Judge John Hodgman - A Gallon of Scallops
Episode Date: December 9, 2020Judge Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse clear the docket! Pet parents, "cheersing," tonic water, and the answer to the age old question, "Is butt leg?" Plus an off season appearance by Joel Mann, Program and ...Operations Manager at WERU Community Radio in Orland Maine, and some new drama with our old pandemic pal Leafie!Links discussed in the episode:Â CHiPS, the Park Slope organization that provides meals to hungry BrooklynitesLos Angeles Regional Food BankEmmaus Homeless Shelter in Ellsworth, MaineHOME in Orland, MaineBooks Are Magic in BrooklynLeaf and Anna in Mainebit.ly/dicktownPut This On ShopPut This On Holiday Gift Guide ArchiveThe Science Daily article that Katie sent in response to Foot Dad
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket. And with me, as always, is Coastal Maine's number one New York based author of humorous memoirs with the initials J.H. Judge John Hodgman. Hello. Yes.
With you as always, but not with you
as always.
But with you in spirit and visual,
I can see you here. You can see me
here in the studios
of WERU Community Radio
89.9 FM.
Don't dial in 99.9
anymore. They don't do it anymore. Right, Joel?
That's right. Right. I don't dial in 99.9 anymore. They don't do it anymore. Right, Joel?
That's right.
Right.
I don't know why they shut that one down.
It's a lot of controversy, I understand.
Joel doesn't want to talk about it.
No.
Right.
Obviously, here with our friend, programs and operations manager here at WERU, Joel Mann.
Joel?
Good to be here with you, Judge.
Ooh, that's a lot of talk from Joel there all of a sudden. Joel, the last time I saw you was at the supermarket. We're like chatty
Cathy, man. Well, you know, we've all been alone for so long.
All of a sudden we can't afford to be
flinty misanthropes like we moved to Maine to become.
I can see Joel exchanging a sentence or two with maybe a big iron wood stove.
I ran into Joel in the supermarket about a week ago, and Joel wouldn't stop talking to me.
I was trying to get my groceries, and Joel said – you said you were going to pick up a gallon of scallops.
Yes, I did.
Right off the boat.
You say scallops or scallops?
Scallops.
Yeah.
Were you getting them there from the supermarket?
No, no, no.
I got a diver who dives.
A gallon?
How many?
Every year I get a gallon.
How long does a gallon last you?
Until August.
Oh, God.
You freeze them?
Yeah, they're perfectly frozen.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I was going to say.
How have you lived?
I want to get some scallops today.
Where do I go?
Call David Tarr.
I'll give you his number.
All right.
So I'm going to get some scallops after we record this podcast.
Yeah, I'm up here in coastal Maine, hiding out.
Hiding out with an elderly relative.
Hiding out with an elderly relative.
I'm just, I feel so inadequate for not having my own scallop diver.
Everybody has a scallop diver, don't they?
I'm here in coastal Maine, hiding out with my family for the foreseeable future.
Jesse Thorne, you are there in Los Angeles looking good in your home studio. And Jennifer Marmer, you are also there in Los Angeles looking good in your home studio,
and Jennifer Marmer, you are also there in Los Angeles looking good in your home studio.
How are you? Are you guys doing as okay as possible? Yeah, you know. I mean, my friends,
the gardeners just arrived, and they're building a house across the street from my house, and I live on like a 15-foot wide street with no sidewalks.
Are we going to hear a leaf blower today or what?
Hey, it just started, baby.
It's here.
Oh, great.
I'm here in the isolation booth at WERU where they are maintaining
impeccable depopulated multiple cleanings a day.
I'm in a room where no one else has been for months, said Joel.
I can tell.
But I'm sitting in a chair.
Listen to this.
Oh, wait a minute.
Do you hear it go?
Can you hear it, Jennifer Marmer?
Yes, I can hear it.
That's not as good as a leaf blower.
I'll try to find a better sound for you here in the studios of WERU.
Maybe the sound of my voice as we lay down some justice.
You and me, Jesse Thorne, old friend.
What do we got on the docket?
Here's something from Jay.
He says, is butt leg.
I guess I should read the rest.
I kind of want to leave it there.
That's like a question my three-year-old would definitely ask.
Frankie would say,
Dad, is butt leg?
My view, says Jay, is the gluteal region is part of the leg,
an argument endorsed by my med school textbooks and anatomy professors.
Functionally and even aesthetically, butt is leg.
But my friend says butt cannot be leg. Butt is butt. Nothing more. If anything, butt is leg. But my friend says butt cannot be leg. Butt is butt. Nothing more. If anything,
butt is hip. The gluteal muscles act on the hip joint. The argument is not settled and cannot be
without a decision by the judge. Thank you for considering our case. John, would you say that
you're more of a butt man or a butt man?
