Judge John Hodgman - Across State Felines
Episode Date: May 23, 2018Adrienne brings the case against her boyfriend, David. They are going to be attending graduate school in different states and cannot agree on how to handle custody of their two cats. Adrienne says it'...s more practical for David to take care of them but David thinks Adrienne will miss them too much. Who's right, who's wrong? Thank you to Charles Louis Richter for suggesting this week's title! To suggest a title for a future episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, across state felines.
Adrienne brings the case against her boyfriend David.
They're both going to be attending graduate school in different states
and can't agree on how to handle custody of their two cats.
Adrienne says it's more practical for David to take care of them.
David thinks Adrienne will miss them too much.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the
courtroom and presents an obscure cultural reference. I fear the man who drinks water
and so remembers this morning what the rest of us said last night. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them
in. Please rise and raise your right hands. Do you
swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God or whatever?
I do. I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he hasn't
had a sip of water in over 22 years, preferring instead to drink gin? I do. I do. Judge Hodgman? Adrian and David,
you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors. Can either
of you name, not the cultural reference, in fact, the direct quote from culture that I said as I
entered the courtroom? David, we'll start with you. I'm going to guess the Japanese new wave horror film, Jigoku.
Jigoku.
I know how to spell it.
J-I-G-O-K-U?
That is correct.
Fantastic.
I'll let the listener in on a little secret.
The first time we recorded this, there was a problem with my mic.
I fixed it now, but David was very kind and spelled Jigoku for me.
And then explained what this Japanese new wave horror movie is all about.
What is it about?
It's about hell.
And there's a scene where a bunch of very bad people toast to each other and drink some poisoned alcohol and die and spend the rest of the movie in Japanese hell.
I've engraved that now in the Peter Guest book.
It's a good guess, I have to say, David, because there is obviously a drinking slash toast theme to the quote.
Did you just have that in your back pocket?
You had Jigoku in the chamber there?
No, I didn't.
But it was the first thing that occurred to me.
Okay.
I love a guy who thinks of deep cuts first.
Adrian, it is now your turn to guess.
You may not guess Jigoku, the Japanese new wave horror film that we are all fans of.
What is your guess?
It sounds kind of like something Ernest Hemingway might say.
So I'm just going to say the only Ernest Hemingway book I've read, which is The Sun Also Rises.
Well, you don't even have to say the name of the title.
I'm only looking for the person who is being quoted.
So we'll say Ernest Hemingway.
And is that your final answer?
Good.
All guesses are wrong.
Didn't want to wait for that one.
Because if you thought about it for even a further second,
either one of you might have come to the conclusion
that the speaker was Benjamin Franklin, famous American aphorist and electrician.
Specifically, a Benjamin Franklin quote that is engraved itself upon pewter on a tankard that is for sale for $83 in the online gift shop for Colonial Williamsburg, where I believe you both work.
Is that correct?
That is true.
Yes.
So, A, I am so delighted to have you both here
because I have many questions for you.
And B, you should be very ashamed of yourselves
that you don't know your inventory as well as you should.
Pewter beer tankard with Ben Franklin quote, $83.
And you may have your own custom engraving as well, if you wish.
Hand engraving or machine engraving.
It's up to you.
This has been Buzz Marketing for Colonial Williamsburg.
But this is not what your case is all about.
Your case is about custody over some cats.
I was going to read a quote from the famous sad child custody movie, Kramer versus Kramer,
too depressing.
Last minute, found the Benjamin Franklin quote.
Feel better about it.
You guys currently cohabitate.
Is that correct, Adrienne?
Yes.
And you are not married?
That is correct.
All right.
That's fine.
I'm fine with it.
But you do have two cats.
And in fact, you are going to de-cohabitate.
And the question is, who is going to keep the cats?
Do I understand this dispute correctly, Adrienne?
Yes.
I mean, for the period of time that you are non, this is not a permanent de-cohabitation.
You're not breaking up.
Do I understand that correctly?
Yes.
It's just for the next two years.
Okay.
Now, Adrienne, you bring the case.
What is the situation?
Why are you guys splitting up your household?
Well, so David is moving down to Georgia and I am going up to New Haven.
And so the cats that we have, we adopted them together as not siblings, but they're their best friends.
siblings, but they're best friends. And so, well, we need to keep them together.
And so we have to decide which of us is going to take them both. And I think that David should take them. Now, I do not know if there are any sort of weird Westworld-y historical reenactment
parks like Colonial Williamsburg in Georgia. I do know in New Haven, they have an old-timey university world called Yale.
But if you're not leaving Colonial Williamsburg
to go be robots in another pretend old-timey park,
why are you guys leaving your colonial home, Adrienne?
