Judge John Hodgman - A Zither Jam
Episode Date: March 4, 2020Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are in chambers this week with a special guest, Tre'vell Anderson of the smash hit Maximum Fun podcast FANTI! They are clearing the docket and talk about pic...king restaurants, playing music at work, using recyclables as dishware, and responses from listeners about the judge's recent ruling on Santa presents!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. We're in chambers this week to clear the docket. And with me, as always, is the world's most justest man, Judge John Hodgman.
Hi, Judge Hodgman.
Yes. Hello. Jesse Thorne, how are you? You know what? Hang on a second. Let me tell you, I'm on top of the world. You know why?
No, I don't.
I'm looking here at a copy of this week's weekly packet, the weekly five-page newspaper
from the part of Maine where I go some of the time to see this headline, GSA Combo Places
Second at National Jazz Festival.
Jesse, you remember when we did our live show up there in Portland, Maine?
Sure.
And we had the night and day trio starring Joel Mann, the taciturn bass man.
Of course.
Did I introduce you to the saxophonist, Mr. O, Mr. Orlovsky?
Yes, I met Mr. O.
Yeah, Mr. O is the jazz band teacher at the high school.
Every summer he performs at the Blue Hill Fair.
It's my favorite thing in the world.
This jazz combo is so hot.
These kids playing the jazz are so adorable and good at it.
The drummer was incredible.
Check my Instagram feed to find out.
They just went to Philadelphia.
They took second in the nation.
Second in the nation, Mr. O.
Bringing home the silver.
The silver in jazz.
I would expect nothing less of Mainers.
That's probably America's greatest hotbed for jazz.
Perhaps second only to Salt Lake City, home of the Utah jazz.
That's why they call it Jazzland USA.
Yeah.
I just want to say congratulations to Melodious Thunk, the GSA Senior Jazz Ensemble, and Mr. O for bringing on the silver from Philadelphia.
But I'm also on top of the world because I'm talking to you, my friend, Jesse Thorne.
And I hope you're doing okay.
I hope you're up there on the top of the world with me.
And we have another friend here.
Yeah, I'm doing great because I was singing musical theater on the way
here in my car. That's a safe space for me to be a 16 year old again, performing musical theater in
my car. And I decided I made arrangements. I'm not going to look. This is just what they call
in show business, which I am definitely in as a professional podcaster. That's right. This is
what they call a tease. But my friend Renee and I, Renee being one of the hosts of the great Max Fun Dog podcast,
Can I Pet Your Dog?
My friend Renee and I have made some arrangements to perform some musical theater at the Max
Fun Drive live finale show on the last day of the Max Fun Drive.
It's very exciting.
on the last day of the Max Fund Drive.
It's very exciting.
I'm not going to reveal anything further other than to say KT has been,
our office manager has been looking into costuming.
She has a sideline in roller derby coaching, so she's ready to go on that front.
And KT has placed a few orders on my behalf,
and I think I'm going to be looking great.
That's all I'm going to say.
That's all I'm going to say, John.
Don't browbeat me.
That's all I'm going to say.
No, I'm not going to browbeat.
I know what the surprise is
because we were chatting off the air
before we got to recording here.
This is going to be very, very exciting.
Jesse, the one time I happened to be in L.A. for the big MaxFunDrive finale in MaxFunHQ.
One of the best nights of my life.
So much fun.
So exciting.
I wish I could be there to see whatever surprise you and Renee have got cooked up.
But I guess the doors are closed and the blinds are down and you have to be there in order to see it, right?
No, it's going to be live streaming on the internet for all
to see and
mock. For all
to see my, witness
my shame as
I do my best to
recreate
the production I was
in when I was 16 years old. Okay,
we have a guest on the program.
One half of Maximum Fund's brand new smash hit podcast.
It's taking off like a rocket ship.
Fanti, Travelle Anderson.
Hi, Travelle.
Hello, hello, hello.
What a joy to have you here.
Thank you for having me.
I now see the entire world through the Fanti lens.
As you should.
Fanti is like, to call it,
like I've been saying podcast about problematic faves
or favorite problematics,
but that sells short what it is.
I was just talking with friend of Judge John Hodgman,
Linda Holmes, about how much she loves the show.
And she was like, you know,
I feel like when you say that,
people expect a
certain thing and it's so much more than that it's so much funnier and like more big-hearted and
um and more insightful like actually insightful but now i feel like i am obsessing over
what are my fan ties and what are the fan ties of like, I just learned I've been watching the new Star Trek show.
And I talked to my friend Benjamin Harrison, who's a host on Max Fun and has been podcasting about the new Star Trek show.
Right.
And he told me that apparently the guy who invented Star Trek, Gene Roddenberry, was maybe a bad person, which I didn't know.
Does that surprise you, though?
Well, here's the thing.
Then he also pointed out to me, you know, like,
Star Trek takes one of the great selling points.
I'm taking this from my high school AP U.S. history teacher,
Miss Lederer, who was a real Trekker, very committed Trekker,
talked about it in class a lot.
But, like, one of the big selling points of Star Trek
is that it's like a utopian post-conflict world.
Right.
Right.
Post-conflict, post-scarcity, like it's an amazing world of magic where, you know, in 1967 or whenever Star Trek was on television, there were people of many races.
There were, you know.
Mm-hmm.
Women could even be executive officers in the pilot that they had to refilm.
Then Nichelle Nichols, who's incredible as Uhura, of course, gets the job of space operator.
Yeah.
