdo, Mony, Alamony, Tony. You can call me Alamony, Tony. That's fine.
Starting point is 00:38:49 That's fine. We have to take a break. Can you, do you want to stick around? I'd love to stick around. Okay, well. Scott, I'm having a wonderful time. I listen to the show, obviously, because it's a minute catchphrase. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:38:59 Yeah, that's true. We also have an Odds and Ends Man coming up. Oh, this is exciting. I love your open door policy. Never been on the show before. And hopefully we'll get a little more information from Catherine. We'll be right back with more Comedy Bang Bang after this.
Starting point is 00:39:12 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Comedy Bang Bang, we're back here with our good friend John Hodgman. His podcast is out there, much like the truth in the X-Files.
Starting point is 00:39:24 You can get it somewhere. We also have WeirdamonyAlamonyTony is with us. Do you know the alphabet? I can teach you, yes I bet. And then I do a comical thing where I put the letters in the wrong order and I run out of time because the song ends at a certain point before I can get out of it.
Starting point is 00:39:43 That seems like the funny part. I don't know why you sang the first part. Oh, well I wanted to give people a flavor for it. Oh, okay. So I can sing on my YouTube channel. Listen. What is the channel, by the way? How do people get to it?
Starting point is 00:39:54 Because you said you wish people called you Weird-a-Money, Al-a-Money Tony. Yes, the channel is entitled, Please, I Beg of You, Call Me Weird-a-MoneyMoney-a-Money Tony. These are my YouTube videos of songs that I put funny words to. Okay, and you own this, surely no one out there listening
Starting point is 00:40:13 will be able to. Well, here's what I think the problem is, is that it's all one word. And it's so easy to get one letter off. Yeah. To forget a word. That's the whole internet, you know? That's the whole internet.
Starting point is 00:40:27 That's why these things like Google, it's easy. Google, it's easy. Hey, you sound like you used to sound. Clear your throat again. Google, it's easy. All right, well, we need to get to our next guest. Please, have fun. I've been hyping him up here for a dog's age here.
Starting point is 00:40:45 But he is, of course, an odds and ends man, which I don't exactly know what that is. But welcome to the show Rupert Sharp. Hello. Hey, Scott, fellas. Thanks so much. Love to be on the show. Boy, oh boy. What a thrill.
Starting point is 00:40:57 It's our thrill. This is John Hodgman. Hey, how are you? I have a fan of your podcast. Oh, thank you. The Judge John Hoffman podcast? Oh, no. That one I don't know. Oh, check it out. Maybe it's not you that I'm a fan of your podcast. Well, thank you. The Judge John Hoffman podcast? Oh no, that one I don't know. Oh, check it out.
Starting point is 00:41:06 Maybe it's not you that I'm listening to. There's some podcasts I like, but you seem like a good guy and I'm glad to meet you. Can I ask, does he ask to lock the gates at the beginning of it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay, that's not John. I feel like I know a lot about you, by the way.
Starting point is 00:41:17 And you're tasting guitar riffs. Oh yeah. If you're the man I'm thinking of anyway. That's my side hustle. This is Weirdamoni Alamoni, Tony. Hi there. Oh yes, Weirdamoni Alamoni. Tony. Hi there. Oh yes. Weirdamoni Alamoni?
Starting point is 00:41:28 Yes. What an iambic name. I don't know the names of the different poetic things. It's a pretty iambic name. You could just call me Alamoni Tony if that's easy. Hey, that's the kind of guy I like. Casual. No airs about you. You like casual people? I hate formality. Do you like people with nicknames? Sure, I love it. Because those people, they tend to be relaxed.
Starting point is 00:41:48 Too many people get offended in this country these days. Thin skin. You don't like this whole PC culture? You know, a lot about the modern age bothers me. A lot about the modern age? Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's right. Things are going in the wrong direction. And I'm no Trump supporter, by the way. I'm not a political guy.
Starting point is 00:42:04 No one said that. No one said that. I feel And I'm no Trump supporter, by the way. I'm not a political guy. No one said that. No one said that. I feel like I'm heading down that road by accident. I don't want to back into it. Time for a pivot. Early pivot in my conversation. Yeah, yeah. Well, listen, Scott, you were one of what an odds and ends man is.
Starting point is 00:42:21 It's a simple thing. I don't mean to make this obtuse. I don't like obtuse people. I do odd jobs from simple names. You're a simple man who likes nicknames. I do like nicknames, yes. I would call that- Although that seems like sort of a level upon- Yes. It seems like it's almost simpler to just have your Christian name, but then to add
Starting point is 00:42:37 a nickname makes it less simple. Sure. I guess if I had two people, all things equal, and one of them has a- they're both casual but one has a nickname and one doesn't,'ll go with the non nickname person. Okay, but if someone wants to be called doctor something Oh boy. Oh, yeah, and then somebody over here is I just call me skids I'm like me and skids are gonna get a brew. See you later doctor. Whatever. How did you know my nickname Scott? You're a good guesser. I'm doctor something that's what they call me doctor something But yeah, are you an official PhD or is it just a nickname doctor? It's an honorary doctor.
Starting point is 00:43:06 You're like doc? University of Massachusetts. I don't know where I fall with you. You're a real gray area. I think we have something, you say you don't like obtuse people, right? That's correct, yeah. Boy oh boy. Oh, give me a break.