We are both going to graduate school.
So I'm going to the aforementioned weird old-timey college in New Haven.
And David is going to the University of Georgia.
I'm doing a master's program, so it'll just be two years.
And David is going to do a PhD.
So he'll be there for longer.
And so I'm going to move down to Georgia when I'm finished with my program.
And I applaud you both for furthering your education and getting secondary degrees.
Given that you both work in Colonial Williamsburg, may I presume that one of you is getting a master's degree in blacksmithing and the other is getting a Ph.D. in town crying?
It would be a fair guess, but I am getting my master's degree in early music, and David is going for his PhD in history.
Fantastic. All right. Well, congratulations to you both. You're going to be apart for two years studying your obsession with the past, your mutual obsession with the past.
Before we talk about your delightful cats and look at pictures of them and make Jesse respond to that.
What? I presume that there are pictures of them and make Jesse respond to that. What?
I presume that there are pictures of the cats in the evidence.
Yes, I see.
I'm already seeing them.
Okay.
Jesse, you're going to have a good time.
Oh, there's one that's really.
Oh, my goodness.
Okay.
At this point, I'm basically one of those salivating rats or whatever it was.
Like, you just think you can ring a bell and I'll start being delighted by an animal.
All right. Let's put it to the test.
Jesse, will you please scroll down to the evidence submitted by Adrian?
What are the names of these cats?
The mostly white one who has become known in the past few days as the trash cat.
Hang on, Adrian.
Let's let the bailiff get this out of the system.
Is the cat's head in a glass?
Is it going to be the cat with its head in a glass?
It's the kind of glass with a bump three quarters of the way up, you know?
And so it looks like a funny space cat.
And I think this glass is going to get stuck on the head.
And then it's going to walk around with a glass on its head like,
whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo evidence and these photos of course are available uh at the judge john hodgman page of maximum fun.org and on our instagram at instagram.com slash judge john hodgman this one the cat is looking very fat yeah oh trash cat trash cat there's a trash cat picture it's a cat in the
trash don't put your cat in the trash you could can put it in the cat house. Okay.
So there you go.
The Pavlovian experiment worked again. Jesse did drool when I rang the bell.
To all of our delights.
Can we address that in all of these pictures,
Adrian and David are wearing colonial garb?
Except for this one where David is wearing,
it looks like a colonial r rough and coat and shirt.
Yes.
And then maybe blue jeans.
Yes.
Yeah.
There's a little bit of denim in his colonial Williamsburg garb.
It looks like to me,
but yes,
Jesse,
you have revealed this is the big third act reveal of the evidence section is
that not only do we have a number of incredibly cute cats,
that number being two specifically, but also two incredibly cute owners wearing their colonial
Williamsburg garb in the evidence submitted to this courtroom. I don't know if it's possible
to judge between these two. May I judge them both winners? Because it's incredible.
It's incredible what you guys have brought to us today. Thank you.
You're welcome.
Now, I have some questions about these photos that will guide our discussion further. First of all, there is a photo of a very curious
cat that is white with tabby highlights. This cat is named Claudio. Claudio. And it is a,
Claudio identifies as a he. Yes. And he is putting his head into a water glass to drink some water, and it does look a little perilous.
Claudio likes to get into things, because the next photo is Claudio inside a kiddie condo, a berugged kiddie condo.
And then there's also this photo of Claudio inside the trash can, which is a delight.
And there's also a photo of Claudio just hanging out on a wall-to-wall carpet with his mouth just hanging open like a big
old dum-dum. I love that one. Can we let the record reflect that as a dog person, I don't
respond in a ridiculous manner to pictures of cats doing normal cat things. I have a higher
standard that requires them to be in a funny thing or to be trying to
do a funny thing. Right. Dogs are cute, but cats are proud. And the best part is a photo of a cat
that has gotten itself into a garbage can and is looking up and it's like, I know this is
humiliating to me. That's what is the name of this delightfully fat black cat with tuxedo highlights?
That is Callisto.
She is a female cat.
Callisto or Callista?
Callisto.
Callisto Flockhart?
The famous wife of Harrisona Ford?
That's right.
Claudio and Callisto, they do seem to be a delight.
They do seem to be best friends.
By the way, all over the country, people are driving their cars listening to this podcast going do you remember when the
judge john hodgman podcast heard disputes between people instead of just looking at pets and laughing
i think like what happened to that podcast is just about people laughing at cats now it's like yeah
well you know hodgman got toxoplasmosis about a year ago and that's all he does he does a podcast
where he narrates pictures of animals probably you know what itgman got toxoplasmosis about a year ago, and that's all he does. He does a podcast where he narrates pictures of animals.
Probably, you know what?