Well, look, I'll tell you one thing. I'm not a writer of anatomy textbooks. I'm no butt doctor with like this guy with his fancy med school degree in buttology. I'm a fake judge. And like
a real judge once said about movies featuring naked butts and other shamey parts,
I may not be able to define butt, but I know a butt when I see it.
What do you think, Jesse?
Is butt leg?
No.
No?
No.
No.
Of course butt isn't leg.
Butt.
Leg butt.
Would you ever say, yeah, things got hot and heavy with my high school girlfriend.
She touched my leg.
Referring to your butt?
No.
I mean, if I were in high school and a person, you know, touched my elbow, I'd wonder about the implications.
Whether they were romantic or a sign of disdain.
Certainly if someone touched my butt, though, I would know to feel something,
whether that is fear, arousal, or anger at being intruded upon.
Butt is not leg, right?
Yeah.
Their butt and leg are two entirely.
I mean, have you ever gotten out the slow cooker to cook yourself a Boston leg?
No, and nor have I ever cooked the butt of a pig in a slow cooker because a pork butt is its shoulder, stupidly.
Not even the part of the pig.
Is butt shoulder?
Sometimes butt is shoulder,
but butt is never leg,
except in anatomy textbooks.
So how do we reconcile these two realities?
I will allow this to Dr. Buttminster Fuller.
This is ultimately a,
is a hot dog a sandwich time waster of an argument.
But since pointless arguments and podcasts about them are about the only entertainment we're going to get this winter, This is ultimately a is a hot dog a sandwich time waster of an argument.
But since pointless arguments and podcasts about them are about the only entertainment we're going to get this winter until we can see each other again, I will allow it. And I will reconcile it this way for the doctors out there.
I will say that each cheek is a part of its respective leg.
Chic is a part of its respective leg.
But taken together, they become a butt, which is its own thing.
Is that fair?
Am I splitting the baby on that one?
No, I think that's fair. And I would also just ask you to give blanket permission to all toddlers to ask the question, is butt leg?
Oh, that's granted.
They need no permission.
Toddlers are out here asking the hard questions.
We as a society and as a culture and a civilization need toddlers asking, is butt leg?
I'm not sure I need Dr. J. Buttman, last name redacted, asking, writing into a podcast,
he's just acting like a toddler.
I want a genuine toddler
question i have a clarification here we would accept that question from dr j julia serving
julia serving wanted to ask is butt leg we'd be glad to we'll answer pretty much any if julia
serving if you're listening right now and i'm going to extend this to Walt Clyde Frazier. Yeah. Clyde Frazier, Dr. J, if you're listening right now, feel free to write in with any question.
You get an automatic pass on to the air.
Yeah, any question.
And anyone within the sound of my voice who has a toddler in their lives, email me, hodgman at maximumfund.org, the best question your toddler has asked recently.
Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
The best question your toddler has asked recently.
Have your children asked any good questions lately?
Like mind benders?
My youngest child asked a question the other day that I think fits this,
which is, Dad, why is the moon always following us?
Yeah, see?
Look, Joe Man is across the glass from me just nodding his head sagely.
That's a good one.
Yeah. I want some mind-breaking toddler questions in my inbox.
And I want more dogs on Jesse Thorne's lap.
I'm seeing one dog on Jesse Thorne's lap.
When we come back from the break,
I want there to be two dogs on his lap
sharing the neck hole of his shirt.
More items on the docket coming up in just a minute
with me, Judge John Hodgman,
and my dog Coco, who just jumped onto my lap
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening
to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience.
One you have no choice but to embrace because, yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I. It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ugh, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week,
and we have something here from Gene, a former litigant.
Hold the line for a second, Jesse Thorne, because there's an injustice that I need to talk about
here. So in this new iteration, in this strange alternate reality world that we're living in, doing Judgetown Hodgman, there have been a few changes.
One, we can see each other, which is great.
Two, dogs are in the picture, always great.
Three, new characters.
The leaf blower shows up every Thursday.
But I just heard what listeners don't know is during the break, Jesse told me that Coco jumped in Jesse's lap because Coco is afraid of Leaf Blower.
And I don't like that at all.
I invited Leaf Blower to be part of this podcast.
I invited Leaf Blower to be a member of the Judge John Hodgman family.
this is a time when we need to comfort each other and ask and ask dumb questions like is butt leg and trade scallop recipes and kindle a light in the darkness i don't need leaf blower in here
messing up coco's mood so coco i'm ordering a restraining order against leaf blower
wow this is powerful stuff i know leaf blower's just doing Leaf Blower's job.
