Judge John Hodgman - A Rollicking Docket
Episode Date: December 30, 2020It's the end of the year and we are clearing the docket! Fruit, fake accents, popcorn popping techniques, eating soup from the can, a clicky keyboard rave track, and a rollicking, good time!LINKS DISC...USSED IN THE EPISODE:Questlove's Popcorn Seasoning Set for Williams SonomaQuestlove on InstagramThe Clicky Keyboard Rave Track by Chase Watkinsinstagram.com/josiemorway
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 Maine's favorite not son, Judge John Hodgman.
Oh, hello, Jesse Thorne.
Oh, bailiff, my bailiff.
Hello, Jennifer Marmer.
I can see you in the Zoom.
Jesse Thorne, oh bailiff, my bailiff, hello Jennifer Marmer, I can see you in the Zoom.
I cannot see
guest engineer Joel Mann here at
WERU FM
89.9 in Orland, Maine
in the Zoom, but I can see him through the glass
because that is where I am.
He's waving at me and no one else, because no one else
can see him. But he does exist.
First of all,
time is meaningless to the people who are listening
to this. when you hear this
it may be New Year's Eve
happy new year
I hope the next one is better
of course it may be the next day or the next day
and meanwhile it doesn't matter to you
that I was 20 minutes late to the radio station today
I thought for sure
this was happening half an hour
than when it was actually supposed to start
I thought I was so ahead of the game because I was literally out in the parking lot taking a nap in my car when I got the text saying, where are you?
I thought I was going to be here so early.
Yeah.
I thought I was going to be here so early because I came out early to make a special stop over at Acadia.
See, that's the alarm saying, wake up.
Wake up.
Go into the studio.
Stop.
I made a special trip out to Ellsworth today so that I could go to Acadia Provisions and the one place outside of New Jersey and Pennsylvania and Delaware that sells Taylor pork roll.
And I got some Taylor pork roll there and a fresca.
It was a good one.
I saw on your Instagram, you took a picture of the label of this Taylor pork roll.
Now, the famous controversy around pork roll is whether it's called Taylor ham or Taylor
pork roll.
Tell me how they solve this problem in the great state of Maine.
Well, I mean, Maine is famous for not alienating anybody. It's called the friendliest state.
And they don't pick fights or take sides.
Sure. They're as gentle as their famously gentle climate.
That's exactly right. It is Taylor's ham slash pork roll. And I don't blame them for being ambivalent about it.
I'm just glad they got it.
Now, did they take the pork roll out of the burlap sack?
Yes.
I don't know why they did that.
I missed that sack.
But I got my hands on that pork roll and I'm fine with it.
Plus, they had a fresca.
So I apologize. This has been a couple of fun recording sessions here in Maine as the nights get longer and longer.
The world gets colder and stranger.
We think we feel a dawn on some horizon and maybe by the time 2021 rolls around, that dawn might be a little brighter.
2021 rolls around, that dawn might be a little brighter.
But in the meantime, we're all just kindling a light here to the light of Zoom to see each other from across the country and across the glass.
And I dare say, Jesse, these past couple of Docket's episodes have been a little, I would
say, rollicking.
Do you know what I mean?
A little more rollicking than usual.
A little more devil may care.
A little more, hey, let me invite the listeners
to send me letters. And then I get them a little more back and forth. Joel, have you noticed that
a little more rollicking? God? Yes. See what I mean? Rollicking. It's really a challenge for Joel.
I know. Getting some motion sickness.
You okay over there, Joel?
Yeah, right.
You did it?
Joel has a second career recording what they call efforts for video games, by the way.
I bought that. Have you ever had to do any voice acting, Jesse, where you had to pretend to be punched?
No, but I would love to.
If anybody out there is looking for a punchee, I'm available.
Josh Lindgren is the name of my agent.
Drop him a line.
Grin is the name of my agent.
Drop him a line.
I had to do some efforting of various kinds for the hit podcast sitcom Bubble.
Oh, yeah.
I was sitting there making you do those efforts.
I know, but you weren't punching me.
Just people know.
Professional voice actors have to imagine being boofed in the stomach,
and then you go boof like that.
That's a good one.
I did invite, we have had a lot of listener interaction,
and it's been a delight.
I did invite people to write in.
I got lots and lots of letters this week from around the world telling us that athlete's foot and oral thrush
are not the same fungal infection.
Oral thrush, it turns out, is a yeast infection.
Athlete's foot is a different infection.
It's either trichophyton, epidermophyton, or microsporum.
Thanks to John Madden for writing in and clarifying that.
On behalf of Tuffactin-Tenactin.
for writing in and clarifying that.
On behalf of Tuff Acton to Nacton. We heard
from a number of people and I just want to
shout out in particular Dr.
Kathleen Wild because
that's one of the great names. Next to Thaddeus
Diamond, Dr. Wild.
Dr. Wild, general practitioner
in New South Wales, Australia.
Thank you, Dr. Wild,
for letting us know, quote, you can't get
oral thrush by licking athlete's foot.