It would be very successful, Jesse.
We should think about doing that as a spinoff.
The Meow Boys.
All right.
So these two, you adopted them together or separately?
Together.
And you guys are how old?
We're both 24.
All right.
Oh, wow. You're young people.
How long have you guys been living together in old timey Williamsburg, Virginia?
Coming up on two years. Oh, wow. And now it is time to part. And the question before this court is
who shall take the cats with them? And if I've read this brief correctly, you're both trying to pawn these two delightful cats off on the other.
Is that correct, David?
Yes, that is correct.
I wouldn't put it like that, but yes.
David, why don't you love these cats and why don't you want to live with them?
Are they shedding all over your frock coat?
Well, yes, but that's not the reason why i uh why i want adrian to take them uh so
i love these cats very very much uh but we did get them in part because adrian needed to have
cats in her life um which is a desire that i very much respect and support and uh when uh when we
are apart uh we're going to do our best to see each other as
much as possible um but because of adrian's schedule with rehearsals and performances and
all of that stuff i'm going to be the one visiting her for the most part which means that if i give
up the cats i'm still going to see them all the time. If she gives up, well, not all the time, but semi-frequently.
If she gives up the cats and I take them, then for two years, a tenth of their life, assuming that they're going to live at least to 20, she's not going to see them.
And I think that she would be very sad to part with them.
I think she is in some ways in denial about how sad she'd be to be without the
cats. And so I think she should take them for the next two years and then bring them down so that we
can all be together in Georgia. And that is the end game of your, uh, master's and PhD programs,
correct? You go, you'll end up in Georgia together while you finish your PhD in history.
Yes. And what, what area of history are you studying?
Japanese New Wave horror cinema or what?
I'm going to be studying 19th century American history and Southern history.
I can go into more detail on that, but that's what it is broadly.
I have every confidence you could go into more detail, but we will save that for the nonce.
It's a little old timey talk that I just dropped in there, Jesse, to make David delighted.
Set him at ease.
Thank you.
I'm thanking you on behalf of David.
Well, actually, I would prefer that you say thank you.
By the way, I am wearing my powdered wig and my breeches.
We'll say that.
Okay, David, are you being totally honest with this court?
Or is it that you just don't want to clean out this litter box anymore?
And you want to go down to Georgia and study up your wild 18th century American history
while the cats are away, David will play.
Be honest.
I am being honest, Your Honor, and I think you can
ask Adrienne and she will confirm that I
delight in general these tasks. Oh, I will ask Adrienne, sir.
Sorry, I just needed to
establish my dominance in this courtroom. If I ask Adrienne, she'll say the same?
Yes. All right. Watch this.
Stand by. Adrian?
Yes. I'm asking you
now. Does David
want you to take these cats because he's a
lazy cat taker care of-er?
No.
He loves
the cats very much and
in fact,
I think that he himself may be underestimating how much he would miss them.
Wait a minute.
But that is not my main...
So is that the main reason you don't want these cats either?
You think he's going to miss them too much?
No, that's supplemental.
All right.
What's your main reason for not wanting these cats around while you go to Yale University to study early music and play your plink-plonk music on your string bow or whatever it is?
What's an old-timey instrument, Jesse?
Glass harp?
Yeah, glass harp.
That sounds really good.
Yeah, are you going to learn to play a glass harp or a glass harmonica as invented by Benjamin Franklin?
It's a bunch of little wine glasses full of different levels of water, and they go,
woo, woo, woo, woo, woo, woo.
Is that what you're going to do?
No, I think I missed my opportunity
in doing that while I was at Colonial Williamsburg.
Oh, you got a glass harmonica down there?
Yeah, there's a visiting artist.
There's no in-house glass harmonica player,
but there is a guy who comes in
and frequently performs on this instrument.
Is that a historically accurate instrument? Did Benjamin Franklin really invent that thing?
Yes, he did. And there was another gentleman in town named Robert Carter. He also owned one of these. So it was quite the rage for a very short period of time.
So it was quite the rage for a very short period of time.
Well, no, I still see some street musicians playing them from time to time.
They're really cool.
And if you haven't seen one, go look up,
would you call it a glass harp or a glass harmonica?
Glass harmonica.
And I've seen it without the H in harmonica too, so just harmonica.
All right.
Go have some fun with your autocorrect and try to put glass armonica into your Google and see what comes up.
Judge Hodgman, would you agree that in a way Benjamin Franklin is the creator of the Judge John Hodgman podcast in that he was the man who established the American tradition of coming up with your own weird system that is better than the system that everyone else
around you has agreed upon. He does. He is the very model of monstrous male exceptionalism. It's true.