Space telephone operator.
But it is an idealistic show that presents a vision of an enviable future.
But as Ben pointed out, it's basically fundamentally completely imperialist.
And I was like, yeah, I guess I never really thought about that, but definitely so.
So I guess I'm wondering, Travell, if the fact that you are doing this show on a week-to-week basis has completely altered your perspective on the entire world. Well, I don't know. I feel like I've always been a person who has, like,
looked at things through many different lenses, right?
Able to, like, uplift and recognize somebody or something
for, like, what they mean to the culture,
but also be, like, they're a little shady or a little problematic as well.
And so, like, we say that Fanta is the home for complex and complicated conversations
about the gray areas in your lives,
the people, the places, the things that you love,
even though they may not love you back, right?
And so like, I feel like that's my default
as a black queer person.
I have a variety of parts of my identity
that don't like the other parts.
Travelle, are you telling me
that the world may contain some problematics for a non-binary
African-American person?
It is not as rosy as the girls like to think it is out here in these streets.
What is the next thing that you're really excited about busting into on Fanti?
Well, you know, we get into it all.
You know, we're talking about the black,
the invasion, we're calling it an invasion
of black British actors coming over
and taking all of the
quote-unquote taking all of the jobs from the
black American actors. We've already
got... To be fair, they're taking all the jobs
from the rappers who act.
Which is probably for the better,
now that we think about it.
But we're also going to get into one of my faves, who's Monique, who I love.
She's my favorite actress of all time.
But, like, you know, she tried to have us boycott Netflix, you know, a few months ago.
And we're like, girl, what are you doing?
We're already sharing, you know, our passwords among five people.
Why would we?
I'm trying to watch Tuca and Birdie here.
Right.
So, yeah, we're getting into all of that complicated, complex stuff. among five people. Why would we? I'm trying to watch Tuca and Birdie here. Right? Right.
So yeah,
we're getting into all of that complicated,
complex stuff
about some of our
problematic faves
and favorite problematics
in your words.
Well, Travell,
you know,
a piece of settled law
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast
of course is
people like what they like,
but what if you like something
that maybe you shouldn't like
totally?
Right.
It's hard to work
through those feelings
and that's why Fanta is so much fun.
And we're going to give you all the fun you need
myself and my co-host Jared Hill.
We do what needs to be done if I
say so myself. Thank you for doing
that emotional labor for us.
That's what I'm here for. I appreciate it. I really appreciate it.
Let's get into the justice.
Here's something from Elise.
She says, my husband and I go out
to eat once a week and we alternate who chooses the restaurant.
When it's my husband's turn to choose, he presents two to three options he likes and he makes me choose from those options.
I contend that presenting two to three options doesn't count as choosing.
And in effect, I end up deciding where we go each week.
I end up deciding where we go each week.
Please order my husband to choose a single restaurant so I don't have to choose for him.
I can relate to this dilemma.
Not directly.
My wife and I don't have the conflict around choosing a restaurant, mostly because we never leave the house because we have three children.
But I, deep inside me, have a terror that unless I have explicit, specific permission and like a demand for me to choose based on my preferences that if I choose something for my
wife, I am walking into some kind of trap and I will ruin our relationship and end up divorced.
Basically. And, and I want to be clear, John, not because my wife has ever led me into a trap.
She never has in her entire life.
It is truly about my own childhood emotional trauma that remains unprocessed.
Like, so what kind of choice, if it's not going out to dinner, what kind of choice are you making for you and Teresa that you're afraid will lead to her divorcing you?
Like picking out something to listen to on the stereo or picking out a movie or what?
Yeah, I think picking out a movie is a pretty perfect example.
Teresa and I have been together since, frankly, Teresa and I have been together since the VHS era.
I think we started dating in 1997 or 8.
Oh, wow.
So we used to go to the video store
on Valencia Street in San Francisco
when I was still living at my mother's house.
And we'd wander down there.
And I found the anxiety of picking a video for the two of us to watch completely debilitating.
And my wife has extraordinarily democratic and generous tastes.
She's not picky.
And I am picky.
I'm a weird picky grumpus about that kind of stuff.
And she isn't. But I was terrified that
I was going to mess it up for that same reason. What did you pick? I picked a bootleg VHS of the
British television show Brass Eye, created by Chris Morris, that they had at this particular
video store, which unfortunately this video store closed a couple of years ago. But it was called
Lost Weekend Video. But they had a whole section of bootleg Chris Morris videos
you could rent the day-to-day in Brass Eye.
And my friends from
Casper Hauser had told me I should check it out.
I can't stand up right now because I'd be
off mic. But let me give you a mental
standing ovation.
Because one thing
I admire about that is, Jesse, you are not
hiding yourself to the woman
that you love.
For someone who was just making the case that he overthinks the choices that might affect his life with his loved one and gets trapped in a cycle of self-doubt, you really picked a pure Jesse Thorne pick.
A bootleg of Brass Eye.
A bootleg of esoteric comedy, which by the way, is pretty much the most brilliant thing I ever saw. When Jay Evans,
my old dear friend from home, showed me the same, not the same bootleg, but another bootleg in
Brookline, Massachusetts, probably around the same time. Travelle, does this happen to you?
Do you ever get paralyzed making a decision for other people? Well, I kind of feel like I am Elise's husband.
So like with me and my partner, I do this thing where I present options for him to choose.
But the reason why I do it is because he's always on somebody's diet or he's always like has feelings about what we eat.
Whereas like I eat everything.