So I don't know what your bubble is like for your New Year's Eve party, but if you want to lick some athlete's foot, you're safe from oral thrush.
Yeah.
We also received, and this is a tease, Jesse, because we're going to play this at the end.
We also received a message from Chase.
a message from Chase, I had put out a call to action when we were talking about clicky keyboards back in our episode called A Gallon of Scallops.
Excuse me, A Gallon of Scallops.
Sorry, Joel.
Which I think initiated the new rollicking docket tradition where we got really rollicking
on that one and we just kept it rollicking ever since.
In any case, I put out a call.
We were talking about clicky keyboards and how much fun they were,
and I put out a call saying,
if there are any musical producers out there
who could make a rave track out of a clicky keyboard,
please send it in.
And Chase did it, and it's great,
but we're going to play it at the end of the episode.
No fast-forwarding, though,
because we have justice to dispense.
Jesse Thorne, is that true?
That's true.
You know what?
If you're out there, you're getting ready for the end of the show.
Get your Vicks VapoRub ready.
You're going to want to eat it.
Honchman's mom style.
For this rave.
It's an unusual rave.
Okay, here's something from Michael. He says, I'm seeking a judgment against my partner, Brenda, due to the way she characterizes
my distaste for fruit.
As a kid, I had a mild intolerance to fruit sugars, so I stopped eating fruit for several
years.
Now, as an adult, I do not have a taste for the vast majority of fruits.
Brenda describes this as a, quote, fruit hatred, unquote, and calls me
a fruit hater. I request an injunction to stop her from describing my weird eating idiosyncrasy
as hatred. Hatred. Strong word. Jesse, you enjoy a fruit from time to time. Yeah, I mean,
Jesse, you enjoy a fruit from time to time.
Yeah, I mean, I aspire to be a television greengrocer.
Local news greengrocer is my career of choice. I haven't climbed that mountain yet, but that's my dream.
I very, very vaguely remember the local news greengrocer segments on the local Boston stations.
But I don't remember what they really were.
Was it literally a person saying how much Apple costs today?
It was a man in like a sort of green version of a pharmacist's coat.
Right.
And he's standing on a television set built to, in an abstract way, represent the fresh products, the produce section of your local grocery store.
Right, a simulation.
Sort of like in the same way the CBS Sunday morning set represents a sunrise.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
a sunrise.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
And the anchor would walk over to him.
It was him in the Bay Area.
And he would talk about what fruit was in season.
What was the tastiest fruit right now?
Right.
And maybe give a recipe or just take a big bite of an apple.
Just take a big bite of an apple. Yeah, no.
Recipe is a whole other job on local television news. I seem to have, well, so first of all,
it was a little different in New England because the Greengrocer reporter, who I remember as being
a he, didn't stand on a set that simulated a grocery aisle full of vegetables.
He actually stood on a set of a fake moon landing.
Weird.
I don't know why they did that on Channel 4.
They just had it left over from Kubrick was – had been shooting in New England.
No, actually my memory was that they would do it live from Haymarket,
which was the big open-air green grocer fruit
and vegetable stand area. And they would actually report on like, yeah, cabbage is seven cents a
ton today. Come and get it. Similar deal. But that could be a mistaken memory, much like I thought
my mom eating Vicks VapoRub for colds was a mistake in memory, but turns out to be absolutely true.
I don't like fruit.
Don't care for it.
Joel, you like fruit?
Blueberries.
Yeah, right.
On the nose, Joel.
But, Jesse, you know what's in season right now?
The Satsuma?
The Satsuma.
Guess what they had at the supermarket just yesterday?
Maine came through again.
Satsuma season.
Now, I don't think that's growing right
now in Maine. No.
No, it was shipped. Probably brought up from
Louisiana or out from California.
Yeah, no, this is shipped from out
of state, and
it's a little
kind of orange, a little kind of mandarin orange called a Satsuma it says it's a little it's a little kind of orange a little kind of mandarin
orange called a tzatzuma which jesse's a big fan of i wish i could give this one to you jesse
i brought one for you joel you ever had one before no never seen it before here we go
ow did not i like we're doing two different bits there joel one was me throwing it up the glass
and it bumping off, which happened,
and then you pretending at the same time to actually have been hit by it.
Yeah, both were solid bits, though.
I know.
When bits collide.
I don't think I've ever had a Satsuma for as long as we've talked about them, Jesse.
So I'm going to annoy a certain segment of the misophonic listenership at home
and just give this a
try to see if this changes my own fruit hatred. Not hatred. We'll talk about that.
The advantages of a Satsuma are it's easy to peel, it's seedless, and it's full of flavor,
really consistently full of flavor. If you find one that looks shiny, that's bad news because one of the things about
Satsumas is they're relatively difficult to ship because they're relatively sensitive to, you know,
bumping around. Right. So if you find, you'll often find them, and because they're so easy to
peel, you'll often find them on the stem. You'll find them with leaves and stems attached, as yours was, John.
I know.
I'm holding my satsuma by the stem like a gentleman.
Yeah.
When you're looking for satsumas in your local grocery store, look for ones with deep color and thicker, baggier skin.