Starting point is 00:43:16 I'm not obtuse-ist, but those people are really getting out of hand in this modern age. I'm not obtuse-ist either, like just, you know, I'm friends with a couple obtuse people because I went to school with them or whatever. Right, exactly. But by and large, I don't like people who put on airs. Okay, so heavily established. You don't like people who put on airs. Yeah, I don't know why I dug into that so deeply,
Starting point is 00:43:33 but the thing I- Is that not Jermaine to your whole deal? I wasn't expecting it to be. Is it Jermagesty to your whole deal? It's Jermaine's son. Yeah, Jermaine Jackson's son, Jerm Majesty, the altar. Now that's a nickname I love. It's a great name. I don't know why more people have it named.
Starting point is 00:43:50 I guess it's not a nickname. His actual given name is Jerm Majesty Jackson. That's the kind of guy, I could go on a road trip with Jerm Majesty Jackson. I could hang out with that dude for 24 hours in a row, which is my maximum amount of time. Like stay awake all night. Yeah, give me some nodos and I gotta talk to Your Majesty.
Starting point is 00:44:07 24 hours and then friendship over. I've never hung out with somebody long. Maybe I could go, to me 24 hours is- Oh, I thought that you were saying that was the max you would hang out in a day. Yeah, in a row. In a row. Oh, in a day, yeah. I never thought of it.
Starting point is 00:44:20 Look, for me 24 hours is like the Mach one, you can't break the sound barrier in terms of friendship hanging out. I can't go longer than 24, I couldn't imagine it. Look, for me 24 hours is like the Mach 1, you can't break the sound barrier in terms of friendship hanging out. I can't go longer than 24. I couldn't imagine it. Now is this important to your whole deal? I don't think so. Get to what's important. Yeah, we're far into me talking. I was going to say odd jobs, my friends. Odds and ends man. Little things around the house. That's how I make my living. If you need a couple of like, who knows, you need keys sharpened maybe or if you need... Sharpened?
Starting point is 00:44:49 Yeah, you need your keys sharpened. To what end? Well, maybe you're, maybe they're not sharp enough for you. Maybe like... I don't need them sharp. Can I tell you something? Do you have any sharp keys? I hate dull keys.
Starting point is 00:45:01 Exactly. I hate them. As long as they fit in the slot. Yeah, but have you ever heard of someone who has a self-defense mechanism? They're walking on the street to get me hold their keys In their knuckles so they have like a little mini Wolverine's going on. Yeah, you got dull keys there. Good luck Yeah, I guess that's true. But don't want at least one or two sharp would they not fit in the lock though? If they have like sharp useless as keys That's why I gotta pick and choose don't give me your car key and have that sharp.
Starting point is 00:45:26 And I'll check. Is Wolverine supposed to denote a little wolf? That's interesting. Is that where the name Wolverine comes from? Yeah, I guess it is a like teeny Wolverine. Wolveriney. It's a slightly larger Wolverinello. What's that?
Starting point is 00:45:43 Did you? Wolverinello. That's what they meant to say. Everything all right? What would a, what would a Wolverette be? I guess a female. A female Wolverine. A small, a small female Wolverine. Were they backup seggos, the Wolverettes?
Starting point is 00:45:59 In the seventies? Yes. Yes. And I think they were great. Is this important to your deal? I don't think so, but aside from sharpening keys. I would say after the pips and the Supremes, I would like the Wolverettes. You know, I find it's, as a listener to the show, I find it's always tough for the second
Starting point is 00:46:16 guest sometimes to get out their whole deal. That's just as well. Well, by that point, there's three other people in the room. That's right. I like that you're making excuses for me. It could just be that my main deal is not germane enough to transcend, which I'm always willing to. Or germagesty. It's not germagesty enough to make it to the surface.
Starting point is 00:46:35 So you are, what you do is you're hired? I'll head into a neighborhood. I'll wander in. I'll walk up to a house and I'll say, hey, you got any little things that need done just for a fair wage? Just a little thing. You need any key sharpened? You want maybe some hinges tightened?
Starting point is 00:46:49 You want something sanded, perhaps? You want to get some knives duplicated? Yeah, you want some knives. You know, hey, is this a good knife? I'll get it one just like it. I mean, do you prefer the serratedness of this knife? Why not have two? Do you hang any drywall?
Starting point is 00:47:02 Sure, I'll hang a little drywall. I'll hang a paper room.. I'll put up a paper room. Send that so languidly. Do you hang any drywall? Hey, don't mess with Doc over here, all right? Doc. So you're putting up wallpaper as well? Yeah, I'll put up some wallpaper if that's what you need.
Starting point is 00:47:17 Are you an interior decorator? I don't think so. If you need furniture arranged in a certain way, maybe you need some upholstery. I'll do that. That's no problem. What about fixtures? Odds and ends. Sure, I love fixtures.
Starting point is 00:47:29 Or if you want sort of a theme of knickknack, I can help you decide that. It really seems to me like you need to get into interior design. That's not how I see it, because I'll also sharpen those keys. I'll duplicate your knives. Don't tell me that's interior decoration. That seems to be the only two things that are not interior decorating at this point. Well, hey, I appreciate the feedback and I'll take it into consideration.
Starting point is 00:47:46 What else do I do? Color schemes? Suggest knocking down walls? Sure, yeah, maybe open this room up a little bit. You know, maybe- Open floor plan? Let's get an island here in this kitchen, I'll say. That's a good odds and ends type of thing to do. Restructure the structure of the house.