But Leafy, you can't come in here.
Coco is an established character.
She's an elderly dog.
She's an elderly dog and a longtime member
of the Judge Sean Hodgman family.
You can't be coming in scaring the dog, Leafy,
if you want to be on this podcast.
I know I have no control over
Leafy and Leafy's hours.
There's nothing I can do.
But this is symbolic.
A symbolic restraining order and I hope that it gives
Coco some comfort to know that I'm on her side.
Get your act together, Leafblower.
My dog takes beef pills.
What's a beef pill?
It's a beef-fl flavored pill for her heart.
That's incredible.
It's flavored with beef?
It's beef flavored, so she'll chew it.
This is an episode of the Beef and Dairy Network podcast waiting to happen, but it's happening here in my real life.
I wish that I had a doctor who would be like, yeah, you know, you really should start thinking
more about your heart health.
You should modify your diet.
You should get some more exercise.
And here, take this pill
made of beef.
Contradictory.
That's all I'm saying.
Okay, I'm ready.
I'm ready to move on now.
Here's something from Jean,
a former litigant.
She and her sister Liz
were in episode 427,
Code of Conduct. Here's what she says.
My son Jude and I adopted a wonderful Shiba Inu named Skye 10 years ago. Skye is wonderful and
sassy with eyes that always make it clear she's mildly disappointed in you. Although I think it's
weird, I refer to myself as Skye's mom when scheduling visits to the vet, grooming, and so forth.
It's convenient, and I like it better than saying I'm Sky's owner.
However, I recently learned that Jude calls himself Sky's dad.
What?
First, that family tree makes no sense.
Second, as Jude provides lots of fun playtime for Sky, but zero
financial support, Jude seems more like a brother than a dad. Please order Jude to stop referring to
himself as Sky's dad. Well, first of all, thank you to everyone who wrote in after our last pet
related dispute. I had asked for photos of cats cuddling together because I needed to look
at them, and you sent in some wonderful ones. Also, some of you sent a lot of information and
a lot of letters, some of them quite long, about feline psychology, and I really enjoyed them.
Special thanks to listener Sarah, who wrote quite a novel of an email to me.
And I really enjoyed it.
She's a veterinarian in Canada.
And she gave me a lot of information about cats that I did not have, including the fact,
Jesse, that one of the reasons that cats look so ashamed and wary in the litter box is that
they are instinctively terrified of being ambushed in the litter box is that they are instinctively terrified of being
ambushed in the litter box.
And one of the things that will cause cats to avoid going to the litter box in terms
of placement is if it's enclosed and they don't have a fair view of all of their surroundings,
they're going to feel like they're going to get jumped as soon as they get out of that litter box. They are both prey and predator animals, Sarah wrote,
and they don't have a pack to protect them. I didn't ever think about that.
So Sarah, I know from Get Your Pets, the occasional afternoon talk show that I do on
Instagram Live where I interview people's cats and dogs. She is the, I mean, this is the thing. Do I say cat mom? Do I say the mom of,
or the owner of, or the person of the cat's Captain Jack Sparrow Harkness, the time traveling
pirate kitten, who has one eye, an incredible cat, and Sophie, who did not get a good name from
Sarah. Sarah really stopped naming cats the good way when she named Sophie. Anyway, it was nice to get that letter
from Sarah. And if she gives me permission, Sarah, if I have your permission, I'd like to forward
that to any letter writer who writes me requesting it. Your email is really good and interesting.
All right. Anyway, so there's that. Now, this is the issue here. Who is what in relation to this incredible dog, Sky?
So I agree with Jean personally.
Jean says that she thinks it's weird, and I agree with her, to call yourself your pet's mom.
I think that's a little weird.
And I know I can hear the letters being written right now.
I'm getting them before we even post this podcast. I'm sure of it.
Because it's very common for people to call themselves, you know, my cat's mom, my dog's dad, my cat's brother-in-law or whatever it is.
I get it.
It's a sign of affection. And it is better than I am, you know, this is just a thought experiment, Jesse. I'm not
trying to claim your dog here, but like me saying I am Coco's owner. What do you say, Jesse?
I'm Coco's owner, not you. Was that the question?
No, but-
You can't have my dog.
Oh, no, I was just, it was just a thought experiment. It was just like-
No, I love my dog, John. You can't have my dog. And I don't even know how my dog would get to you.
You're in Maine and I, my dog and I live in Los Angeles live in Los Angeles. You can have my other dog, Sissy.
All right, great. But you don't say that you own your children. Do you say that you own
Coco and Sissy? Or what is the term that you use?
I do generally. I think I do generally. I occasionally use parent. My children have
insisted that Coco and Sissy are their siblings, but that doesn't work for me.