Let's take a quick break to hear about one of the other awesome shows here
at Maximum Fun. We'll be back in just a second on Judge John Hodgman.
back in just a second on Judge John Hodgman. Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney,
is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many
more is a valuable and enriching experience. One you have no choice but to embrace because yes,
listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you. And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh
and you're on the go, try
S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I
Hmm. 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-p-b-a-d-i it'll never fit no it will
let me try if you need a laugh and you're on the go try s-t-o-p-p-p-d-c-o-o ah we are so close
stop podcasting yourself a podcast from maximumfun.org you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Court is back in session.
Let's get back into the courtroom.
Adrienne, you've alluded to the fact that you think David will miss these cats,
but that's not the main reason you don't want them.
Yes.
What is the main reason you don't want your delightful cats, Claudio and Callisto?
So it's mainly a practical thing.
First of all, David is going to be able to afford a bigger place for a lot less money than I will in New Haven.
And that's the place that we're going to both end up in eventually.
So it'll be big enough for all of us.
The cats are kind of a handful,
which is something that I wanted to illustrate in the evidence that I sent in.
So they kind of need a lot of space.
Oh, you legit don't want these cats around
while you're taking your master's degree in new haven because why because
cats are terrible apartment dwellers and they usually require a separate room to their selves
well not i guess well neither of those things are true obviously they're amazing apartment
animals and also they can't speak english so they can't make any demands
well they can't speak english but they can, they can't speak English, but they can
meow very loudly, especially Claudio. He's deaf, so he is extra loud and extra talkative
and extra rambunctious. So I just don't see them doing very well in a small studio apartment,
which I think would be all that I could afford on my own.
Do you have a place picked out already?
No, I was waiting for this decision to be made for me
before I start doing some more in-depth searching
but I already see that it's going to be more expensive
than it will be for David.
As someone who has lived in New Haven
admittedly in the colonial period myself
because it was a
long time ago, with a cat, I can tell you that it can be done. With more than one cat, in fact.
Can be done. I'm just going to say that. But you don't want them around because you think
they're going to take up a lot of your time and attention, and Claudio in particular
is going to be loud and meowing it up while you're
trying to play your bass viol or whatever you're going to do. What ancient music are you interested
in studying? What's your life going to be like there in New Haven? So I'm a singer and I'm
particularly interested in early music. So I'm going to be a member of a small vocal group and yeah, singing mostly.
Is that what you're going to be getting your professional training in at the School of Music
at Yale or what? Yes. Early music voice. Early music voice. Yeah. Well, let's hear something.
Oh.
Yeah, well, let's hear something.
Adrienne, I can't hear this case unless I know whether or not you actually have a future in the music of the past.
Oh, geez.
Okay.
I'll give you a verse of one of John Dowland's famous lutenists, one of his more famous songs.
I wouldn't say he's the most famous lutenist, but go ahead.
Okay. I got a few lutenists in mind, but go
ahead.
Alright.
Come again
sweet love
doth now invite
thy graces
that refrain
to do me due delight.
To see, to hear, to touch, to kiss, to die with thee again in sweetest sympathy.
Whoa.
Bravo. That. Bravo.
That was amazing.
You'll be setting the small churches and living rooms of the Northeast on fire in your career as an early music vocalist.
And arsonist.
Thank you.
It's a perfect cover for a dual career.
Adrian, that was truly amazing.
And thank you so much for sharing that with us.
I mean, my only regret is I didn't ask you to sing that song only using the words meow,
meow, meow for my own personal reasons.
Thank you very much.
David, can you sing?
Yes.
Oh, it's amazing how your voice changed, David.
I can sing, but nothing like that.
Because I'm about to saddle you with some cats you don't want, because Adrian just killed it.
Well, Adrian and I occasionally at work sing duets, usually from a book of two-part madrigals by an English composer named Thomas
Morley, though she definitely carries the ensemble.
Second most famous madrigalist?
After Al Madrigal.
Yeah, Al Madrigal is really the famousest.
Yeah.
Hi, Al.
Showtime show about the comedy stores.
Yeah.
Hi, Al. That Showtime show about the comedy stores.
Okay.
Well, I would order you both now to sing a duet, but I think it would get so adorable that cars would be driving off the road and it would endanger everyone's lives.
So instead, I'm going to ask more questions about your work together and how you met.
First of all, David, tell us about, for those who may not know, what is Colonial Williamsburg? So Williamsburg in the colonial era up through 1781 was the capital
of the colony and early state of Virginia. The capital moved west to Richmond in 1781,
and the city sort of fell out of use, but a lot of buildings were very, very well preserved.