It's odd to think, but sometimes the most ugly
looking Satsumas are the most
delicious.
Let me tell you something, Jesse Thorne.
I've never had one before for all the years we've talked about it.
And I don't
like it.
Yeah.
To quote Tom Sharpling,
I love it.
Curveball.
Good. Joel,
after you disinfect the Satsuma
that I threw at the window and it
fell on the floor, you should eat it. It's good.
Five second rule.
Not during a pandemic, sir.
No seconds. But John,
you're not a fan of fruit generally.
You're a fruit disliker.
Well, the thing of it is
I will like a fan of fruit generally. You're a fruit disliker. Well, the thing of it is I will like any piece of fruit if it is in perfect condition, perfect ripeness.
That's delicious.
But the thing is, and fruit people know this is true, that happens about once every seven years.
And the rest of the time the fruit is all garbage.
And I don't have a fructose intolerance
like michael says he did but but it's the something about the acidity it just i just don't
maybe it's acidity i don't know what it is but there's the tartness is too much for me
too much tart you know what i mean so i'm not going to waste my time eating a subpar piece of
fruit and there's no way for me to know if a piece of fruit is going to be perfect or not.
Because fruit is always tricking you.
It looks good.
It's in season.
But then it turns out to be mealy, mealy apple or whatever.
But now I know exactly what kind of fruit I like.
It's a satsuma.
It's got baggy skin.
It's on the stem.
And it's not shiny.
Because this is really, really, really good.
I'm dripping fruit on my computer.
I've had a conversion experience, Michael.
I've become a fruit liker of this one fruit.
But otherwise, I'm against Brenda.
Michael suffered from fructose intolerance.
Jesse.
I don't know if he still has it, but I went over to that Mayo Clinic,
my favorite resource for medical advice because it shares the name
with my favorite condiment.
Right.
And fructose intolerance is a real problem, and it can cause bloating,
Right. And fructose intolerance is a real problem and it can cause bloating, abdominal pain and get ready 13-year-olds, diarrhea.
Oh, wow.
Yeah. Michael went through some – I mean he went through some poop literally dealing with his fructose intolerance. And I don't blame him for being wary around fruit.
You know, I don't agree with him.
It's not an idiosyncrasy.
People like what they like, Michael.
You should own this.
This fruit did you bad.
This fruit did you wrong.
This fruit did you bad.
This fruit did you wrong.
And you approach it with a certain level of caginess that is appropriate.
Do you disagree, Jesse?
No, I agree. I think hater is inappropriately strong language, even if it's used in a gentle and loving manner, as I'm sure it is, as this is his
life partner. But I think he should be able to define the terms by which his relationship with
fruit is described. Thank you, Jesse. I agree. Understandably fruit-weary.
The Mayo Clinic also says that people who are
fructose intolerant should avoid
obviously high fructose corn syrup, honey,
agave syrup, invert sugar,
maple-flavored syrup,
molasses, palm or coconut sugar,
and sorghum.
So stay away from... Otherwise, sorghum
is a superfood.
Michael's not a fruit hater.
You want to see a fruit hater, go talk to Elliot Kalin.
That guy hates fruit.
Let's take a quick break.
More items on the docket coming up in just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast
brought to you by Haas Apple Farm
at the Pasadena High
School Farmer's Market. The only apple farm with delicious apples, pears, and fresh eggs. Best in
the market. What size would you like? That's what Mr. Haas says to me every time. I've not asked for
eggs. He just says, our eggs eggs best in the market what size would you
like and how can we how can we have a discussion of fruit without mentioning our good friend and
native Mainer John the fresh banana man uh have not have not been in touch with him for a little
while but uh Joel if you think this is before I ever recorded here I was driving south on the main turnpike.
I-95, the Kennebunk Southbound Service Plaza.
There was this young man selling bananas like a green grocer.
He was like a Mr. Green Grocer.
And he was just saying, bananas here, fresh bananas.
And his question was, when he ordered bananas, like, any particular banana or just two off the top?
That's fun.
He was building a Judge John Hodgman courtroom in Minecraft last I heard.
He's a wonderful fellow, and I hope all is well with him and his family.
Check in.
Okay, what else do we got?
Anyway, we've got something here from Josie who writes from Boston.
My husband Tyler and I enjoy speaking in fake accents.
No one else enjoys us speaking in fake accents.
That's correct.
Tyler and I have always enjoyed this activity so much that we each had to divorce our previous accent opposing spouses in order to marry each other.
Wow.
I suspect it's universal.
spouses in order to marry each other. I suspect it's universal. Wherever there is someone wholeheartedly enjoying their affected accent, there's someone else fleeing the room. My question
is less about annoyance, which I accept, than about ethics. I would never do a fake Asian accent,
obviously, but I would totally do a fake British accent. And why is that? One friend proposes the rule that we may parody the colonizer,
but not the colonized. But within the vast array of British accents I do, there are plenty like
Brummie or Cockney that have complicated class and cultural associations. Even the New Bedford
and Boston accents that we imitate as locals could still be considered classist. Where should we draw the line?