Wait, on somebody's
diet somebody's diet atkins diet or dr atkins you know so that would be an example of being
on dr atkins i don't know weight watchers i don't know mr t diet doing a a juice cleanser some
foolishness uh and so i provide options for him because he's got everything going on and i can
i will literally eat anything all the time you know know, that diet Jesse Thorne has developed by the, by that famous
nutritionist, Dr. Phineas T. Keto. So for you, Travelle, it comes down to food. Yes. It comes
down to my partner having specific thoughts about what he should or should not be eating and me being able to eat literally everything.
And so I provide options so that he can choose a restaurant that will have something that fits within whatever dietary restrictions he has that week.
Yeah, my trap, John, is definitely about me having hyper specific tastes, like overdeveloped, hyper specific tastes in a variety of areas and opinions, as listeners of this show probably know.
And then but me also being terrified that if I express those hyper specific tastes, it's going to lead to disaster.
And thus desperately begging my wife for a kind of explicit blanket permission
to express my hyper-specific tastes when she's pretty chill.
She's more of a Trevelle.
I think she's probably pretty used to your hyper-specific tastes by now.
She knows you're a bootleg of Brasshead guy.
She did ask that we stop watching that new Star Trek show the other night because we
were eating dinner while we were watching it and they were removing a cybernetic eye.
That sounds like a good reason to stop watching it.
There was a lot of robot blood.
Yes.
But Travell, if you feel like Elise's husband sometimes, do you get the sense that your partner feels like Elise?
That he feels frustrated that you're just not making the call?
Or does he appreciate the fact that you're like, I don't know what you're eating these days.'re not making the call or does he appreciate the fact
that you're like i don't know what you're eating these days so here's uh here's a bunch of rice
here's a steak and here's a jello shot like whatever you're doing let me know i'm sure he
probably feels closer to elise in that you know he tells me to make a decision and i don't make
a decision i end up making him make the decision. But, you know, I always tell him that, like,
he could also not make the decision and I can choose something,
but then he just has to deal with whatever I've chosen.
And, like, if his diet is that important to him,
then, you know, that could create some issues, right?
Like, if I choose something that, like, he can't eat this week, you know,
then he's going to be staring at me, stuff my face at the table.
I think for us, in our relationship, that with me and my wife, he can't eat this week, you know, then he's going to be staring at me, stuff my face at the table.
I think for us in our relationship,
that with me and my wife,
we've managed this a lot by just making the rules a little more explicit
and the expectations a little more explicit.
So sometimes if I'm having a bad day emotionally
and it gets to be 8.30,
which is the time when we have time to watch one
television show i will just let my wife know that i only have a 30 rock brooklyn 99 or cheers level
of emotional bandwidth uh i need to watch a show that i will make me feel nice and happy um and then sometimes i the palette is broader and we can we can watch
uh lodge 49 or uh barry i'm basically at the end of the evening emotional state now where i can't
even watch a show like the most the most culture i can take in is staring at a single panel illustration of Green Arrow drawn by Neil Adams circa 1977 and just fall asleep to that.
That's all I need.
But see, Travell, what you're describing to me feels more like communication between two adults than what Jesseesse is describing which is pure mind chaos
and what i feel like elise is describing here like i feel like i think that jesse
you and you travel have have sort of maybe opened elise's eyes a little bit to what's going on
behind the curtain with regard to her husband and his terror of making decisions.
There may be real emotions involved, fear of making the wrong decision or feeling paralyzed
with an abundance of decisions and so forth.
But that said, this reminds me of something.
Now, I have been spending a lot of, you know, I was just saying like most of the time, it
is true that like, I think last night i just looked at one panel of a 1977
justice league of america uh no excuse me it was a a neil a neil adams illustration from an old x-men
comic book not let's not talk about it anymore i've also i've also when i'm not able to consume
real culture like full novels and junk i read little short stories. And by short stories, I mean, I read Yelp reviews of
restaurants, because Yelp is my favorite collection of very short fiction written by
incredibly unreliable narrators. Where all the conflict is either racism or parking based.
I've also been reading, I've also, and I blame the Maximum Fun Reddit for this,
honestly, Jesse, because you tricked me. You didn't lie, but I blame the Maximum Fun Reddit for this, honestly, Jesse, because you tricked me.
You didn't lie, but you said the Maximum Fun subreddit on Reddit is the only nice part of Reddit.
And that's true.
And I've really enjoyed engaging with all of the Maximum Fun subredditors on the Maximum Fun subreddit. And I've been commenting and responding to people's nice comments
on the Judge John Hodgman episode stuff
and the iPodius episode threads and so forth.
And then I got started,
like I'm like,
maybe there's some other parts of Reddit
that I can read.
And unfortunately I did.
And now I'm addicted to a different book
of incredibly unreliable short stories
called the subreddit is,
and this is
you have to use some strong language here am i the and this is i looked at that one before
that's really intense it's really intense i mean it is it is like judge john hodgman with zero
guardrails it is people writing in going in in this situation where i disagree with my partner my spouse my
father-in-law or whatever am i am i the a-hole or is this other person the a-hole and it's an
it's intense it's like um i feel like we're gilligan's island and it's the sopranos basically
of conflict resolution or or non-resolution in this case. The little here and there manifestations of what it means.
The many casual ways that men don't even realize they're being monsters.
That subreddit.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because I'm just going to say it here.