And so in the 20s, thanks to a generous gift of blood money from John D. Rockefeller Jr., a group of archaeologists, historians, architects restored the city. So now it's a restored colonial capital. It sits on about a
mile of land, several hundred acres. People wear 18th century clothing and give tours of houses,
demonstrate 18th century skills and material culture, stage scenes from historical events and things like that.
And occasionally fall in love.
Well, we were actually in love when we got there.
Adrian and I met in college in Pittsburgh and actually both got jobs at Colonial Williamsburg
at the same time when we were already in a relationship and already
had been for a few years. So we both moved down there together. Were you always interested in
history? Was it your goal to move together to this replica of the past and just wear frock coats and
sing madrigals together? Well, I majored in history in my undergrad. Adrian started focusing on early music around the same time.
I was interested in working in museums.
And when we realized that there were musician jobs at Colonial Williamsburg that actually perfectly suited Adrian's skill set,
at Colonial Williamsburg that actually perfectly suited Adrian's skill set, we decided to both apply in the hopes that we would both get jobs and both be able to move down there.
And so what do you guys do at Colonial Williamsburg? What is your job?
My job is I'm called a site interpreter, which means that I give tours of houses, historic sites, things like that.
In costume and in character?
I am not in character, but I am in costume.
All right.
I only half approve.
Adrienne, what's your gig?
I am a music interpreter, and more specifically,
I'm a member of the group known as the Governor's Music
Ensemble. We're sort of the resident Baroque ensemble at Colonial Williamsburg and so we do
a range of different levels of formality of performance. So we'll do one formal evening
concert once a week and then throughout the rest of the week, I'll be sitting in a house, practicing on the harpsichord, answering people's questions as they wander through a building.
When you're plunking on the harpsichord and people are asking you questions, when you answer them, do you talk in old-timey language?
Are you in character or no?
No, I'm not in character.
Is anyone in character down there?
Yes, there are character interpreters.
They portray specific people from history.
And there are what's known as the nation builders.
That's the Thomas Jefferson, George Washington people.
Can you guys leave and get some of those weirdos on my podcast?
Because I wanted to talk to them.
They are very interesting and talented.
So I'm sorry that I'm not them.
No, you guys are very interesting and talented as well.
And when is your last day there?
Well, my last day, appropriately enough, is the 4th of July.
Little on the nose, Adrienne.
Yes.
All right.
So we got to decide
what's going to happen quite soon.
Will you do me this favor, though, Adrian?
I know that you don't play
a particular character
and you're not even technically in character
when you're doing your harpsichord.
But at some point when before you quit,
maybe on your last day,
when someone asks you a question,
no matter what the question is,
just whisper in there,
these violent delights will have violent ends?
I can promise to think about it.
I'm ordering you to do it unless you want some cats you don't want so much that you claim to
love. All right. Who takes care of the cats the most now?
Who takes care of the cats the most now?
I think it's pretty equal.
We both have certain things that we tend to do more of.
I do more of the feeding of the cats.
David cleans out the litter boxes.
David also plays with the cats more than I do.
And I would say that I cuddle or attempt to cuddle with them more than he does. So I would say it's a pretty even split of both responsibilities and enjoyment of the cats.
Have you considered a kind of a split custody agreement where you feed the cats in New Haven
in the morning and then drive them down to Georgia for them to poop in the evening?
the cats in New Haven in the morning and then drive them down to Georgia for them to poop in the evening? I can honestly say we have not considered that. Well, why not another kind of
split custody arrangement, such as separating the cats or having the cats for a year in
New Haven and having the cats for a year in Georgia, and then you all are reunited after two years in Georgia?
Well, I'm all about spending as little money as possible.
So if I'm going to get an apartment that I have to pay some kind of,
well, either pay to get a larger apartment to house the cats
or to have to pay some kind of pet fee,
I'm not going to do that if we're both going to have them at some point.
Okay.
I got you.
And after all, you're only paid in copper pennies after all.
Of course.
What kind of place are you going to have in Georgia?
Are you going to Atlanta, Georgia, David, or somewhere else in Georgia?
I'm going to be living in Athens, Georgia.
Right.
And Athens, Georgia is very cheap.
I'm currently looking at potentially living in a small townhouse for less than we currently pay now for our smallish apartment.
So it is true that I'm going to have more space for a lot less money than adrian
is going to have yeah that sounds like a really good deal because that way the cats can probably
have their own floor and some stairs to run up and down and stuff that that all is true
so where do you think honestly david the cats would have a better quality of life
quality of life that's a very piercing question um i suppose that i'd be forced to admit that they'd probably have a higher quality of life uh living uh with me for the next two years
in part because it would spare them several very lengthy moves they do not like being in the car
they do not like being in their boxes. So if they came
down with me, they'd only have to do that once. Uh, they would have more space. Um, but while I
do, uh, prize the wellbeing of my cats and the happiness of my cats are very much, uh, they are,
They also are animals and Adrian and I are humans and I believe that inconveniencing the cats in as much as having to move them several times and maybe giving them a little less space for the next two years would be worth it for Adrian's quality of life and quality of frequent cat interactions. You're saying that Adrian's quality of life and happiness is more important
than the cat's emotions and that she would suffer without the cats.