I think Coco and Sissy are their weird aunties.
I feel that.
They're both literally older than my children and dramatically older in dog years. Yeah. I certainly appreciate why, in Gene's case, though,
if you have raised a dog from a relatively young age
that you feel a paternal or maternal instinct towards them,
you would think of it as your child to some degree.
But it's a little intimate just for me.
It's one of my little weirdsies. It weirds me out a little bit. John, I have to, I have to admit here that
while I just claimed that I would typically refer to myself as the dog's owner, and certainly that
is true where I calling, for example, the TLC Pet Medical Center in Pasadena, where my dogs receive veterinary care.
I'm thinking back to earlier this morning when I let the dogs out the front door
so they could go sniff around the front yard.
And my wife was coming in at the same time
through our front gate.
And I greeted her, said hello,
then looked at our dogs and said,
did you know dogs is a type of baby?
Is dog baby? Is dog
baby?
I think dog is baby.
You think dog is baby? Yes, she is. I'm not saying
that Jean, look, Jean's a former litigant.
She's a member of the Judge John Hodgman family.
She wants to say that she's Sky's
mom. Go for it.
If you want to say that you're, not you
Jesse, but listener, if you have a
dog, a cat, a bearded dragon, an emu, go ahead and say that.
Betta fish.
Betta fish.
Yeah, you can go ahead.
You can go ahead and say it.
Just know that I'm going to go.
You're kind of diminishing actual parenthood there.
But that's fine.
It's cool.
But this is not the crux of the case, Jesse.
The crux of the case is, if I allow this, can Jean's son be the dad of her own offspring dog?
Or is that only allowed in the British royal family?
I feel like that's an episode of The Crown.
Maybe occasionally the Bible, the Old Testament.
I think that you're right, Jesse, that the pet is a member of the family for sure.
And if you're going to incorporate familial names, they should be accurate to the situation.
So, for example, Coco and Sissy are weird older aunties to your children.
That's perfect sense for all the reasons he said.
And similarly, with regard to Jude, who loves to play with the dog and show the dog a good time and be Mr. Good Time for the dog
but never is around when the dog needs to go to the doctor,
doesn't pay for any of the dog's food or housing.
That's not a brother, Gene.
I would say that Jude is Sky's deadbeat dad.
Jude can refer to himself as his dog's deadbeat dad.
And then he can go
get a pack of cigarettes
and never come back.
Here's something from Andrew.
I'm writing the court
seeking a cease and desist order
against my fiance, Vanessa.
Vanessa uses the term
cheers as a verb, as in, let's Vanessa uses the term cheers as a
verb, as in, let's
cheers to the newlyweds.
I believe cheers is not an
action, it's what you say.
The correct phrasing should be
let's make a toast to the
newlywed couple, followed by
cheers. Please order
my fiance to stop cheersing
people.
So Vanessa is Andrew's fiance?
Yeah.
And they're going to get married at some point?
Yeah, and there's going to be a lot of cheers.
Yeah, it sounds like it's going to be a lot of fun with Vanessa and her family cheersing each other.
I think cheers is a noun, and what you say is, Norm!
Cheers is a noun, and what you say is, norm!
Yeah.
No, I mean, I'll tell you.
First of all, congratulations, Andrew.
Have a good time getting really mad at your own wedding as your new wife and her family cheers each other up, down, and all around town.
You know, English is a living language.
I understand what you're saying.
A toast is the noun.
Cheers is something you say.
I get it. I would not recommend that you watch Love Island Season 6 for sure.
Because not only is that the birthplace of the
incredible catchphrase it is what it is in it which is the most got me through many days
as well as the incredible catchphrase from mike
jesse have you watched love island no i missed that somehow season six you said
do i have to see the previous seasons to understand the storylines no no no no they're
all new groups of people every time and in fact love island season six is like the the young woman
who lives in our house made me watch this.
And she said, you're really going to like this.
And I said, I reserve the right to be correct in saying no.
But she was right.
It was surprisingly fun and wholesome for a reality show.
Like you actually like these people.
And also this was the first season where they banned smoking on camera.
So you look back at like season five and you're like, who are these bad kids?
Give me Mike from season six because I don't remember which.
It was Trotz, I think.
I can't remember his first name.
But he gets to go on a date with the girl that he likes.
And she's really into disney princess stuff so they decide that the date is going to be in a castle somewhere
and they're going to like really princess it up right and they're going to and they're going to
keep it they're going to do the scavenger hunt so she gets clues about where to go.
And Mike goes, I know what we'll call it, Operation Fairy Tale.
There's a pause.
And he goes, where do I pluck this stuff from?