John, I should admit just for context here that I'm dressed in a full pearly king outfit right now.
I don't even know what that means.
There are cockneys who cover suits in mother of pearl buttons and raise money for charity.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I always wondered what that was all about.
What are they called?
It's about raising money for charity.
Pearly Kings and Queens.
Pearly Kings and Queens
in the Cockney tradition.
Well, you look very, very sharp.
You look like a character
from one of the animated segments
of Mary Poppins.
Good job.
Thank you.
Can you do a Cockney accent?
Right,
Governor? Why not?
There you go. Always
fun. Step in time, step in
time, step in time.
That's about as good as you need
to get in order to be in Mary Poppins.
Yeah. I
can only do one accent.
I cannot do a Boston accent even though I grew up in the area and that's a region of New England.
It's the largest city in New England, which is a region of the United States, southeast of Maritime Canada.
Is that in the Midwest?
No, no.
It's here in the northeast of the United States.
Maine is part of New England as well.
In fact, Maine and Massachusetts used to be the same state until Massachusetts said,
we don't want it anymore.
And then that was 1820.
So this is the last day of Maine's bicentennial.
I can do a Maine accent.
Hang on.
Joel's jumping in.
Joel's jumping in. He wants to do a Maine accent. Hang on, Joel's jumping in. Joel's jumping in.
He wants to do a Maine accent.
Let's hear it.
Yeah.
All right.
That was incredibly disturbing.
For a moment, I thought maybe Joel was having anaphylactic shock
due to the Satsuma that I lobbed at him
what was that?
that's how
Mainers say yeah
oh no oh I got you
okay he's a little slow
that was
that was fair cunning
that was fair cunning joke yeah Joel that was our
fault it sounded like you were in respiratory distress which is not something you want to hear That was fair cunning. That was a fair cunning joke. Yeah, Joel, that was our fault.
It sounded like you were in respiratory distress,
which is not something you want to hear this time of decade.
Never mind year.
Ah, yeah.
That's what you say.
Ah, yeah.
Ah, well.
I can't do a Maine.
I can't do a Maine.
No, I can't do it.
I'm not going to do it.
Can't do a Boston accent. can't do a Maine. No, I can't do it. I'm not going to do it. Can't do a Boston accent.
Can't do a Philadelphia accent.
Oh, it's me right in from Portland, Maine.
I can do one accent, though.
Oh, yeah.
I can do one accent, though, and only one word from it.
And that is the accent that Matt Gourley does pretending to be a person from New Zealand as a made-up
guest on the Andy Daly Podcast Project, specifically the perhaps masterpiece of comedy, which is
Wolfman Hot Dog.
And the only word he can say is, no.
That's him saying no.
No.
No.
That's it.
So what accents can Josie do?
Josie apparently can do a vast array of British accents.
Now, here's the thing.
I happen to know that she dabbles in Jamaican patois.
She revealed in her letter some more information, which is that she said, of course, to take on a Jamaican patois is
irresistible, but I would never do it outside my home, which I'm like is, yeah, you'd best not.
And by the way, resist. Leave that to Jamaicans and Busta Rhymes. Exactly so.
She also revealed that most of her conversations between her and her daughter are done through
singing,
which is, it's an amazing household. It's rollicking over there. It's rollicking.
I have a personal connection to this because I was asked to read,
to read the audio book of a short novel by Warren Ellis called Normal by my friend, my long,
my longtime friend and former editor, Sean McDonald, who is the editor of this book.
Warren Ellis is a great writer of novels and comics and other projects.
He's great.
I was so flattered to be asked, so of course I said yes, right?
And of course I read the book maybe two days before the recording session because I'm a lazy procrastinator.
And it was a terrific book that was set in a secret asylum where people who study international affairs,
who had peered too deeply into the abyss and had mental breakdowns, were all being kept prisoner, basically.
And all these people came from all these different places around the world, many of them very specific regions of England,
Russia, Africa, Jamaica. And no one had told me this and suddenly on the fly I'm trying to do accents.
It was like a nightmare.
I think the only worst nightmare
would be Warren Ellis hearing me
ruin his work this way.
I could have used an eds up
in Cockney slang
because of course
Josie is absolutely correct.
There are deep problematics when you appropriate a means of speech.
Because certain accents are very specifically racially coded, very specifically class coded.
It's a delicate thing.
And I recall when I was a kid in Brookline, Massachusetts, doing a skit in elementary school where I was imitating Dave Maynard, who was a local television personality, who had like a local variety show and had a Boston accent. And I was doing his Boston accent and I talked about people coming in from Hyde Park and I really laid it on thick and my mom took me aside afterward and just said,
don't ever do – that's probably why I don't – I was traumatized like a Michael Eaton fruit.
I had abdominal pain.
I had diarrhea of shame.
I had a diarrhea of shame because my mom was like, that is not our accent. That is an accent of working class Irish American people specifically.
And they are in the audience and they're hearing you
and they think you're making fun of them.
And she's like, don't do it.