Is that so?
Yes.
But you have heard her argument.
She says she doesn't want these cats.
She doesn't want the cats because they're going to interfere with her
historical music lifestyle in new haven
connecticut how do you answer that um well uh i believe that in part she's in a little bit of
denial um when we when we go on vacation uh if we're apart hang on a second you think that she
doesn't know her own emotions i'm not sure i'd go that far yes in this case You think that she doesn't know her own emotions? I'm not sure I'd go that far. Yes. In this case, not that she doesn't know, but that she knows and that she's buried that awareness under layers of practicality and concern about having to move the cats around and have them live in a small space for two years. So you see, Jesse, the dudes thinking that they know their spouses' minds better than
their own spouses, it goes back to at least the 18th century.
We know that now as a part of history.
I knew this was going to happen.
On this day, David does not get a check in his virtue box.
Adrian, how do you feel?
I mean, I want you to be honest.
Do you think you might be underestimating the emotional trauma of not being near Claudio and Callisto?
Maybe, but I also think I could get over it.
I also think that it's not that I think they will interfere with my activities. It's that I just think I won't be home as frequently as they would want me to be. I might not even get to see them that much he will be busy, but I think a lot of his work could be done at home.
He'll be, you know, grading papers and the cats can come and sit on the papers and enjoy the past.
And in Athens, Georgia, life is lived more slowly than in the hustle bustle of New Haven, Connecticut, where you're going to be singing in your apartment and those cats are going to
be meowing along with you and all your neighbors are going to be hitting the
ceilings with brooms saying quiet.
But none of that matters to me, Adrian. I asked David a piercing question.
Thank you, David. I appreciate that compliment,
which was where does he believe that cats will have a better quality of life now i'm going to ask you a piercing question
and i order you to tell the truth whom between you do these cats love more well
i i really don't know they definitely allow me to get closer to them, but I think that's also because of my
cat parenting style. I'm very much into picking them up, and David is not. I think that they could
grow to allow David to pick them up if he just tried to do it. So I think it really depends on their mood. If they're in a cuddly mood, they show more affection to me. But I don't know, you should see them playing with their bird and mouse toys with David. That's that picture of Claudio with his mouth hanging open. That is a cat panting, which I never knew cats could do, but David really gets him worked up,
and I think they would miss out on that.
You never knew cats could do that.
Did you not grow up with cats?
I did, but I guess I've never gotten a cat
to leap through the air so well as David can.
That's a lot of words for a simple question.
It seems like you're evading the answer.
That's fine.
I have one more question to ask
before I go into my own carpeted kitty condo,
judge size, that I call my chambers
and make my decision.
Who has had cats longer in their lives?
David or Adrian?
I think probably me.
Mm-hmm.
David, would you disagree with that?
No, I'd agree.
Did you have cats growing up?
I did, but not until my middle school years.
And I believe Adrian grew up with cats from very early on.
Adrian, have you ever had a time when you haven't
had a cat in your life?
When I was away at college.
Oh, okay.
Gotcha. Alright, I think I've heard everything
I need to in order to make my decision. I will be back in a moment.
Do what the bailiff says
while I'm gone.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
exits the courtroom. Adrienne, how are
you feeling about your chances in the case? I guess I still feel pretty good from a practical
standpoint, but I don't know. I never really know which way these are going to go.
David, how do you feel? I feel fairly confident. I feel like that last question might have tipped the scale slightly in my favor, but of course I'll have to wait and see.
David, will you please, in the interest of fairness, sing a public domain song for us?
The Old Gray Mare or...
The old gray mare or...
Okay, I'll sing a little bit of Down by the Sally Gardens, an ancient English folk song which had words written for it by Yeats in the early 19th century.
Oh boy. Down by the Sally Gardens, my love and I did meet.
She passed the Sally Gardens. All right, that's enough.
We'll be back in just a second on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
Of course, the Judge John Hodgman Podcast always brought to you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org.
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Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and offers his verdict.
In a field bound by the river, my love and I did stand.
And on my leaning shoulder, she laid her snow white hand.
She bid me take life easy As the grass grows
Come on, David.
Grows on the wheels
Here, I can help, guys.
The old gray mare
She ain't what she used to be
Ain't what she used to be
Ain't what she used to be
Oh, David.