We say it all the time.
Where do I?
Anytime any of us, you know, we're all, look alone we're all alone together in maine whatever we just like we're just trying to find a way to get along
anytime anytime we say some dumb idea like i'm gonna i'm gonna put salt on this uh sandwich or
whatever it's like where do i pluck this stuff from salt on a sandwich that's actually weird
it's a weird idea never mind and then course, what they're always saying is,
and you're going to really hate this, Andrew,
and that's why I'm so happy to say it to you.
They say, let's have a cheers.
Let's have a cheers.
They're using, they're not,
it's not even a verb.
They're getting rid of that whole noun toast.
Let's have a cheers.
And then they say cheers.
And guess what they do then? They have a
sip of their drink, alcoholic or non-alcoholic. They look beautiful. They have fun. They're all
friends and they're wholesome. Don't let your linguistic, I'm not even going to say pedantry.
I mean, I appreciate you have a certain standard, but don't let it get in the way of fun.
You have a certain standard, but don't let it get in the way of fun.
And, you know, you can say all kinds of words.
And to Jesse Thorne's point, you can say cheers when you're raising a glass to a friend or loved one.
But you can also, and this is my ruling right now, you can also say any title of a Ted Danson sitcom.
You can say, Jesse, here's to you.
Becker. Ink to us all.'s to you. Becker.
Ink to us all.
Ink to the newlyweds.
Whoa, deep cut.
Wow.
The good place is what everyone's going to say.
To the good place.
But I will, when we can get together again, if we have meetups, like that incredible meetup we had in Atlanta that time, listeners,
Judge John Hodgman, if you come up to me and you go and you raise your glass and you say,
bored to death to you, John Hodgman, I will buy that drink. I'll buy that drink right there.
Also, if you say Gymkata.
Yes. Karate skills, martial arts kills.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, we'll hear disputes about tonic water and a letter about parents sucking their own children's pacifiers.
That's called a tease.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you you this week by the folks over there at Babbel.
Did you know that learning, the experience of learning causes a sound to happen?
Let's hear the sound.
Yep, that's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel.
We're talking about quick 10-minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that can help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks.
Let's hear that sound.
Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations, and delivered with conversation-based teaching.
So you're ready to practice what you've learned in the real world, and you get to hear this sound.
It's not just like a game that pretends to teach you a language.
It's also not a rigid, weird, hyperacademic chore.
It is an actually productive app that actually teaches you while you are actually having a nice time.
And you get to hear the sound.
Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners
right now. Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners
at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman spelled B-A-B-B-E-L
dot com slash Hodgman. Rules and restrictions apply. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by our pals over at Made In.
Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio, the famous chef, right?
Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
And did you know that most of the dishes at that very same restaurant
are made with Made In pots and pans?
Really? What's an example? The braised short ribs,
they're made in, made in. The Rohan duck, made in, made in. Riders of Rohan, duck. What about the
Heritage Pork Shop? You got it. Made in, made in. Made in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants
with high-end cookware for years. They make the stuff that chefs need.
Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron,
the best of stainless clad.
It gets super hot.
It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame.
One of the most useful pans you can own.
And like we said, good enough for real professional chefs,
the best professional chefs.
Oh, so I have to go all the way down to the restaurant district in restaurant town?
Just buy it online. This is professional grade cookware that is available
online directly to you, the consumer, at a very reasonable price.
Yeah. If you want to take your cooking to the next level, remember what so many great dishes
on menus all around the world have in common. They're made in Made In. Save up to 25% this Memorial Day from the 18th until the 27th.
Visit MadeInCookware.com. That's M-A-D-E-I-N Cookware.com.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week.
Here's something from Barbara.
She says,
My husband and I both enjoy an occasional vodka tonic,
but we only buy tonic water made with cane sugar.
During the pandemic, we order our groceries ahead of time
and pick them up at the curb.
Sometimes I end up with an item we didn't mean to order or didn't want.
So we leave these items with our neighbor who volunteers at our local food bank. Recently, we mistakenly received
tonic water containing high fructose corn syrup, which we try to avoid. My husband wants to donate
it to the food bank. He reasons that there may be a food bank patron who appreciates a cocktail,
but it strikes me as callous in a kind of let-them-eat-cake Marie Antoinette-ish way.
What should we do with it?
First of all, you don't make a cocktail with tonic water.
If you're putting tonic water in a thing, that's a mixed drink.
It's not a cocktail.
Second of all, we're recording this in December.
This is a time of desperate need.
Food banks are absolutely slammed across the country with people who are living with food
insecurity. Massive numbers of people have been just thrown into economic places they never
expected to ever be in their lives.