Starting point is 00:47:59 Really, I think that your identity shouldn't be odds and ends, man. It should just be like, you know, a very famous interior design. Oh my, what's a fair- What know a very famous interior design. What's a fair wage to you? Fair wage? Two bits. Two bits for all that? Yeah that's right. That's four bits? I forget my bits to coin. Two bits is a quarter. Four bits is a fifty cents. A Saubuck is buck 50. No, I think that's $10 So I'll book is yeah, I believe it's $10 or $5 one of the two boy in my mind
Starting point is 00:48:30 I thought of five. It's not five dollars a fin. That's a $5. It's $5 I believe a saw buck is $10. What do you call? What do you call slap me a couple of fish? Oh, that's our catcher That's real deep in the who's not first sketch. They get into the slimy couple of fish. That's our designated hitter. Rupert, can I give you some advice? I would love some. Were you to go into these, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:54 travel around the neighborhoods, wander into a suburb, just offer myself peacefully, hands up. Were you to knock on doors, and were you to offer your services as an interior designer? You could charge way more than two bits four bits a saw buck a Fin I just don't know the way society's charging you know $20,000 20,000 what would I do with $20,000 come on? I'm not I things we were just talking about earlier
Starting point is 00:49:19 We got there the same time that's fun I got look I don't need that I got two sleeping bags and a pickup truck and I am good. Why do you have two sleeping bags? Back up, in case it rains. I keep one tied up nice and dry. I'll switch to my backup sleeping bag if it rains. So it's an open flatbed truck and you sleep in the back open concept?
Starting point is 00:49:36 It's open in concept and in space. That's right. Rup, you'll forgive me, I wanna know. I love Rup. Right? Hey. Easy, unpretentious. You say you have two sleeping bags. That's right.
Starting point is 00:49:46 Is there a lady in your life? Well. Or a person. I don't like to kiss and tell, but absolutely. Well, the fact that he was almost a Trump guy made me think that he was definitely a- I'm not almost a Trump guy. I was backing into that.
Starting point is 00:49:59 I know you're not. I'm a political guy. Accidental Trump guy. Yeah, no opinion on politics at all. Accidental Trump guy, I know, I know, it's serious. Another one on the playlist. I've seen that video. I saw that one at 3. I can't believe I'm meeting the people that have provided all the views of my page.
Starting point is 00:50:21 And the current husband of your first ex-wife. Oh yeah, that too. That's also strange. That's also strange. You called accidentally Trump supporter. You still called it Girlfriend in a Coma, so I was looking for that song. I forgot to change the... You know, because I was thinking Girlfriend in a Coma, this is what the song is, Paradising. I forgot to change the name.
Starting point is 00:50:38 Paradising. Yeah, that's our term of art. Yeah, I backed into Trump rallies by mistake. I've gotten in there to do- Wait, you were walking backwards? I walked backwards. So I didn't see what it was. You backed your truck in.
Starting point is 00:50:51 I backed my truck in. I get out, I walked backwards. You were probably on the backside of a piece of furniture that you were walking into the truck. Sure, I was helping out with some, replacing some sofas for a- You really should be charging a lot more for this. I don't think that's necessary. Why do you have such a simple lifestyle? Don't you? Would you- for a friend of mine. You really should be charging a lot more for this. I don't think that's necessary.
Starting point is 00:51:05 Why do you have such a simple lifestyle? Oh, that's all you need, Scott. That's all you need. I mean, surely when it rains, you would desire a roof. You get wet. Yeah, but what about a roof over your head? I love the rain. I love the stars above my head.
Starting point is 00:51:18 What about a nice split level roof over your head, open concept? Now you're speaking my language. Although you can do a lot with just a simple colonial. Are you allowed to live in a WeWork? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, that's always been my opinion. I'm not sure if I'm the authority really.
Starting point is 00:51:35 This is more of a legal matter, right? Yeah, you know, ask for forgiveness and not permission has been my strategy. Yes, exactly. Right. Yeah. WeWorks. How did you get interested in the various odd jobs that you do?
Starting point is 00:51:44 Well, I was a stockbro in the various odd jobs that you do? Well, I was a stockbroker. I owned Goldman Sachs. Oh, what? You owned it. I did. And I said, this life is not for me. Wow.
Starting point is 00:51:55 And I walked away from it at the height of my power. What did you not like about it? The stress? The stress was bad, the greed, the type, the character of the people that you would work with. Who's worse, Goldman Sachs? Well, this people that you would work with. Who's worse, Goldman or Sachs? Well, this is between you and me and the lamppost, but I'd say Sachs by far.
Starting point is 00:52:10 Really? Yeah, Goldman will stab you in the stomach, Sachs in the back. That's the difference between those two. Sachs in the back. Yeah. Sachs in the back is a... Out of the park home run.
Starting point is 00:52:20 I'm bringing Sachs in the back, right? That's a parody of sexy back. Wait, you're saying Saks in the back is the name of a home run? Out of the park. Or he hit, it's a type of home run? Yeah, yeah. One that goes out of the park, you know, over the, uh, I hate to destroy a bit that was working well and I'm going to now ruin it. But like before, we were giving the names of people on the team,
Starting point is 00:52:43 but now you're naming just things that happened in the ballpark. Things that get achieved during a game. So like inside the Park Home Run might have the name like participle or something like that. Something like that. Okay, I like to know the rules of where I'm wandering about. Inside the Park Home Run, wow, that's a hockey goal.
Starting point is 00:53:00 So you, Rup, you left Goldman Sachs. At the height of my powers. And then, but how did you get interested in these odds and ends? Well, I was like, you know, this isn't working. This abstract numbers and space and like we say this is valuable. And so now that I say that I own you. Money is just a concept. It's just a concept.