And my mom, who had grown up in a working class German Irish American
enclave in Northeast Philadelphia,
where all of her family had a very deep and beautiful Philadelphia accent, one of the strangest
accents in the world, but had then been the first in her family to go to college and went
to graduate school and became a registered nurse, et cetera.
She knew about class mobility and she wasn't saying that accent is low. Rather, she was saying you have to be
respectful of it. You have to be respectful. And so obviously, as I say, Josie, first of all,
you know, my advice to you is don't accept a job narrating an audiobook unless you're the
right person for the job.
Maybe that should be something.
That's when I started thinking about, am I the right person for this job rather than just taking any job that someone was fool enough to offer me?
Absolutely resist doing a Jamaican patois in your home.
I know from your letter, Josie, that you're a white person.
So I would say just stay away from all non-Caucasian accents in general.
They are resistible.
In your home, privately or no.
And the rest of it, I would say keep it in your home.
Not because it is intrinsically offensive, but yes, it's absolutely annoying.
It's absolutely annoying.
I'm sorry.
I've talked about this with Jordan Morris, my co-host on Jordan Jesse Go, with whom I went to college and with whom I worked at our college radio station, KZSC in Santa Cruz.
But we had a colleague named DJ Hadai, who was a Californian, a white Californian, who was very deep in reggae culture, spent a lot
of time in Jamaica and had a sound system that competed in international sound system competitions.
And he explained to us one day that in international sound system competitions,
in which reggae DJs and toasters and so forth get together and compete
over who has the best dub plates. The shows involve everyone speaking Patois. Patois is the
common language of people from, you know, many of the competitors are from Jamaica, but many are
from all over the world. You know, there's Japanese guys and Malaysian guys and so forth.
Yeah.
And they all speak patois together on stage.
And I was really awed by this.
And he truly had an extraordinary commitment to the culture around reggae and especially dub reggae um
uh but it still was a little odd in the context of a community radio station in santa cruz
oh do you mean that he that he that he was patois on the air yeah yeah oh for sure i think a lot of
our listeners believed him to be jamaican like everything there's a lot of there's a lot of our listeners believed him to be Jamaican. Like everything, there's a lot of blurring at the edges, you know.
And, you know, we say patois rather than accent because Jamaican is really a fairly distinct dialect.
It's not just a slant to your vowels.
It's a whole language system.
Much like spoken black American English has its own language system.
But obviously, unless you're deeply into the dub reggae scene and have earned your chops,
Josie, maybe you are. Maybe you've got a sound system that competes in international competition.
I would say-
Yeah, show me your Beanie Man dub plates, Josie.
Yeah, I would say that your instinct is correct.
You should avoid accents that do not comport with your basic cultural background.
And for the most part, just keep it at home.
Look, you divorced spouses to have this hobby together.
I'm not going to tell you to stop it.
Like that was a real big move.
But you're absolutely correct that there is
a class that anyone who is not into this gets annoyed by it. And I remember my wife went to
an all-women's college in Pennsylvania where there was a club of undergraduate women who
met at the cafeteria every day to have lunch and speak to each other in fake Irish brogue.
Good for them.
Good for them.
Good for them.
Not good for the people around them.
John, my stepmother is Irish and she's mad at like Michael Flatley.
I can't even imagine how she would feel about the fake Irish accent club.
She's mad at any American who touches a tin whistle.
Yeah, but you have to remember, you have to remember that they're only 19 years old.
They're very wee, very, very, very, very young to do a thing like that, you know.
Oh, excuse me, to do a ting like that, Jesse.
You have to be.
It's okay if you're young.
But if you're older, don't do it in the cafeteria.
I can't believe you never got cast on Peaky Blinders.
Okay.
Here's something from Carl.
My wife and I enjoy watching movies on saturday nights with homemade popcorn the first batch i
make my popcorn bowl never pops up as much as the second batch her popcorn bowl to even things out i
take some of her popped kernels for my bowl i say that since i'm the one making it i'm allowed to
impose a popper's tax she says i'm stealing it Sounds like something that sends you to the poorhouse in Dickensian
London. That's right. She says I'm stealing her popcorn and that I'm a jerk. Tell her to pay up
or pop her own. All right. Look, this hasn't even aired yet. And I see the, I'm getting letters
about my Irish accent. Yeah. That was a violation on purpose. That was me blurring
the edges. This is my
step-grandmother calling my house.
Hello? Hello?
It's your grandmother.
Is Barney not available?
Is Barney available? Hello,
Jesse, it's nice to speak with you. Is Barney
available? Yeah, that's
his grandma. My mom's
last name at birth was Callahan.
Does that give me the right to do that terrible thing?
No, I've never been to Ireland.
I was just as bad as those kids.
That's the point I'm making.
I'm not a teenager.
I'm not a teenager trying on a new life.
I was just doing a comedy bit.
Okay.
I look forward to your letters.
It's your grandmother, McAnulty.
Hello, Jesse. It's lovely to hear your voice I'm here in Belfast
I was going to go to Ireland
But then that trip got cancelled due to everything
I hope to come and visit soon
I'm 84 years old
I'm on a ladder painting my ceiling
What we have to do, Jesse
Is to do a show
In Dublin and in Belfast and see which audience murders us first for what we just did today.