And the mass number of people were already relying on these food banks,
and now there's less and less and less to go around, and we all know why.
So credit to you, and especially your neighbor, Barbara,
for thinking of that food bank. And I hope that everyone listening
can give a moment to find a food bank in their community
and think about how they might help out
by donating food or time or money,
whatever you can spare.
I support an organization in Park Slope
called Community Help in Park Slope or CHIPS.
That's one that I like.
And much like Barbara and her husband, I make a point of donating at a minimum once a year one bottle of Campari a week.
No, I don't do that.
I give them something they can use like time or food or money.
Scallops.
Scallops.
Thank you, Joel.
A gallon of scallops.
They freeze beautifully.
Jesse, what do you think?
Should they donate tonic water to a food bank?
Honestly, I'm so hung up on people avoiding high fructose corn syrup.
It's just a whole thing.
Look, Barbara.
Yeah, that's a good point, Jesse.
Barbara, you're a valued listener.
And of course, whatever you want to put in your body is obviously your choice. And, you know, the whole new Coke versus old Coke wars were around the different flavor profile of high fructose corn syrup versus cane sugar. And that's reasonable as well.
Mayo Clinic, which is still an authority on some things, I guess.
I like it because it's called Mayo.
They say that there's no real personal health difference between high fructose corn syrup and other sweeteners so much as it is a community risk
because, as Michael Pollan will tell you,
it's a super cheap sweetener and it just promotes the growth of corn,
which is a kind of devastating crop, a maze I'm talking about
if you're listening to the UK.
It's a not very good crop to grow.
It's not a very sustainable crop to grow
and has negative impacts
environmentally. The problem with high fructose corn syrup is not that it is more unhealthy for
you than cane sugar or beet sugar or wherever else you are getting your sugar. The problem with high
fructose corn syrup is that, you know, in the United States, corn is a highly subsidized crop.
is that in the United States, corn is a highly subsidized crop.
High fructose corn syrup is therefore much cheaper than other forms of sugar.
Sugar is very similar no matter its source.
But because it is so much cheaper, it is used heavily in processed foods because it's a very affordable ingredient that people like to taste.
Right.
But I don't have a problem with someone donating a bottle of tonic to the food bank, just as
I don't have a problem with there not being restrictions on the foods people can buy with
funds from government food programs.
People are capable of making their own decisions.
If the food bank doesn't want it, they can throw it in the garbage. If nobody who is a patron of
the food bank wants it, they're welcome to leave it on the shelf or throw it in the garbage.
People are capable of making their own decisions and managing their own stuff, whether or not they are a food bank or a person who needs food help.
So it's totally fine with me.
My first choice would be like, in this case, you'll probably survive drinking the high-fructose corn syrup tonic this time.
But beyond that, yeah, sure, give it to the food bank.
They'll tell you if that's not something they accept.
This comes down to a court of Judge John Hodgman precedent with regard to whether or not it's OK to fill up, to refill your cup at the fountain soda machine or to just get seltzer with your own bottle or whatever it is. And people come to a podcast to ask for a moral ruling when it's very, very easy to just
find out what the truth is. Ask. The best way to help, of course, is asking in the way you're
asked to help. And sometimes that involves you asking people who are doing the work how to help.
And the easiest solution to this would have been to go to your neighbor who volunteers at the food bank and say, do you think the food
bank wants this? And if your neighbor says, sure, or I don't think so, they say no, then guess what?
Give the neighbor the tonic. You know, don't tell them about the corn syrup. Don't tell them about
the corn syrup. They probably don't even know. And you know what you add? Add a bottle of Plymouth
gin as a tribute to your neighbor's good
work, unless they're non-drinkers or whatever. You know, that's how you find out things, is you ask.
There are a few things, John, that make me more mad. And this is not a case of this,
but there are a few things that make me more mad than people shaming folks who get food assistance over what they are using their food assistance for.
You know, you hear these stories about,
you know, oh, I saw somebody paying with food stamps
or paying with EBT who was buying four big steaks
or whatever.
First of all, you know, anecdote is anecdote. It's not a
useful sign of what people are actually doing on the whole. And second of all, let people make
their own choices. And the result of this hysteria is that food benefits are the target of cuts across this country, have been for some time,
to the point where those cuts were so capricious that a court had to stop them from going into
effect earlier this year at the start of the pandemic. And giving people money to buy food is the single most effective way to alleviate the suffering of poverty.
Yeah.
It is more effective than food.
Food banks will tell you the same thing.
Food banks will say, we're here because, you know, there's excesses in the food system that we can help manage and get food that it would otherwise go to waste to
people who need it, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. But if you want to do something about hunger,
just give people unrestricted money to use to buy food. Um, and so, uh, yeah, I'm, I'm really like,
I'm really like, and I also just think as a person who spent part of his childhood in what we'll call semi-poverty, I never felt food insecure, though.