Starting point is 00:53:18 Give me something I can put my hands on. Don't say that. Working with your hands on. Well, I mean, it's easy to disagree when you have a trillion of them. Well, but it's also, I love paying money to ex-wives. That's true. But you could, you know, Alamone, Tony, if I could give you a suggestion, and it's just a suggestion, I'm not an expert in your field of whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:53:35 Understood. But you could be paying them in like hard goods, you know, instead of like Venmo-ing them or however it is you're doing it. Yeah, the barter system, sharp keys. Well, it could be cash in a briefcase, or it could be some emeralds, or it could be some gold bars out of your safe deposit box. Right, but I thought you were going down the line
Starting point is 00:53:52 of I could be exchanging services. Oh yeah, sure, yeah, you could be doing that too, I guess bartering. Hanging paintings in their home. Yeah, you could be straightening paintings or maybe suggesting a- Light dusting. A rug.
Starting point is 00:54:03 Sure. Do you go down to, like, art dealers and pick out paintings as well? Yeah, I usually go down there and I'll negotiate a price and I'll say, this is the kind of, uh, art that... You're also an art dealer! I wouldn't say that. Hey, that's not the way I put it.
Starting point is 00:54:16 I buy paintings from fellows who work with their hands. Yeah, that's how art is made. People do it with their hands. You guys know Paul Klee? Do you know Paul Klee? Sure. Buddy of mine. Nice guy, salt of the earth. It seems to me like you're not that much different of a guy than when you worked at Goldman Sachs when you owned it.
Starting point is 00:54:33 Wow, that hurts. And you were interested in interior design and art? No, no, no, no. I'll take that and reevaluate my life tonight as I cry. You are wearing a double-breasted suit. Sure, but I made this. But I made this. Oh, really? And the gold tie I fashioned.
Starting point is 00:54:46 Out of gold. Out of liquid gold. And so are you paid so little because you, much like Alamoni... Alamoni Tony. Weirdamoni, Alamoni Tony over here. Are you independently wealthy? Define independently wealthy. How much money would I have to have for you to feel comfortable saying I'm independently wealthy? That's a good question, Stan. Like if I had $10,000 in the bank,
Starting point is 00:55:06 I don't think you'd say I was independently wealthy. No, certainly not. Even if I had $100,000, a sizable sum, Doc. No, that would maybe last. So you wouldn't say that, boy, he's not independently wealthy. No, no, no. How much do you have?
Starting point is 00:55:17 Doc, something you could run through a hundred grand easy, right? I did it on the way over. So. I'm doing it right now. How much do you have? Liquid? Sure. $500 million. Okay, see?
Starting point is 00:55:28 There's nothing to sneeze at. I mean you would sneeze at it maybe. I meant for you people. But I don't touch it. Are you like Jay Leno? Yes, in every way. Do you just survive on your standup dates? Not just that. I laugh at headlines and I'm like, I gotta tell somebody. My main conversation piece is get a load of this idiot. You ask a bunch of tourists simple questions about history until one dumb person says something? Yeah, wait till I find an idiot and then we all laugh at them together.
Starting point is 00:55:55 What's the ratio of people who know the answer to not knowing the answer? One out of every 10,000 people doesn't know the answer. But we love to laugh at them. It takes a while, but you find it. Because they have to look like, kind of smart. You can't feel bad for them. You can't be laugh at them. It takes a while. But you find it. Because they have to look like kind of smart. You can't feel bad for them. Of course.
Starting point is 00:56:07 You can't be like a real D minus of a person. Yeah. Sometimes comedy is all about putting in the work to humiliate someone. Thanks, Doc. It's very true. It's very true. Well, Rup.
Starting point is 00:56:15 It's who wins. That's how I look at comedy. Rup, we have to take a break if that's OK. Hey, of course. I'm not pressuring anybody. Sure. I mean, you have nothing to do. I mean, you have no responsibilities.
Starting point is 00:56:23 Let me ask you something. What's this room here yeah you ever think about adding a couple like I don't know something I don't know a kandinsky around here yeah I mean it's some conversation starter really yeah could you go find me one okay how much would I pay you for it two bits baby it's just sold yeah all right look go down to your truck and get it All right, come back. How do I work this door? It's sort of like you ever see a velociraptor After over here
Starting point is 00:56:59 Clever girl Comedy bang bang we are back here with Judge Sean Hoffman, our treasured guest. How do you do? Do you have something in the house? We also have Weirdamoney Alamoney Tony, who is a song parodist. That's right. With one trillion dollars, were he to liquidate all of his assets. About one trillion. Sure, yeah, it's hard to estimate.
Starting point is 00:57:22 And then we have the similarly rich and yet with only $500 million, it's a fraction of what Weirdamoney, Alamoney, Tony. And I'm not ashamed of that. Nor should you be. Rup Sharp, AKA Rupert Sharp is here, the former owner of Goldman Sachs who has brought in something during the break. This is a-
Starting point is 00:57:40 Kandinsky. A Kandinsky, this is beautiful. Wow, it's gorgeous, beautiful. Yeah, it's modern era, yeah, or early modern, it's not post-modern? This is beautiful. It's gorgeous. It's modern era, yeah. Early modern, it's not postmodern. This is beautiful. True modern. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:49 But I don't quite know what furniture would go with it. Now this installation, do you need to have this up here, right? Obviously the sound stuff? Well it's really poor right now. We were hoping to add more because you can hear all the way into the lobby. Well here's, okay, we think we can kill two birds with one stone, sir. Oh, okay. I'll sharpen these keys, first off.