When a dude is asking, usually the answer is yes. When a dude is asking, am I the a-hole? Usually the answer is yes when a dude is asking am i the a-hole usually the answer
is yes yeah i know treville you know in the in the now coming up on 10 years of doing this podcast
it has been and i've said this before it has been incredibly instructive to me to see the data
and the disputes particularly small domestic disputes between uh heterosexual uh romantic
domestic partners i would have presumed that dudes are always the monsters and they're always wrong
but i can't argue with the data it's just time and time and time and time again not always not
100 not all men ah but it happens a lot and in small ways.
And AITA, as it's called, is truly, you know, as Jesse said, it's a data set worth reckoning with.
I'm just surprised that y'all can actually like stomach the Reddit of it all.
Because I haven't touched Reddit in years and don't plan to.
There are some friendly Reddits besides the Maximum Fun Reddit,
which is almost universally really sweet and friendly.
And they love Fanti, by the way.
Oh, great.
Maybe I should check it out now.
But I haven't encountered any toxicity on my Slow Cooker subreddit
or my People Who Collect VHS Tapes subreddit or my Vintage Stereo VHS tapes subreddit
or my vintage stereo equipment subreddit.
All of those are really chill and positive.
Did not know all of these subreddits existed.
Oh, there's a subreddit for a thing
where you go onto a bridge
and you get an industrial magnet attached to a fishing line
and you drop it into the river
and then you pull up something
made out of metal and it's just like oh i found a half a carburetor wow it's amazing interesting
it is amazing but i will but i will say trevell i would i would not encourage
anyone to go to the subreddit am i the a-hole unless you really want to feel bad feelings i'll keep that after a while
it's hard it's hard and people are in hard circumstances there and and you're just reminded
yeah there are a-holes really bad ones but i give it credit and i bring it up here only because
it introduced me to a cartoonist named emma emma is a commenter from time to time on this board
um she uh lives in france and i believe is french and she did this whole cartoon
about uh what it feels like when you are a woman and a heterosexual couple
and you're trying to feed your child and get dinner on the table and,
and something boils over and the dude goes,
you should have asked me for help.
I would have helped you.
And the whole comic is about how that is the entirely an inappropriate thing to
ask.
Like you are a whole human being,
dude.
You are,
you have field awareness of what's happening.
Like, you are a whole human being, dude.
You have field awareness of what's happening.
You do not need your mommy wife's specific request that you help out in order to realize that another human being needs help.
You just need to open your eyes.
And she wrote a whole comic about that and then put that along with a bunch of her other comics in a whole book called The Mental Load, which is about the mental load that,
and it doesn't have, obviously it's not necessarily only in male-female partnerships,
the reasons that it happens that way. But it's often the case in a relationship where one person is doing a lot of the thinking about everything that needs to happen. And the other person is
just like, I'll just let you handle this. Let me know if you need anything. And that's not fair. So I was really thrilled. And I bought her book,
The Mental Load from Books Are Magic here in Brooklyn. It's great. And I think it really,
really described a lot of what these disputes that come up often on Am I the A-Hole or the
Judge John Hodgman podcast, the one you're listening to right now?
You know, what Elise resents here, I suspect, no matter what her husband's mental chaos is,
the whole point of this exercise of trading off choice of restaurant is,
A, everyone gets to try something that they want and it's fair and it's equal.
And B, half the time, I don't have to think about it.
I don't want to think about where we're going for dinner.
I just want you to make the decision.
And Elise's husband is making her bear the mental load,
not only of her night to decide,
but also his night to decide.
And that might be because he's trying to be conscientious.
It might be because he's nervous that if he chooses the wrong restaurant,
she will divorce him.
Some people think that way.
I have 100% confidence that Elise's husband has a defense.
But I would still say, Elise's husband, you're wrong.
Take the mental load of this one thing.
Choose that restaurant.
If it's not to Elise's liking, I guarantee you, you're not going to get divorced.
If it's a bad choice and it's humiliating to you, I guarantee you,
humiliation happens to everybody all the time.
And you can deal with it a little bit.
You can deal with one bad dinner.
It is not conscientious to put the mental load on the person who's trying to unload.
By the way, Jesse Thorne, I just want to say, I find it so adorable that you and I share this
bootleg of Brass Eye experience. It's so exciting to me. It really warmed my heart. I miss Jay Evans
so much. He lives down in Richmond, Virginia and works in the art store there.
Love him.
I mean, I think that thing probably, I mean, you know,
that thing probably shaped my mind in an important way,
and I never would have gotten there without Jay.
So thank you, Jay.
But also, I will say I've known my wife and have been in love with her. Forget about the VHS era, the beta era.
have been in love with her, forget about the VHS era, the beta era.
And on one of our very first, maybe our first date,
I was the kind of guy who did not feel the way you did, Jesse.
I was like, I am going to decide what movie we're going to watch because it is my job as a guy to put my taste into your head.
And she came over and I said,
would you like to watch with me
my very favorite movie,
The Third Man,
starring Joseph Cotton and Orson Welles?
And my wife said,
uh, no.
Smart woman.
She has not seen it to this day.
And I thank her for that lesson that that's not what dating is about especially since if she had if she had watched the third man that night of our
first date i guarantee you she would have divorced me even before we got married years before
divorced i mean that's because of her legendary antipathy towards zither music.
I'm talking about,
you're talking about Anton Karas's hit,
hit song.
The theme from the third man,
the number one,
the number one zither song of all time.
Oh my.
Travelle,
do you ever see the third man?
No,
I don't think I,
I don't think that's something I should be doing.