Okay.
Here we go.
Carl's making popcorn.
He makes two bowls of popcorn.
The second one pops more.
So he takes some back.
And Carl's wife says he's being a popcorn thief.
So I asked Carl, I didn't understand what's going on there.
And I asked Carl for some specifics about his popping method.
And I got a lot of them.
I'm still not sure I understand.
So here's what Carl's doing, Jesse.
Let me know if you've ever heard of anything like this before.
He says, quote, I use a glass popper in the microwave and a blend of butter and olive oil.
I first heat the oil in the microwave, then melt in the butter, then stir in the kernels, then microwave for six minutes.
Then I make her popcorn, but I don't have to eat the oil and the butter melts easily because he's using the same bowl and it's already hot.
Again, stir in the kernels, the microwave for another six minutes.
And the glass popper comes out now, not only hot, but with stir in the kernels, the microwave them for another six minutes.
And the glass popper comes out now,
not only hot, but with walls,
the heat of a nuclear reactor.
And it always has more popped kernels.
And he suspects that the difference is due to either increased temperature
of the glass popper
or the microwave has warmed up.
Jesse, how do you make popcorn?
I got a system, John.
Let me hear it.
This is a system that I borrowed from our friends at
Cook's Illustrated America's
Test Kitchen. It works so
extraordinarily well
that I have abandoned all other
methods of popcorn popping
Let's hear it. You
get your pan. You put your fat
into it. You want a high smoke point
oil like canola. Yep
You put three kernels of popcorn inside.
You put it on medium high heat.
Yeah.
More on the medium side than on the high side.
You don't want to burn anything.
When those popcorn kernels pop, you pour the rest of your popcorn into the vessel and take it off the heat.
You shake to cover them in fat and leave it off the heat for 30 seconds.
Then you return them to the heat and you pop them until the pops are, you know, two or
three seconds apart.
Respect to Cook's Illustrated, America's Test Kitchen, and listener Afton, who works
there.
That is the most Cook's Illustrated thing I've ever heard in my life.
It's so easy.
It's so simple though.
No, it's more complicated.
Joel, what do you think about that?
One word, Jiffy Pop.
Okay.
When they sponsor us.
Two words, but thank you.
When they sponsor us, we'll get to Jiffy Pop is fun too.
Look, I trust that it works.
Everything there is tested.
Orville Redenbacher, go on Judge John Hodgman.
That guy can't.
The original Orville Redenbacher must have passed.
No, I think they have Michael Ian Black or something playing in the commercials now.
They just give comedians the suspenders and let them go at it.
Why does Michael Ian Black get that?
Look, I'm right here, Orville Redenbacher.
I know.
I could wear a bow tie.
I'm not as lanky as the original OR.
You know, he was lanky.
You're too busy working on Peaky Blinders.
Yeah.
So I'm going to say this.
I've got a method too, and it's called Whirlypop.
The Whirlypop is a device.
I see Jennifer Marmer nodding.
Whirlypop is a device.
It's a pot, and then it has a crank on the top that turns a little spindle
and a couple of little wings in the bottom that keeps that popcorn moving around in the oil.
And it's never been more delicious.
And I hate having that thing.
I hate having a thing that is only for one thing.
I hate taking off the lid and dragging out the spindle and the little wings,
and it's very hard to store. But it's worth it because for me, that popcorn is the best.
And I am willing to accept that, Carl, like Jesse, like me, you deserve your own method
of making popcorn. But I do not understand what you're doing at all. Like I've never,
I had to look up glass microwave popcorn poppers and they make them. But why are you making two batches, right? I mean, here are my questions. Why not make one big batch, put it in two bowls
rather than wait to deliver your wife's separate bowl to
her and then grab kernels from her to even it out. That's just passive
aggression. There are two possible solutions to this. One is make one big
batch and separate it. Two is make one batch, one bowl's worth, separate that, eat it, and then maybe decide you're done.
The only reason that I can think for having two bowls meanwhile, because look, do whatever you
have to to get through the night, but maybe his wife seasons her popcorn differently.
What do you like to have on popcorn, Jesse?
What do you like to have on popcorn, Jesse?
You know, traditionally I was just a salt and butter man.
But more recently, I went to a popular members-only retail establishment known for selling goods in bulk.
Yeah.
And I bought about a 75-pound jar of ranch powder.
Uh-huh.
Wow.
And I've really enjoyed both making my own ranch dressing
using that ranch powder
and homemade mayonnaise.
Yeah.
That's talking about your high-low contrast.
Yeah.
A few chives from my front yard,
homemade mayonnaise,
and ranch powder from Costco.
Wait, you got yard chives? homemade mayonnaise and ranch powder from Costco. And the other thing that I've done with it-
You got yard chives?
I've got a few yard chives.
I bought them at the Pasadena High School Farmer's Market.
Must be fun to live in California.
$3, that's what yard chives cost.
Anyway, I interrupted you.