Starting point is 00:58:05 Then we'll get rid of this foam here. We'll put some nice thick Picasso's around. Not his prime stuff, because that's not worth it. Okay. If I may, may I suggest a Van Gogh or two? He really liked to slather on that paint. That's right. Oh yeah, you want a quiet room?
Starting point is 00:58:20 You want a nice, quiet, like a nice absorbing tone? Yeah, someone who had a lot of paint on those bones? The impressionist said, thick bones and a lot of meat on it is how I would call those paintings. I don't know, are these going to appreciate though in value? Because I'm really looking at it as an investment. I wouldn't think about it that way. You're looking at it all wrong.
Starting point is 00:58:39 They start depreciating. Once you take it off the easel, it starts to depreciate right away. I guess so. Once you put your eyes on it, it basically loses half of its value. Well, imagine all the people that have looked at those paintings. Disgusting, what do you think about that? Well, the only way to enjoy art is to actually
Starting point is 00:58:51 put your eyes onto the paint. Like push your eyeball, like full direct contact? Give a painting Butterfly Kisses? Do I have a painting of Butterfly Kisses? No, give a painting Butterfly Kisses. I do have a painting. Do you have a painting of Butterfly Kisses? I've dabbled in painting in the high-
Starting point is 00:59:04 You've dabbled in painting. You've dabbled in painting. Can we see some of your work? Right here, this is my painting of the famous father-daughter dance song Butterfly Kisses. Oh my God, this is beautiful. Wait, no, if I'm not mistaken, going by these brush strokes, what you've done is much like
Starting point is 00:59:19 when they teach an animal how to paint, you've dipped your eyelashes in paint. That's right. And used that as your brush. I think you gotta be right up against the canvas if you really wanna capture the spirit of what you're taking. I was gonna say, you came in here in a suit and you have like various colored eyelashes.
Starting point is 00:59:36 Thank you for noticing. It's hard not to notice. I didn't wanna say anything. It's very striking. That's so gracious of you. It works. But I have to say, this is a beautiful painting. I'm almost moved to tears looking at it. Please, please, please, don't say that.
Starting point is 00:59:48 I can't take that kind of pretentiousness. I mean, you're an art dealer who can actually make successful art yourself. I don't, this is a hobby. My main way of living is- Sharpening those keys? Sharpening keys, duplicating knives, wandering into suburbs and knocking on doors
Starting point is 01:00:04 and just saying, hey, can I help out? You got two bits for a guy? Do you have any other hobbies? Any other side hustles? You know, is cello a side hustle? I don't know. I don't consider it. I would job, job, job, job, job, job, job, job, job, job. Cello? You guys are really not backed by cello. Isn't cello the 20th anniversary?
Starting point is 01:00:22 Cello, yeah, that's the 20th anniversary for a couple. You gotta give each other cellos. I may have misheard earlier. Or cello shots. Oh, I love cello shots. Can you play a little bit of the cello? Sure. Oh, you have one right here in your bag.
Starting point is 01:00:35 Hang on, I gotta put it together real quick. It's a little, it's a three-picer. Yeah, okay, how much would I owe you for this? Two bits, two bits is easy. You got two bits? I have two bits right here. You know? You got two bits? I have two bits right here. You're good for it, pal.
Starting point is 01:00:47 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Ah, that's just me warming up. And now here's the- Oh, I thought that was so good. That was beautiful. That was beautiful. I just, I like to get my-
Starting point is 01:00:58 All of a sudden I felt like I was on public radio. Yeah, and now I'll actually play the cello. Sorry. I just like to have my vocal cords warmed up. Sure, yeah, thank you for that. Sure. Oh, you were making the noise with your mouth. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:10 I definitely thought that was the cello. Oh, no, no, no. You were making the music with your mouth, much like Bismarcky. Yeah, he's my hero. Are you a cello ventriloquist? Cell-triloquist? A cell-triloquist. Bismarcky is a chill-triloquist. Or a vent-chelloquist?
Starting point is 01:01:23 I like to think on both. Vent-chelloquist. Vent Vanchelloquist? I like to think I'm both. Vanchelloquist is the term. Elegant portmanteau. I hate clumsy ones. Oh, nothing worse. Alright, I think I got what you need right over here. Car whiffer.
Starting point is 01:01:47 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, pal. I don't have any cash with me. No problem, Doc, something. We're buds. You're good for it. Oh my gosh. Give me a broom next time I see you down at Leo's.
Starting point is 01:02:10 So you're an art-loving interior decorator who also plays the cello. I'm an odds and ends man. That's all you got to know. Wow. But you don't like anyone who's fancy. I can't stand them. That's trouble.
Starting point is 01:02:23 That's trouble. You get someone who's got heirs about them They're gonna stab you in the back or the front mm-hmm or the side are you interested in? Obviously you're very interested in the humanities it seems like I mean I wouldn't say that I just say I like helping out around the house By playing cello If somebody's if there's a beast who needs soothing You know maybe an unruly child that you need to like on a primal level, get them to like go to sleep. Yeah, help out around the house that way, you know?
Starting point is 01:02:50 Sure. Domestic dispute where you've lost that spark and that flame and you need some, the magic of music to just get you back in touch with your emotional self. So when couples are fighting, you come over and play the cello. I'll be like, hey, let me see if this helps. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, and we'll just see. This might help you with your, you know,
Starting point is 01:03:07 your ex-wife problem. Well, this is why I never play music around the house. Yeah, you, cause you want it to end. You don't allow music. I love playing alimony. That is, you know, my- You are a musician. My not allowing music to be played in the house
Starting point is 01:03:20 is, I'm going to say it's led to almost 100% of my divorces. No music in the house. And yet you write parody songs. Yes, it's just for me. I get to go into my studio and I get to do my, yes, my studio, and I get to do my parodies, but I forbid music being played in the house. You have a studio in your home at most times?