I think I probably was at some times.
As a person who spent his childhood in semi-poverty, I really believe that poor people deserve pleasure as well.
Yeah.
And they need that sweet quinine in the tonic water.
That's a natural anti-malarial.
That's an issue in their lives.
I mean, I think the real question at the heart of all of this, John, is it's weird that tonic water is a thing.
Oh, Jennifer Marmer's giving us a heavy nod there.
A Joel Manish heavy nod across a continent.
Tonic water in the 21st century, outside of the context of a tropical world without anti-malarial drugs, is really a challenge food.
Yeah. I would say this, Barbara and Barbara's husband, you're not Marie Antoinette. You're doing a wonderful thing by thinking to donate food that you can't use for whatever reason
to a food bank. And I agree with my bailiff and yours, Jesse Thorne,
that the food bank can distribute that food however it sees fit.
I agree with myself that if you have a question about what is suitable or not for the food bank,
there's an easy way to find out, and it's not asking a podcast.
It's asking your neighbor.
And then I think you can ask yourself, especially in this time of year and in this year of years,
can I do a little bit more?
You know, I appreciate it's something that we all have to ask ourselves
because when you see and you hear the stories of people lining up at 3 a.m.
to get leftover tonic water from a food bank or actual nourishing food, right?
It's just hard.
So maybe go a little bit further.
Maybe push yourself a little bit to go beyond your neighbor and contact the food bank itself.
Maybe ask the food bank what it needs in support.
What is the kind of food bank that the food bank really wants
or finds most valuable to distribute?
And order a case of that food for them, right?
Or volunteer some time or just give money to the food bank or other programs that are alleviating poverty and food insecurity.
I mean, that Fever Tree Tonic, that's super good tonic water.
I like tonic water.
I'm not like Jesse Thorne.
I like it.
And I think I know the brand that you're referring to.
And I don't think that's corn syrup.
Fever tree.
It's got a cool name.
It's a tree that's got a fever.
Not very popular right now, I realize.
But it's a good name, good bottle.
They make a good ginger beer, I think.
I'd love for them to be a sponsor of this podcast.
In any case, this is not to shame you. This is only to hear you, appreciate you, and maybe you consider making a more direct contact
with the problem. And I'm saying that as a challenge to myself as much to you, Barbara,
to make a more direct hands-on contact with the problem and help
in the way that people who are working on the problem ask you to help. I think you'll feel
better if you do. By the way, I want to give a shout out to all the Maximum Fund members who
bought pins this year. You might have heard a promo on a Maximum Fund show, but I'll say it
here in the body of the program,
our members in buying pins and us in selling those pins and having them designed and et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, raised very close to $100,000 for GiveDirectly, who do exactly the
thing that we were just talking about. Give directly essentially chooses people who qualify for public assistance at random and gives them direct cash grants.
Great.
Which is the lowest overhead, most effective way to alleviate poverty in most instances.
And they have a COVID-19 relief program that we raised almost $100,000 for.
And I'm really proud of Max Fund's community for making that happen because that's a lot of people's lives changed by something as stupid as PINs.
So thanks, everybody.
Yeah, thank you very much, listeners.
Joel Mann, is there an organization, a food relief organization here in Maine?
There's the Emmaus Center.
That's in Ellsworth.
And there's Home right up here across the street.
Yeah.
Both two really worthy causes.
Yeah.
So what's the first one again called?
The Emmaus Center.
Emmaus?
Emmaus.
Emmaus.
Oh, E-M-M-A.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll put it in the show notes.
Okay.
All these organizations will be in the show notes, Barbara, if you and your husband want to make yourself a vodka tonic and then kind of, you know, maybe have a second one. And then all of a
sudden you're typing in an extra couple of figures in that donation form. You know what I mean?
And then you'll feel and then you'll cheers to yourselves for being a terrific involved citizen.
Finally, we heard from a couple of listeners in response to a case we heard in episode 493, Mr. Clicky Keys.
In that episode, we ruled on a case about picking up baby pacifiers with one's toes.
Katie is a doctoral student of biological anthropology and sent in some scientific advice.
She says, yeah, agreed.
Wow.
That's the only appropriate response to that.
Biological anthropology.
Biological anthropology.
That's incredible.
Please tell the foot dad that if he's concerned about his baby's microbiome,
he should lick the pacifier instead of showing off his circus skills.
I like this one because it comes from a place of science and contempt for circus skills.
I like this one, too, because it gets in.
It does the job.
It gives information.
It totally needles that dad.