So I'll put the ranch powder
on the occasional slow cooker beef roast, and I'll put the ranch
powder on some popcorn.
It's really good.
But my children will only eat certain brands of microwave popcorn.
So what happens is I make a full family size serving of popcorn, then end up eating it
all myself until I'm sick.
Yeah, you can eat too much popcorn.
It's true.
Look, Carl, I don't mean Yeah, you can eat too much popcorn. It's true. Look,
Carl, I don't mean to totally shame your method of making popcorn. I don't understand why you wouldn't melt butter and drizzle on top, but instead pre-butter the kernels. I don't know if
this, maybe this is the greatest thing. I think I'll have to try it. I think I'll have to try it. But as far as evening out the kernels, do that in the kitchen, not in front of your wife to annoy her.
And meanwhile, everyone can go get a Whirly Pop.
It's $30 at Williams-Sonoma.
I'm not saying that you should go to Williams-Sonoma particularly.
You'll probably get it cheaper elsewhere.
But that's where I happened to find it today. And I also noticed that Williams-Sonoma sells Questlove's brand
of popcorn seasoning. Did you know Questlove is out here selling popcorn seasoning now, Jesse?
If you told me in 1999 at Maritime Hall in San Francisco, as I was
hanging, skulking around the artist's entrance, trying to get
the autographs of the various members of the Roots, that one day Questlove would have his
own popcorn seasoning, I would have been stunned.
Now, if you told me that one day Leonard Hub Hubbard, the bassist at the time for the Roots,
would one day have his own brand of those licorice sticks that people chew on in the side of their mouth.
That I would have believed at health food stores around the nation.
Yeah.
Ah, I say this with incredible respect because Amir Questlove Thompson is truly a person for all seasons.
Like he knows a lot of things about a lot of things very deeply love him i love his all of his recipes in his book and i'm sure this popcorn
seasoning is good but yeah and i also you know what i love and respect hustle quest loves like
yeah i'm making a brand of popcorn seasonings. Nothing will stop me.
You got lemon pepper, truffle parm, rosemary, and Saturday morning cereal seasoning.
I don't know what that is.
Maybe cinnamon.
I got love for those.
I'm going to buy those seasonings just to say thank you to Questlove for my post-adolescent days on okplayer.com.
And he's an incredibly nice guy.
Some of my best buddies are OK Players.
Yeah.
When you see him going live on Instagram to DJ stuff,
go get a history lesson in music.
Go get an incredible, just beautiful vibe
of watching him and listening to his taste.
And, you know, make yourself a bowl of popcorn
with his popcorn seasoning.
You get that one for free, Questlove.
Please call Maximum Fun.
We will work out something for you to sponsor the podcast.
Questlove, go on Judge Sean Hodgman.
Yeah.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, our clicky keyboard song.
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,
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.
Were 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, call S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-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.
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.
We've got a dispute here from Danny.
I work from home at a constantly busy job, and I typically only have brief periods when
I can grab a snack before I have to be on a Zoom call.
As such, a great go-to lunch for me is opening a chunky soup can, grabbing a spoon, and eating the soup from the can cold.
My wife is disgusted by this and usually complains that I look like an animal and should use a bowl.
I argue that not only am I saving us both time on dishes, it's also inefficient and downright silly to dump soup from one perfectly good soup holding contraption into
another soup holding contraption, especially since I'm not heating the soup either way.
Please rule that my wife has to allow me to eat soup from cans without shaming me.
I imagine I'm imagining Danny, by the way, wearing like a pork pie hat where the top
of the hat is mostly cut off and it's
sproing up like the top of a can when you're cutting the lid of a can off.
Also, he's in a 1930s hobo camp.
I'll say this is my image.
First of all, you don't look like an animal, Danny,
because an animal can't open up a can of soup at all.
If a dog or a cat could operate a can opener,
this would be a different world we lived in.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, we'd be in trouble.
We'd be in trouble.
The market for dry dog food would, you know,
no pun intended, dry up real fast.
Yeah, exactly.
They could unload that stuff.
You'd be paving driveways in Maine with kibble.
Yeah, if I came home and Lola the dumb, dumb cat was walking around on two legs eating
chunky soup out of a can she opened with her paw with no thumbs, I'd be like, you know what? I
misjudged this cat. Not dumb. Pretty smart. Pretty amazing. I'm going to go on television.
amazing. I'm going to go on television. You look like Rorschach. Rorschach from The Watchmen,
who would show up at Daniel Dreiberg's house, the former night owl, his former partner in crime busting, with his mask halfway pulled up, eating a can of beans from the can with a spoon.
Rorschach, that's what you look like.
And you know what Rorschach is?
A deluded sociopath.
A dysfunctional antisocial creep.
Obviously the most compelling character in Watchmen.
And essentially the hero of Watchmen.
Even though, as Damon Lindelof and his team of writers so
ably extrapolated, his extreme right-wing vigilantist way of thinking would have directly
led to the white supremacist militia and the TV show Watchmen, where they all wear his masks.
And I bet they all sit down alone and pull up their masks and eat a can of beans,
because that's what antisocial weirdos do.