Starting point is 01:03:39 At most times. And when do you not? I have a studio for painting, not a music studio. When do you not? I have a studio for painting, not a music studio, but a painting studio. In the truck? Yeah. Where do you live? In my truck.
Starting point is 01:03:55 The studio is the passenger seat. Right, right, right, right. Is your truck parked anywhere, like a giant mansion or her? It's on an, I mean, I don't know if it's a giant mansion. It is a six bathroom, 10 bedroom house. Oh, in what city? Upper West Side. Okay.
Starting point is 01:04:12 Yeah. Well. Right up by the cloisters. I just park it up there, cause I like to be near nature. Do you know, I like to think of the cab of your truck. Thank you. With the,
Starting point is 01:04:23 I know there's more. Thank you for thinking of it. Oh, I like being thought of in any context. If the passenger seat is your painting studio, I like to think of it all just covered with paint, and then the other side, the driver's side, completely pristine, and it's like the Batman villain Two-Face.
Starting point is 01:04:36 Oh. I just mentioned him not five minutes ago when I flipped my two bits of him. The Batman villain Two-Face. Why not three? Maybe that's why it was in your head. Why not Three-Face? Why stop was in your head. Why not three face? Why stop at two?
Starting point is 01:04:46 He could have been like a Neapolitan ice cream. Yeah. And chalk straw. One good looking side, then in the center like, he's okay, he's okay. It's all right. And then the other side, oh, he leaves his skull. Lotus guy.
Starting point is 01:04:59 Just really like a, what do you call that on the, you would know this, you're a painter. That's right. I know all this. When you do the painting that, not a triptych this, you're a painter. That's right. I know all this. When you do the painting that, not a tryptic necessarily, but you know when you're doing a wall and it goes from like one color down to a darker color but it blends? Oh, a gradient?
Starting point is 01:05:15 Gradient? Not a gradient either, god damn it, what is it called? Maybe you know and you're wanting me to say it and you can just tell me if you know. No, no, it's a certain, no I don't, it's a certain technique where you... Trump loyal, it's not it, but I just wanted to throw out. Did you say Trump? You just said Trump. No, hey, come on.
Starting point is 01:05:28 Are you a Trump guy? Are you a Trump supporter? I'm not. Seems to me like you wanna talk about Trump. No, I'm not, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, but trust me. Why are you giving me the okay symbol right now? Hey, no, no, no, no, that's not what I'm doing.
Starting point is 01:05:36 Why do you have a cartoon frog on your t-shirt, by the way? Hey, that's a coincidence, I like the composition of it. You're wearing a business suit, a cartoon frog t-shirt, and you have multicolored eyelashes. A red baseball cap turned backwards. We don't know what it says on the front. You're wearing a business suit, a cartoon frog t-shirt, and you have multicolored eyelashes. A red baseball cap turned backwards. We don't know what it says on the front. Is it a Cleveland Indians hat?
Starting point is 01:05:49 We're out of season. Who's not a fan of Cincinnati? Philadelphia Phillies or what? Turn around. I'd like to see the- No, why bother? Who cares? I'll take that as an answer.
Starting point is 01:05:58 Let's not get distracted. The cap's just to let people know I'm just a guy. Do you have anything else you want to talk to us about? Probably not. No. No. No. Are you saying, did I have other issues that I came in here with to discuss? I don't know. I'm wondering how much of this ended up being your deal and how much of it was not your deal. I can't remember. I'll tell you what I, I guess I'll, maybe I'll leave you with a moral.
Starting point is 01:06:19 Oh, okay. We should all do this. Yeah, like, you know, and my morals, by the way, take them or leave them. Like, I'm not a pushy guy. Is that the moral? Take them or leave them? Take them or leave them. That's a premoral moral.
Starting point is 01:06:32 That's a premoral. That's a moral for the moral. The moral for this moral is take it or leave it, but the actual moral is don't mix traditional with a modern aesthetic, cause it'll look like shit. Okay, this doesn't sound like immoral, this is like design advice.
Starting point is 01:06:50 I wouldn't say so, that's immoral for life. I think that you should have your own show on HGTV or something. I would never do that. Why? Cause I can't stand to be that kind of guy. I can't have heirs about me. But I mean- I gotta roll into a bar, play a game of darts,
Starting point is 01:07:05 maybe help out the guy, clink some guts. You don't seem like a regular guy. That's who I am! You're wearing a Pepe t-shirt, you have multicolored eyelashes. Come on. You have $500 million. Look.
Starting point is 01:07:14 In the bank, in the bank. You're wearing a suit. Thank you. You have a gold tie. Sure. A Pepe t-shirt. Right. Backwards hat.
Starting point is 01:07:21 You have multicolored eyelashes. And we have- You're wearing a backwards baseball cap. We have opinions on what's on the front side of that hat. You have opinions, but you haven't seen. Doc Something, have you seen the front of my hat? No, it's like a- Is that why you're always backing into places?
Starting point is 01:07:32 Don't worry about it. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Well look. Alright, John, what's your moral? Yeah, what's your moral? Doc something, your moral. You're not ready? No, I'm not. I would say the secret to a happy marriage. This is good. Is listening. Compromise. Get over yourself.