I mean, consider it.
It's pretty great, but we're not going to make it.
I used to advocate for The Third Man a lot.
It's fine.
It's good.
It's fine.
It's not.
But that song, boy, that theme song.
That song was on jukeboxes.
If you ever need a zither jam.
Whoever needs a zither jam, though.
Who knows?
When it comes up, you're locked and loaded now. You know what your zither jam. Whoever needs a zither jam, though. Who knows? When it comes up, your arm, you're locked and loaded.
Now you know what your zither jam is.
Okay.
Let's take a quick break.
More items on the docket to be cleared with Travelle Anderson from Fanti 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.
We're clearing the docket with our pal Travell Anderson from the smash hit podcast, Fanti.
Here is a justice request from Tom.
I work in the dish room at Pizzeria Bedia in Philadelphia.
One of my coworkers often puts on music before I get there for my shift, even
when they're not actually working in the room. How can we best equally divide the speaker time?
I'm hesitant to address it with them directly because they have a bad temper, and I don't want
to start a fight over something so small. Also, I'm an only child, so I am not a fan of conflict.
I hope you can stop in for a pie next time you're in Philly.
I think it might even give Regina Pizzeria a run for its money.
That's the one you guys talked about on the Doughboys, right?
Yeah.
We'll not talk about Pizzeria Regina right now,
unless you want to, Travelle.
Do you know Pizzeria Regina?
I'm not familiar.
I'm not real.
I'm into, you know, regular pizza joints, like Domino's.
Wow.
That's a problematic fave.
Yeah.
That's maybe one of the original problematic faves.
Right.
First of all, Travell,
sometimes things slip through the docket
that aren't proper disputes.
Like sometimes people are having fights with themselves.
Sometimes people are really just asking
more etiquette questions, which is this
is sort of like a workplace etiquette question. Yeah. There's also kind of a pre-dispute, right?
Because Tom is afraid of getting into a fight with his coworker. I think his coworker sounds
scary. What do you think, Trevelle? I think that Tom needs to step his cookies up.
And by that, what I mean is, you know, Tom presents themselves as a grown person.
Yes, true. You know, and so if you want to change the music on the speaker, you should confront the person and say, hey, sis, this cute song, but can I play something?
this cute song but can i play something i think from now on all of your verdicts john should start with patient presents as a grown-ass person doing the rounds with dr trevell the patient
presents as a grown-ass human john this is truly a classic Judge John Hodgman dispute that anticipates conflict that might not even exist due to social anxiety.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, the patient presents as a grown human, but also presents as an only child.
Emphasis on a child.
And I, Travell, am an only child.
And therefore, I grew up without any rehearsal of conflict whatsoever. And I, Travell, am an only child, and therefore I grew up without any
rehearsal of conflict whatsoever,
and it terrifies me.
Yeah, why do you think, Travell,
that I thought I would get divorced
if I picked the wrong video?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I think you're absolutely right, Travell.
I mean, this is part of just being
a grown-up human being in the world
is being able to say, do you mind if I put on something else for a little while?
Right.
I also wonder if it's like, is the music bad?
Because if the music is bad, then that's that's one thing.
Or is it just like you don't like you don't like hip hop or you don't like country or you don't like, you know, mariachi music or whatever the case is.
And you just want a little diversity.
I think you can have that conversation right in a way that is like easy and approachable
and like won't lead to a big blow up or anything.
What kind of music do you think a guy with a bad temper who works in a pizzeria in Philadelphia
who turns on the music and then leaves the room
is listening to.
I mean, I'm going to venture to say bad music.
Well, I don't, let's not say bad music,
perhaps specialized music.
Ooh, specialized.
You know, I think if I worked in a pizzeria
with a pizzeria guy who got there before me and turned
on the music, my imagination says
that they're playing relatively
brutal metal. That's what I was
going to go say. Which is by no means bad
music, but it is one of the musics
I would least want to listen to while
working in the back of a pizza shop. Can we agree
that since Tom describes this
person as having a bad temper,
and that's just Tom's point of view,
who knows? But can we agree that probably this music that bad temper pizzeria guy is listening
to is scary to Tom? That Tom finds this music scary music? I think it would be great if Tom
just got in there every day and this person that he was so scared of at the pizzeria was just putting on like Natalie Imbruglia or something like that.
Like, I don't know.
I just I get overwhelmed by feelings.
So, Travelle, I'm going to be Tom and you be my co-worker.
Okay.
All right.
I'm going to do a little role play.
All right.
And you choose how you want to respond.
Okay.
Oh, hey, Travelle.
I know you're usually. I don't know how to say it
do you mind if I put on
the third man theme by Anton Karras
I don't know what the hell that is
I do mind
oh okay
can we listen to something else
yeah you took a really intense tack on this role play Trebell Can we listen to something else?
Yeah, you took a really intense tack on this role play, Travell.
Did I?
It was like my worst nightmare.
Tom said that the person has a bad temper,
and so I was just like,
the person's probably going to be very no at the beginning.
You know? Right.
You've got to wear them down or something.
Here's the thing.
I think it's conceivable that they will have a reaction like that but i think it's much more
likely that you don't even have to approach this as a conflict because it is not yet a conflict
right as far as this person knows as far as this there's this co-worker knows to this point
they're doing a great job by making sure there's music in the back so that people can enjoy some music while they work. All Tom really has to do is go to that
person and say like, hey, I'd love to contribute to the music. Is it okay if I change it when
you're not here? Or is there some kind of timeshare arrangement on the play button or whatever?
kind of timeshare arrangement on the play button or whatever and i and the odds are that even for a person with a terrible temper uh that will be totally fine and will not lead to a tempestuous
situation odds are but you heard my role play with trevelle yeah that could happen
that could happen and it was my worst nightmare and it made me feel awful.