And no offense to Sarah, the Canadian veterinarian, and Cat Mom to Jack and Sophie.
Letters short.
Boom.
In and out.
Zip, zip, zip.
Love it.
I love hearing from everybody.
I love it.
I really do.
And if you've got something you need to get off your chest, go ahead.
We're all reaching out and trying to make connections during this dark time.
We don't all have a cocoa on our laps right now.
So, you know, please do write to express yourself. But yeah, you know, I'm a human
being who reads these things. Takes some time. Takes some time. Thank you.
Katie also sent us a link to an article on this subject from Science Daily
that we will post on the Judge John Hodgman page at MaximumFun.org. It's a summary of a study from the University of Gothenburg,
which suggests that exposure to harmless bacteria during infancy
may be protective against the development of allergy,
which is, I think, what Foot Dad was arguing.
And that one way to harmlessly expose children and infants to bacteria would be by exposing them to the mouth stuff of the parents by licking the pacifier.
Yeah.
And you have to suck on the pacifier and then give it to the baby.
You can't just take it to your favorite rave spots yeah no don't don't bogart the passy same with the vix vapo rub save that for when the kids
got a cold you know there are many many reasons that i miss my mom who is no longer alive
but one of the first and foremost among them john among them, John, she loved to rave. She loved
to rave. But one of the reasons that I miss her is that I believe that she told me that when she
was sick, her mother, my nan-nan, would make her eat a spoonful of Vicks VapoRub.
Oh, whoa.
You ever hear of that, Joel Mann?
No.
No.
Because, you know, there are probably a lot of home cures up here in Maine.
Butt leg.
Vicks VapoMunch.
And when I said this to people after my mom had passed away, they met me with the same shock and disbelief
that you all have met me with. And I don't know whether this was a true memory or not.
And I wish I could ask my mom, did I make that up? Or did you truly have to eat Vicks VapoRub
when you were sick in Philadelphia? We'll never know.
But you know what?
This is for Judge John Hodgman late nights.
You put a little molly in the Vicks VapoRub, you're going to have a good rave.
Then we heard from Margaret who says,
also consider oral thrush in babies is a fungal infection.
If eight-month-old Thomas's dad
happens to have athlete's foot,
he could conceivably give the baby thrush
by touching the pacifier with his toes.
That's no fun for anyone.
I can't believe we didn't work the promise
of oral thrush into the T's for this section.
Yeah, that really put the
into our
bring that beat back. You know what I say
about this letter? Ditto. Short and sweet. Love it. Thank you, Margaret. Appreciate it.
I just want to give a shout out. This was on that clicky keyboard episode where I talked about how
I bought a clicky keyboard at the thrift store one day. Yeah. And I love to use it. I do.
I do love to use it.
And I specifically said,
keyboard nerds, don't send me your keyboard tweets.
What happened?
I bought my keyboard at the thrift store.
I don't know what kind it is.
I don't want to talk about keyboards more.
I do not want to become a keyboard nerd.
I just want to have this clicky keyboard.
I would say 12 to 18 keyboard nerds contacted me regarding their particular clicky keyboard preferences.
Just to tell you about their rig or to ask you questions?
Both.
They wanted to share.
I got shared so many pictures of rigs.
Yeah.
So many rig pics were shared with me.
You know who uses a clicky?
Who's that?
Linda Holmes.
The great Linda Holmes from NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour.
She tweeted to me that she used a clicky keyboard.
She got one.
She sent me a picture of her rig.
They're great.
And you can tell on Judge John Hodgman probably anytime that I'm accessing a website because of how noisy my keyboard is.
What I love about coming here to the studios of WERU in Orland, Maine is I can really boost the monitor.
And so I hear my keyboard in the microphone really loud in my ears, and it's so satisfying to hear.
Our thanks to Katie and Margaret for writing in.
Our no thanks to the keyboard nerds who added me.
Yeah, but listen, keyboard nerds who have an overlap with music skills,
if you can make a rave song composed entirely out of clicky keyboard sounds and send it, that would make me very happy.
We need that.
We need profound questions asked by toddlers.
I don't need any pictures of cats cuddling together anymore.
I got that covered.
And if you need anything from me, write me.
How about that?
Yeah.
The docket's clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Our engineer in Maine is Joel Mann, program and operations manager at WERU Community Radio in Orland, Maine.
You can listen to WERU at WERU.org and you can follow Joel on Instagram.
His handle is TheMainMan. That's M-A-I-N-E-M-A-N-N. Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO.
And check out the Maximum Fund subreddit at MaximumFund.reddit.com to discuss this episode and share pics of your clicky keyboards. Submit your cases at
MaximumFun.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org. And we'll talk to you next time
on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.