Goosebumps on that one.
That's one of my favorite songs.
Well done.
Judge Hodgman, it's pronounced
Jesse. J-E-S-S-E. Jesse.
I do apologize.
Jesse, you sang my second favorite
madrigal.
Got it.
You know, I
did not expect this when I was in
my chambers hearing Down by the Sally Gardens.
That one's been getting me since my old college days when I heard them Whiffenpoofs sing it.
So you really know how to manipulate a judge there, David.
But I'm trying to be impartial.
Here's this weird situation because what we have here are two truly adorable people
in the care of two truly adorable cats. And I am in the unenviable position of trying to decide
which one of these people hates these cats more. I do not believe any of this Tom foolery about,
I think that he'll miss them more.
Oh, I think she'll miss them more.
Someone doesn't want these cats around.
And I feel it.
You know, I grew up with cats.
I rescued a cat in 1997 that lived until 2014,
at which time, as I've discussed on the podcast before,
Petey, the cat, began to fail and passed away, basically by my hand, because I brought poor Petey to a professional cat dispatcher at the veterinarian.
And after that, I had a long period where I was like, do not.
I mean, I loved my cats, the ones that I've had over the years. But I do not want a cat anymore. And I had to come to terms with my own cat loathing.
Because as wonderful as they are and as adorable as they are,
whether they are panting, whether they are cuddling,
whether they are in the garbage, whether they have their heads in a glass,
eventually, sometimes you just want that cat to be in the garbage.
Sorry, cats.
They take a lot out of you. They have a lot of personality. They have a lot of demands.
And what's more, they poop in a box in your house and you got to take care of that. It's not a lot
of fun. And one does reach a certain area of cat fatigue. And I need to take that into consideration when I am trying to tease out
the truth behind your competing altruistic claims. There's one of you that doesn't want
these cats more, and indeed one of you who deserves to be catless more for a period of time.
Second consideration, David believes that we are gifted by God with mastery over the beasts of the field.
And therefore, the emotional considerations of these cats should not be taken into account when determining where they should live. Now, I don't disagree completely. I believe in all
human animal partnerships, the human's needs have to come first because they're the ones dealing with all the
feces. I think a certain consideration has to be given to the human mind and the human needs before
the animal's needs. But your argument, David, does not exactly stack up because if you truly did not
care about these cats, you would be considering separating them, for example, because there's one
for each of you and spreading the pleasure and the pain of cat ownership in that way.
But you wouldn't do it because it would presumably break these cats little hearts to be apart from each other.
They're going to go through a big change in their lives and you want them to have a certain amount of continuity.
them to have a certain amount of continuity. There is no question that these cats are going to be happier in a townhouse in Athens, Georgia, a cool college town, than living in an apartment
on Howe Street or Chapel Street or Temple Street or Grove Street in New Haven. I've been in those
apartments. They're cramped, they're smaller, they're northeastern. And that town is less cool, frankly.
No offense, New Haven.
But I don't know who's coming around Toad's Place these days,
but it's never going to be as cool as Athens, Georgia.
And you know what cats like?
Cool.
That's why they're cool cats.
So ultimately, I have to make a decision based on the welfare of the cats as well as the welfare of the cat owner who wants to be away from them in the deepest possible way.
And in this case, when I consider those two inflection points, they line up pretty clearly that it's been acknowledged that David's place will be better,
that they will have a wider range of exploration
and more and more different corners and closets
in which to poop.
And what's more,
it has been acknowledged
that Adrian has had cats for more of her life and therefore has earned the catlessness
that she seeks more than David has. Is it possible that David is correct that she will miss the cats
more than she anticipates and maybe that the cats will miss her more than she assesses? Of course.
And I think he's probably right in this case. Because when I asked
Adrian, who do the cats love more? I got to tell you, Adrian, you prevaricated, you jumped around,
all kinds of things. He makes them laugh and jump and whatever else. You know, you knew that answer
because if you knew that they loved David more, you would have just said David. But the reality
is cats are fickle. They love one person more than the other.
And maybe they love, you know, they have differences of love for each of you.
But I think the answer was obviously clear by the way you did not answer quickly, which is, yeah, they love you more.
Maybe you love them more than you think.
But I do feel that you've earned this experiment of 24 months of catlessness based on time previously served
and also the circumstances of your life
being less good for the cats.
My prediction, perhaps,
you will go to New Haven,
you will install yourself in your little apartment,
and the ancient music song that you will be singing
will be one of sadness, lament, and
mourning for the cats that you shipped off to Georgia for your own comfort.
But this court does not litigate against regret.
This court only litigates fairness.
In this case, fairness to the cats.