But you did the right thing.
That was the right thing to do.
Tom could also just take like, you know, some other steps and like unplug the speaker.
Oh, sabotage.
I don't want anyone's answer to this to be passive aggression.
There's not even regular aggression yet present.
Aggression.
There's not even regular aggression yet present.
Let's establish regular aggression from this other person before we start coming up with undermining schemes. I can hear that.
Fine.
Fine.
I don't know what happened, co-worker.
For some reason, the Bluetooth speaker just ended up in the bottom of this vat of tomato sauce.
It just slipped.
I don't know what happened.
I was over on this side of the room and I saw it jump off.
Look, Tom, Travelle is right.
Go to your coworker.
You're both human beings.
Human beings can say to one another,
hey, do you mind if I put something else on the speaker for a little bit,
if you don't mind?
I was thinking of this, this, and this.
Probably that person will be like, yeah, obviously.
I'm a human being too.
Now that person might be a monster and go, no, or cut you to the quick the way Travelle did me.
But look what happened.
I lived.
I'm alive.
It's not fatal.
It's not fatal to be shut down.
Maybe your boss will be in the room and your boss will be like, that's terrible.
You're fired, tempered, bad tempered guy. And then you get to pick all the music, all of the music.
And you know what music you have to pick. The only music that should be playing while you're making a pizza. The theme from the third man by Anton Paris. We're going to move on. But Travelle,
I ask you at some point when it is convenient to you just dial up on your machine
the third man theme by Anton Karras Master of the Zither and imagine making a pizza to that music
I think you'll be delighted I will figure that out okay thank you here's something from James
I detest washing dishes whenever I I prepare a snack, I will...
This is amazing. This is beautiful. I love
that James is the one who wrote this in.
Bless you, James. A thousand thank yous.
Whenever I prepare
a snack, I will tear off a section
of cardboard from one of the many packaging
boxes that have been set aside for
the recycling and use this
as a makeshift paper
plate.
I can't.
My roommate thinks this is uncouth and wants me to use regular ceramic dishware.
I argue as long as I'm not serving food to others in this way or using it for something
messy, it's completely harmless.
I'm eating French toast off of Popsicle packaging as I type this message.
Who here is right?
Trevelle?
Jesus Christ.
Trevelle, I heard you say, I can't.
And I understand.
But what if I were to say politely, you must?
I just, there are such things as paper plates.
There's no need for you to, you know.
Well, this is the ecological choice.
Is it?
Well, it keeps you from having to use the paper plates as well as the popsicle packaging.
I guess if you're eating something like French toast, you will not be able to recycle that popsicle packaging after you've eaten off of it.
Exactly.
Because it will be food soiled and no longer recyclable
exactly that's not the point i was going to make but that is a very good one that helps my side
yeah no i think you're still you're still reacting to the astonishing fact that this man eats french
toast off of a popsicle popsicle box i i'm just in i'm i'm just confused like i wonder how he
started doing this.
Like, were there no plates clean? Let me explain.
When you're a heterosexual man.
This is definitely some straight stuff right here.
The gays know better.
In a roommate situation, and especially if the other people in your house are also heterosexual men, and especially if you are a young person who's relatively new to independent living.
Okay.
You will go to extraordinary lengths to,
or many will go to extraordinary lengths
to avoid behaving like an adult human being.
And justifying your laziness
with some kind of crackpot theory that you will then type into a
podcast with your maple syrup covered fingers i mean that's the thing we know exactly james is
i admire james for being very upfront about this he doesn't like to do the dishes one day
he had some french toast cooking and he looks in that sink full of dishes and he's like i don't
want to clean that dish i'm gonna tear off this piece of popsicle cardboard and now i've solved
the problem i am lazy and i get to put a gloss of eco responsibility on top of it hooray for me
once again i triumph and i'm the hero of every story. That's James's point of view.
But it's gross, right?
I mean, Trill, it's gross.
Listen, you're not going to see me eating off a no-card board.
I have plastic plates at my house and I still use the glass.
I think you're right, Jesse, that they're probably in school, very young, and it just makes sense to James to do this.
But coming from an adult, I'm going to need James to do better.
And I can let you know, John, you're in New York, we're in Los Angeles together, that
Travelle presents as a grown-up human being.
I mean, we have to agree,
this is uncouth, right?
He says his roommate thinks this is uncouth, right?
Who here votes that that's couth?
Yeah, so stipulated.
Yes.
I have to say, I'm tempted to James' argument
that even though it's uncouth,
if he's not serving food to others,
it's completely harmless.
And I guess that's true.
I think it hurts yourself to some degree james
to be eating french toast off of a popsicle carton mostly because
that stuff doesn't have a rim you can't have french toast and syrup on a on a conveyance
that does not have a rim that does not going to work as a plate, and that cardboard
is too flimsy. Like even if I were to give you every benefit of every doubt, what you have
described is a bad idea. Now I will say this, lots of places won't accept pizza boxes for recycling
because they are already food soiled. If you were to spend an afternoon, James, with a box cutter or an X-Acto knife, cutting
out perfectly pizza slice shaped pieces of cardboard from old pizza boxes and using those
to eat a single piece of pizza, that would be some flair.