Does it mean it's not delicious?
No.
It's delicious.
Sometimes I see a can of beans on a shelf and I'm like, I want to eat that can of beans
out of the can so bad.
And sometimes I don't just think it, I do it.
And one time I even did it.
So good. So good. I understand you, Danny.
I'm not a chunky soup person myself. Give me Progresso any day. Mainly because the name of
it is chunky. It sounds like it's already disgusting enough and you're eating it cold
out of the can. It's gross. But I feel you one time on my my instagram show get your pets
i was talking about rorschach eating beans out of a can and then i just did it as a gag
for the people watching get your pets and i did it with with a
a hat pulled down over my eyes so i looked like rorschach
and i and i just let it roll and people thought like like, oh, this is a comedy bit.
He's really dragging this out because it's so disgusting and ridiculous looking.
And the truth was inside, I was like, this is the greatest meal I've ever had in my life.
I get it.
It's a perversion.
This is the thing, Danny, that I think about you.
All of this is very specific. A can of chunky soup,
you say, as though that's normal. No, that's specific to you. You resist the idea of putting
it into a bowl because that would be downright silly. You're eating beans out of a can,
you downright silly man. You refer to a bowl and a can both as a contraption, not contraptions.
There's no hinge or device to it, just a container.
The truth is, and you point out, like, why would I put it in a bowl?
I would never heat it up anyway.
You're supposed to heat up the soup.
You are doing something very, very specific and very, very weird,
and you're trying to trick
us into thinking that it's actually kind of normal. No, it's your thing. I get it. I've felt
that transgression eating beans out of a can. It gives you a sick pleasure, which you should enjoy.
You should enjoy it by yourself. Frankly, I think that part of the sick pleasure is getting shamed by your wife.
I don't know what's keeping your love life alive during the pandemic, but it might have something to do with you eating a can of chunky soup cold in front of your wife and her shaming you for it.
That might be part of your love language.
Think about that.
language. Think about that. But unless there is clear and affirmative consent in this role play,
your wife's nausea takes precedence over your preference. Do it alone in a closet.
I'll be there with you. I'll be there with you. Can of beans.
Do you think he's doing it on the Zoom calls? I kind of think he's doing it on the Zoom calls. I think he wants everyone to see.
I mean, I understand, too.
I wanted everyone to see me eat a can of beans out of a can.
He's probably doing that.
Joel, you ever eat a can of beans out of a can cold?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah, of course.
Around the campfire.
Around the campfire.
Yeah.
They taste better.
What about in your house?
No.
What kind of beans?
Pinto.
Stewart's shelled beans?
No.
Wrong.
Incorrect.
The best beans.
Jesse, you know what else they have in Maine?
Stewart's shelled beans.
A New England brand of canned beans that I never see anywhere
else. I'm going to have some tonight.
Finally, Judge Hodgman,
we heard from Chase
who has created
an electronic dance music track
as requested by you
in our Gallon of Scallops
episode out of the sounds
of in our gallon of scallops episode out of the sounds of a clicky keyboard.
Thank you,
Chase.
Let's hear it.
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. skills, if you can make a rave song composed entirely out of clicky keyboard sounds and
send it, that would make me very happy. Clicky Keyboard Clicky Keyboard
So satisfying I hope all our listeners cranked that.
And I hope they have subs in the trunk.
Totally.
I'm going to listen to that tonight as I make my dinner of Taylor pork roll, Stewart's shell beans, one Setsuma.
I'm going to be dancing around in the kitchen.
That's incredible, Chase.
If you want to listen to the whole track, and I've listened to the whole track, and it goes places.
It's not just that.
It goes to new territories and new dimensions of sound.
You can go check out, of course, our show page at MaximumFun.org. And of course, we'll post at least a segment of it on Instagram,
if Chase says that's okay, at Judge John Hodgman is our Instagram. And you should check out Chase's
SoundCloud at SoundCloud.com slash Chase Watkins, Chase Watkins, all one word, all small letters.
The docket's clear. That's it for another episode
of Judge John Hodgman. Our producer is Jennifer Marmer, our engineer in Maine, Joel Mann,
program and operations manager at WERU Community Radio in Orland, Maine. Run it back, DJ.
You can listen to WERU and WERU.org And you can follow Joel on Instagram at TheMainMan.
M-A-I-N-E-M-A-N-N.
It's a double pun.
Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at JudgeJohnHodgman.
We're also both individually on Instagram, John.
John is at, you're at John Hodgman on Instagram.
That's correct, at John Hodgman.
I'm at put.this.on.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets,
hashtag JJHO,
and check out the Maximum Fund subreddit
at maximumfund.reddit.com
to chat about this episode.
You can submit your cases at maximumfund.org
slash JJHO
or email hodgman MaximumFun.org.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
This is not a post-credits surprise sequence.
I am not going to sing the Star Blazers theme this time.
This episode is already too rollicking.
Next rollicking episode, stay tuned to the very end and I will sing it.
MaximumFun.org Next rollicking episode, stay tuned to the very end and I will sing it.