Starting point is 01:08:00 King size bid. And make sure you find someone who was briefly married in total darkness for six months to a year. So they're used to it. So you look good by comparison. Right. What I love about that advice is anybody can follow it. Anyone. Exactly. It applies to any situation. Any situation. No matter how much money you have in the bank, be it one trillion, be it 500 million. Yeah, two bits.
Starting point is 01:08:22 Simplest advice is always the best. Which itself is good advice. A little life lesson, Scott? One trillion, be it 500 million. Yeah, two bits. The simplest advice is always the best. Mm-hmm. What about you? Which itself is good advice. A little life lesson, I'd ask Scott? A little life lesson for me? Well, you know, I gotta say, happy wife, duplicate that knife. Wow.
Starting point is 01:08:34 It's a good one. You know? Because you don't wanna be knife-less, you know, when you're chopping up, chopping broccoli, as Dan Carby said. Right, so happy wife, duplicate that knife. Wife not happy, that knife is too crappy. Exactly, you only have one of the knife that's too crappy.
Starting point is 01:08:49 Exactly. I appreciate it, Your Majesty, these are the things I was talking about. And weird, weird. Weirdamoni, alamoni, Tony. My moral, you can change the words to a song, but that doesn't erase the original song. That song is still there for you to enjoy.
Starting point is 01:09:09 It sounds like a legal defense. Like to not get sued. Can it be both? Why not? I wish more court cases ended with morals. I wish every episode of Judge Judy ended with it, like her turning to the camera like Jerry Springer is doing a final thought or something. What did we learn today?
Starting point is 01:09:28 Yeah. Well, the end. Oh, the end. Oh, the end. You're like Coco Marx. Coco Marx? He would end every joke by saying the end. That's right.
Starting point is 01:09:38 The end. Yeah. So that's my moral is you can still enjoy the original song. Any tampering with it doesn't change your enjoyment of that original song. I hope our listeners got a little something out of that. Four morals from four straight white rich men. I'm not rich. I'm only on paper.
Starting point is 01:09:57 I am rich. Wait, what papers? The papers of your bank account? The currency and the bank statements I have. The money paper. The deeds that I have. The property that I own, and the deeds that I have. And the property that I own. The assets I control. Now, is that paper solid, liquid, or other? Some of it's gaseous.
Starting point is 01:10:11 Oh, thank God. Liquid gold. I can still afford that alibot, eh? Well, guys, we're running out of time here, but we only have... Are we? We really are, and the only thing that we have left to do here is a little something called Plugs. I got an ad, yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:23 Show's going on, and they're so hot. Got a mean pot, got a team of ren, show's going on and they're so hot. Got a meme pod, got a team of writers on my staff and they get it like, Plugs. P-L-U-G-P-L-U-G-N. Hey, now, man. P-L-U-G-P-L-U-G-N.
Starting point is 01:10:35 I got a good thing and a dope show, and see so. Oh, boy. The IFC with the CBB, let me see some more. Plugs. Really, let's have a reasonable conversation now. Hey, now, man. Hey, man.
Starting point is 01:10:45 P-L-U-G, P-L-U-G-S. Whoa. Running down my biography, it seems, of all my accomplishments. That was Plug the Jewels by Revolver. What if it said I died at 51 years old? Oh, no. I would have a lot more fucking to squeeze in.
Starting point is 01:11:04 Guys, what are we plugging? Let's go to Judge John Hoffman here. Sure. Well, strangely enough, I also host a podcast. Hmm, that is odd. And while my name is Han Judgment, the podcast is called Judge John Hodgman. Okay, I get it. It's available weekly at Maximum Fund.org. You do that every single week? Every single week. Wow. And are the cases, are they different enough? Meaning, do you get the same cases all the time, like this is what my argument is?
Starting point is 01:11:32 Quite honestly Scott, today I'm going to hear a case that is identical to the 11th case I ever heard. And we are now on, I think, 370. And have you sort of advanced in your thinking where you may give a different result to the... As a matter of fact, when I realized that we're hearing the same case again, and this is the first time it's happened, I asked our producer to go back to the 11th episode, listen to the verdict that I gave in that dispute, which was how people pronounce their last
Starting point is 01:11:58 name, their family name. Okay. And see if it matches. But don't reveal it to me. I'm going to hear this case, and at the end, I'll give my verdict. We'll see if it compares or contrasts. We'll see if I'm consistent, or just a fickle dilettante.
Starting point is 01:12:11 Or maybe you've evolved in your thinking. People can change their thinking. I don't think so. I had neighbors, by the way, who said their names very differently. I do not wanna say. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 01:12:21 Publicly. Well, that's great. And anything else out there? You got a- My book, Vacationland, is available in paperback. Vacationland, of course, paperback. It, that's great. And anything else out there? You got a- My book, Vacationland, is available on paperback. Vacationland, of course. Paperback. It's a wonderful read.
Starting point is 01:12:29 Like I said to you in your previous episode, I felt like at the end of it, I knew so much about you, I felt like I should write you a book about my life. Well, I have another book due that I'm working on now, but if you wanted to write it for me, that would be great. No, no, I don't want to write your book about your life. I want to write you a book about my life. Like a book like Thank You, No. So that you would know as much for me, that would be great. No, no, I don't want to write your book about your life. I want to write you a book about my life. Like a book link. Thank you. So that you would know as much about me as I know about you.
Starting point is 01:12:49 No, thank you. I'm not interested. Alright, very good. Uh, Rup. Hey! What are you plugging here? Well, I got nothing to plug for myself, but there's a podcast I listen to that I like very much called Screw It.