That I would enjoy.
But if you're eating your food off of just trash, uh-uh.
You deserve better than that, James.
You deserve better than to eat food off of trash.
Make that trash into an artwork, then you got something.
Then you can be ecologically responsible.
A shared living situation is a social contract.
You are responsible for obeying shared social norms with the people with whom you live.
In this case, we're talking about basic koof.
Listen.
case, we're talking about basic koof. Listen.
And so
for me, if I
were in this situation, I didn't live that long
in a shared living situation, but
if my college roommate Nathaniel,
for example, in a non-romantic
shared living situation, but if my college
roommate Nathaniel, if I
had come home and seen him
eating off of a cardboard box, I would
have felt the same way
as James's roommate. But if he ate off of a cardboard box at home alone while I was not there,
I guess I could have dealt with that. But at a certain point, I know we all have our way that
we like to do things. And I think that having roommates involves some accommodation of that.
that we like to do things.
And I think that having roommates involves some accommodation of that.
There also has to be,
in order to just establish
a baseline for human life,
some basic expectations of Kuth
in any shared living situation.
And this is not an unreasonable one
from James's roommate.
It's just asking you to use a plate.
It's very simple.
Yeah, Jesse, I very rarely say this, this to you, my friend, but nope.
To me, that's not the issue at all.
Really?
Even if he's alone, eating French toast off of a popsicle carton is a perversion.
This is not about putting calorie ballast into your mouth as quickly as possible.
Feeding yourself, even alone, deserves self-respect and ritual.
So, as I say, if you make your own paper plates that are circular or triangular, if you add something, if you're bringing something literally to the table in terms of thoughtfulness and mindfulness, eat off of whatever you want, especially if you're alone.
But, you know, don't take that.
When was the last time you guys saw a Popsicle box?
I've seen them.
That's the thin stuff.
You can't put French toast on there.
Respect yourself, James.
Do better.
Take it from the Staple Singers.
Respect yourself.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, we'll hear some letters about Santa Claus and have some in-depth Santa Claus discussion after the break.
We're going to get into Santa Claus.
That's a content warning.
Okay, parents? That's a content warning. We're going to get into Santa Claus. That's a content warning. Okay, parents,
that's a content warning. We're going to get into it from a parent's perspective.
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 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.
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Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
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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. We've got Travelle Anderson.
They're one of the hosts of Fanti, the brand new smash hit arts and culture podcast for maximum fun.
I don't know.
It counts as a smash hit, right?
I'll take it.
Do you feel like a hit?
I am always a hit with or without the podcast.
That's right.
Exactly.
So I guess with the podcast, it's a smash hit.
That's fair.
That's very fair.
We're going to get into Santa Claus now.
Travelle, do you have Santa Claus experience?
I mean, yes.
Like at home as a child, right?
I'm going to say I don't know what you mean by Santa Claus experience.
Like I don't know where this is going, but I think so.
Yeah.
Does Santa Claus visit your home around the holidays now?
No, not now.
But, you know,
I feel like when I was younger, there
was some talk of a Santa
to a point. Yeah. To a point.
A modest Santa. Modest dose of Santa.
I feel like after my mom
got tired of me thanking Santa
too many times, she was like, okay, I bought it.
Alright. You know, I think it was one of those like thanking Santa too many times. She was like, okay, I bought it. All right.
You know, I think it was one of those situations.
Santa is a problematic fave on this podcast.
I think so. I agree with that.
Yeah.
And in life.
Yeah.
There's a lot of problems with Santa.
There's a lot of illogic to Santa.
And then one of the things that we've discussed and here is really, we gave you the content
warning parents.
If you don't want to hear any more about this, turn it off.
Travelle, Santa is a myth. Here is real. We gave you the content warning parents. If you don't want to hear any more about this, turn it off. Uh,
Travelle,
Santa is a myth.
Santa is not real.
It's not a real guy,
not a real home invader.
It's a story that parents tell to children.
I hope this is not news to you,
Travelle.
It is not.
It is not.
And I have a strong opinion.
The parents shouldn't lie to their kids and to encourage them to think of
Santa as being
as real as their favorite uh fictional character which is pretty real but to not actually trick
kids because there's a bad experience in my family when our daughter just got really upset and felt
like a friend died when we explained that there was no real santa it was hard that's just my opinion people can do what
they want this dispute was whether or not the gifts from santa on christmas morning should be
wrapped and i said this goes back a couple weeks now and i said of course they should be wrapped
they should be wrapped in special santa. But I got a bunch of letters.
Before we get into them, Travell, do you have an opinion based on your experience?
Or just good taste?
Should gifts from Santa be wrapped?
I feel like all gifts should be wrapped.
Right?
Yeah.
I think so.
wrapped right yeah i think so like why because if it's an unwrap you remove kind of that christmas morning energy of unwrapping yeah i'm with you and yet i got many many many letters
basically telling me to in so many words eat french toast off a popsicle box my bad opinion
people saying lots of people saying where i grew up santa presents were always unwrapped
and that's and that's how we knew which ones were coming from santa
and a lot of the people writing in said, and this is like a consistent thing. It's like the story was Santa is making these presents up in the North pole.
He's not buying them from a store.
He made that Atari 2600.
He, he, he had a, he, well, he didn't, he actually, you know, he's got a, uh, uh, an
army of elf flunky.
So I hope we're in a union making the stuff.
And therefore, it would never be wrapped.