Though I predict, as per the final lines of the song down by the Sally Gardens that you will conclude eventually
that you were young and foolish
and now are full of tears, Adrian,
I nonetheless find in your favor.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Adrian, the judge is found in your favor.
How do you feel?
I feel good.
I know that I might be full of tears at first, but I think it's for the best.
Do you think you'll ever be full of tears again?
Sure.
I mean, specifically with regard to the cats.
I should be clearer.
Obviously, tragedy happens to all of us, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
I wouldn't want to ask you to completely shut down your emotional life,
specifically with regard to the cats.
Yes, I think they will probably,
I'm sure they will give me lots of reasons to cry throughout my life david how do you feel about the judge's decision
not too surprised i i think this was always a bit of a long shot on uh on my part uh and that you
know i would have had to justify really uh making the cat's lives
difficult and adrian's life difficult uh so i guess i'd say i'm feeling pretty sanguine
um people in the 18th century didn't believe in the four humors by the way
no they definitely did one i'm 100 on that one they were way into humors
the bilious humor was their greatest concern
i'm not 100 sure what the bilious humor was their greatest concern.
I'm not 100% sure what the bilious humor is, by the way.
Adrian, David, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Another Judge John Hodgman case in the books.
Now, before we dispense some swift justice,
we want to thank Charles Lewis Richter
for naming this week's
episode, Across State Felines. If you'd like to name a future episode, be sure to like Judge John
Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions there. You can follow us on Twitter
at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman. Hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO. I always enjoy
seeing those. And if you want to chat about the case, you can do it on the MaxFun subreddit at MaximumFun.reddit.com.
This week's episode recorded by Steve Clark at WCVE Public Radio in Richmond, Virginia.
Our producer and recordist here in Los Angeles, Jennifer Marmer.
Now, Swift Justice, where we answer your small disputes with a quick judgment.
Matthew asks, can you save a street parking space after you have shoveled it clear of snow?
This has caused many arguments between my friend and me.
The answer, of course, is yes. You can save the street parking space after you've shoveled it
clear of snow using one specific method, leaving your car there.
I guarantee you very few people will take your space if your car is there.
If you leave your space, then ethically, reasonably, it is fair game for someone else to take it.
Now, I understand that in the city of Boston, Massachusetts,
my home Commonwealth in the region of New England, this is a contentious issue in particular,
particularly a couple of years ago when the city and the whole region was pummeled by snow and people would dig out their spaces and they were so exhausted from digging out their car
spaces that there was a violent expectation that no one would come and park in their space while they were away.
And I think by violent, I mean, if you did it, you might face the kind of justice that no podcast can touch, vigilante justice.
And I would say that if you are the one taking the space, you are doing so at the risk of at the very least wrath.
But so long as you are going in with your eyes open and an understanding of that risk, you are within your reasonable ethical, moral and legal bounds to park in that space.
I just wouldn't expect your car to be in good shape.
We'll probably end up with a cone full of snow through the windshield. But there you go. I don't think it's fair to reserve a space once you have vacated it, no matter what the meteorological conditions are.
Judge Hodgman, there is a street here in Los Angeles, right near our office, a few blocks from where I sit now, Alvarado Boulevard,
where residents of the small apartment buildings that abut the street will use chairs and particularly fruit crates to reserve parking spaces.
It is the only street in Los Angeles, or indeed in California, where I have
ever seen this practice practiced. And it leaves my jaw agape every time I drive past at its sheer
temerity. I know. But, you know, when you're in a neighborhood where that happens, whether it is
Alvarado Boulevard in Los Angeles or street name undisclosed in Boston. I can't think of one.
I mean, you would never take one of those spaces, would you, Jesse?
No, because I'd be afraid that someone would mess up my car.
Yeah. Basically, that's a signal that like the neighborhood is watching. And if you take a space
that is occupied by a fruit crate, then you have broken the neighborhood code. And even though that
is pure vigilantism, extra legal vigilantism,
I think their enforcement methods
are probably pretty sophisticated.
And while you would be within your legal rights
to take that space, I wouldn't risk your car.
By sophisticated, you mean that
they're not just throwing one punch,
they're throwing combos?
Exactly so.
XXY, XXY, up, down, left, up down left right two yeah that's what i meant
when i said combo we'll talk to you next time on the judge john hodgman podcast
but i was young and foolish now adrian is two three four the old gray mare she ain't what she Now Adrian is full of tears.
The old gray mare, she ain't what she used to be.
Ain't what she used to be.
Ain't what she used to be.
The old gray mare, she ain't what she used to be.
What's the last part?
And now the podcast is...
All in a bowl of blood.
Sure.
That's actually the plot of Jigoku, the famous Japanese new wave horror movie.
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