Starting point is 01:13:02 We're just going to talk about the Beatles and I recommend it. Oh, a lot of recent Beatles activity. What with the White Album reissue. Oh boy, yeah. There's a lot of news for a band that broke up in 1969. Paul McCartney reissues as well. Yeah, he reissued... Wildlife. Yeah, albums that nobody cared about then and now we care about them. And he has a new album. Yeah, boy, so a lot to talk about on that show it seems. Yeah, yeah. A lot of new current stuff. Check it out. Great. Anything else?
Starting point is 01:13:26 That it? I'll do Screw. We're just going to talk about Spider-Man 2. If you're a middle-aged, sad, meaty, obsessed dude, check out those two podcasts. Walking through the supermarket? Yep. That's all I got.
Starting point is 01:13:38 Is that, let's talk about Spider-Man 2, or let's talk about Spider-Man also? Also, yeah. It's like as a second podcast. So it's not just about the movies. Yeah, not just talk about Spider-Man 2 or let's talk about Spider-Man also. Also, yeah, it's like as a second podcast. So it's not just about the movies. Yeah, not just talk about Spider-Man 2, although it might be a more fun podcast. Have you guys seen that movie, Spider-Man 2? Yeah, Spider-Man 2, sure.
Starting point is 01:13:55 Spider-Man? I've seen it, yeah. Oh, it's Spider-Man. Weird-a-bony? Yeah. Well, I'd like to promote my YouTube channel, of course. What's it called again? Why would I say that?
Starting point is 01:14:08 We don't have time for the whole thing. Oh, that's too bad. I'd also like to promote this guy, Paul F. Tompkins has some shows coming up. Love him. Oh, that's nice to hear because I think he's very funny. You know, I'm a fan of the show. I wish you'd be on more not just on the best ofs. That proves my fandom.
Starting point is 01:14:28 I enjoy that. He's got some shows coming up in this, the new year. Friday, January 25th, you can catch him at the Music Hall Theater in Detroit, Michigan. I hate to tell you, but that one has already passed. Oh, is that so? Well, you missed it. Talk about shows in the future.
Starting point is 01:14:46 How about this? This will be Sunday, February 2017. Is that gonna be the clear? I hope so. You don't know. Sunday, February 17. You were very definitive and a little bit rude about what date that was gone. Well, I definitely know
Starting point is 01:14:59 that is in the past. I don't know whether this one is in the future or the past. I hope that it is. Well then, why don't I just say, fuck it the future or the past. I hope that it is. Well then why don't I just say, fuck it. What's the point? No, but talk about the February 17th. No, that's fine.
Starting point is 01:15:13 That's fine? Yeah, that's fine. You're just plugging the idea of Paul F. Tompkins. Yes, please. He's out there as an entity. Check him out. Will he be near you? Go to paulftompkins.com slash live to find out.
Starting point is 01:15:22 He may be right next to you. He. What if you, or what if this person. I'm trying to lead on your cello. That's no problem. I was about to disassemble it anyway. What if Paul F. Tompkins just broadcast his location at every point of the day?
Starting point is 01:15:38 Like if you went to his website and there was a GPS and you could just find him. Like a little red pin on a map. Yeah, that would be fun. Oh, okay. Okay. Talk to him about it. That was a what if I was not prepared for
Starting point is 01:15:48 and didn't know how to answer. Okay. I wanna plug, I don't know, Freedom. I have a show with the previously aforementioned Paul F. Tompkins as well as Lauren Lapkus. That comes out on Thursdays. If you like this show, go check out that show. Why wouldn't you check out both?
Starting point is 01:16:04 I think you should check out both, certainly. Well, time is finite, but sure. I enjoy that show very much, by the way. Well, thank you very much. I know time is finite because I'm dying at 51. Let's close up the old plug bag with the new plug bag theme. Open up that bag Close your eyes and Open up that bag You gotta get those eyes closed Open that bag Get em, get em, get em
Starting point is 01:16:36 Don't be closing, don't be closing Open up and let's get loaded Let's get loaded, open up the bag Let's get loaded. Let's get loaded. Open up the bag. Let's get loaded up in the bag. Open up the motherfucking bag. Open up the motherfucking bag. Open up the motherfucking bag. Open up the motherfucking bag.
Starting point is 01:16:56 Open up the motherfucking bag. Oh boy. More false endings than Layla. And Lord of the Rings. Return of the King. Guys I want to thank you so much. It's so good to see you John. It's so great to see you. Thank you so much. Please anytime you're in town give me a call. Would love to either know you're in town or have you on the show. I enjoy being in town and on the show. And Rup,
Starting point is 01:17:20 you know, really I think you should be charging more but you don't need it. So I like your style. Hey, thanks a lot, man. I love that positivity. You're almost doing stuff on pro bono in a way. Are you in? Do you have any legal advice as well for people? Yeah, don't break laws. Good enough for me. That's a good umbrella legal advice. And then weirdamoney, alamoney, Tony, always good to meet you.
Starting point is 01:17:44 It's always good to meet you too, Scott. I fear this is our only time. I wouldn't be so sure. No, I'm going to meet you. Oh, that's true. You may be on the show several times. You say that to everyone you meet, right? Yes.
Starting point is 01:17:58 I fear this is the only time we're going to meet. All right, let's, we'll see you next time. Let's all go through that door like velociraptors. Here we go! I can't get this. I don't understand. I'm pushing up but it does nothing. I know I got it before.
Starting point is 01:18:12 I'm pulling just directly towards myself. Oh I'm pushing, I think that's the problem. Ah, at the same time? That's bad, okay. Yes. Three, two, one. Ow!

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