Someone wrote in, Jesse, what was one of the letters that we got there?
This is one from Sharon.
She said, imagine the kids' surprise when, wow, their most wanted gifts are sitting next to Santa's empty glass of milk.
Moreover, in the loopy wee hours of Christmas Eve, when Santa is most active,
there's room for boundless creativity.
It's fun to pull out a minifigure and
arrange it next to Rudolph's uneaten
carrot, setting the box of Lego
underneath the plate.
You can also pose Barbie
in her Corvette, jauntily
waving to a stuffed octopus who
has a tentacle on one of Santa's
cookies. It's nice of Santa to share his cookies with the stuffed octopus who has a tentacle on one of Santa's cookies.
It's nice of Santa to share his cookies with the stuffed octopus, I think.
That was true.
I think the stuffed octopus is one of Santa's gifts, though, right?
Because it's unwrapped, I guess.
Yeah, but I mean, it's a long trip from the North Pole.
It would die if it didn't get anything to eat.
Oh, Lord.
I think ideally it would be eating krill or whatever.
Anyway, Travell, what I'm saying, like like we got this letter from all over the country i thought maybe it would be a regional thing
uh some people wrote in to say you know the the santa president is purposefully unwrapped
so the kids can go down and play with it while their parents get a little extra sleep that
morning or whatever but i got i got letters from jennifer from hannah from alberto from jason kurt wayne alex so many people this is one of those rare situations travel and i'm
glad you're here to see this where i'm gonna say and i don't think i've ever said this on the
podcast you're right i'm wrong wow wow yeah i don't like that I don't like saying it. Are you wrong, though? Ah!
Yeah.
Teach. Teach me, Travelle.
How about this? Is it possible that John is right and these people are right and that there's no exact right way to make Santa Claus?
I mean, yes, that is possible that everyone is right and you can do whatever the hell you want to do in your house with your presence.
I'm just thinking of like y'all must have a lot of presence to have some presence that are Santas that are unwrapped and other presence that I guess are from the family that are wrapped.
Because in my household, there wasn't two separate groups.
Your presence is your presence is your presence, whether they're from Santa or your parents.
And like and it's already limited because we didn't grow up with a lot of money so like
we don't have time for this these are santas so it's like a game time decision for your mom
no i we we would write you know to such and such from santa or from mom or whatever on the package
so like right but the part of the idea of Christmas morning, I feel like is, you know, making the youngest kid that is there clean up all of the wrapping paper. You can't do that when
all of Santa's gifts are unwrapped. That's a treasured tradition. You know, I just, but yes,
maybe everyone is right in this situation and you do what works for you and the Santa from your
region. There's also something from Emily who pointed out that the letter writers can't stop wrapping
their presents from Santa now.
Like the regrettable elf on the shelf, you can't give up the tradition once you've started
it.
And that does feel like it drives at the heart of it to me, John, which is part of the point
of a tradition is its arbitrariness.
Part of the point of a tradition is its arbitrariness. And so, you know, when you are enacting a ritual of some kind, you are committing yourself lot of traditions that I'm glad we've gotten rid of.
You and me both.
I think that, yeah.
I think that we need to have some flexibility with regard to tradition.
I think that we need to appreciate that a gift-giving situation such as Christmas is a moment of thoughtful generosity.
I think that our rituals and our traditions should emphasize that we are lucky to be together
and that we have the means and the ability to be generous with one another.
And whatever ritual best expresses that is the one you should go for.
And what I'm saying, I'm wrong about Santa wrapping.
Oh, look, I think all presents should be wrapped.
That's what presents are.
But I do acknowledge that there is a existing beyond regional tradition of unwrapped presents
from Santa that I was not aware of.
I apologize to all of you who wrote in.
I think your Santa kink is valid.
Fine.
And I think that if two families come together
that have different traditions,
you sit down, you work out,
and you make a new tradition for the family.
And I hope that the tradition is
don't trick your kids into thinking
there's actually a man coming into the house
because that's A, scary, and B, a deception.
But that's me.
That's my Santa kink.
No Santa kink.
Our docket is clear.
Travell, if you were going to recommend one episode of Fanti for our listeners to check out, which one would you recommend?
Well, I would recommend all of them, first and foremost, because they're all wonderful.
But let's say our listeners are anxious people who would like their decisions to be made for them in a clear manner.
Yeah, don't put that mental load on me.
I can do that.
I would say I would listen to our conversation about Gayle King's interview with Lisa Leslie around Kobe Bryant's death.
A lot of people had feelings about it.
And Jared and I, as journalists, had special feelings about it.
As a semi-journalist myself, I listened to that episode and found it incredibly insightful and compelling and spoke to my own strong feelings about the situation from a variety of perspectives.
Travell, thank you so much for being here and for showing yourself and being so awesome and for doing Fanti with Jared.
It's available every Thursday on MaximumFun.org or wherever you get your podcasts.
Right, Jesse?
You got it.
F-A-N-T-I is how it's spelled.
It's a portmanteau of fan and anti if you haven't figured it out yet.
Our thanks to Travelle Anderson for joining us this week.
They're on Twitter at Trevelle Anderson,
T-R-E-V-E-L-L-A-N-D-E-R-S-O-N.
And Trevelle's a very fun follow on Twitter.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We are on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO, and check out the Max Funds subreddit at MaximumFund.reddit.com, where John Hodgman has been showing up a lot lately.
or by email at hodgman at maximumfund.org.
No case is too big or small.
We're always grateful for every case that you offer us.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
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