Judge John Hodgman - Amicus Beef
Episode Date: May 12, 2021Casey files suit against his friend, Sean. They go to baseball games together a lot. Casey says that Sean’s antics at the games cause great stress. One of the more appalling antics, says Casey, is t...he time Sean brought his own hot dogs into the stadium. Sean says that he is well within his rights to do this. Who's right? Who's wrong?Thank you to Marley Jay for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, follow Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions there.We are nearing the end the MaxFunDrive! The best time of year to show your support for what we do. Join us at MaximumFun.org/join!Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, it's your judge, John Hodgman.
As you know, or maybe you don't, it's MaxFunDrive, specifically the second and final week of
Hashtag MaxFunDrive.
These are the two weeks, this is the second one, in which we come to you and ask for your
support for the community of artist-owned, listener-supported podcasts that make up Maximum
Fun.
You know, membership support is so important for this show and all the shows on the Maximum Fun. Membership support is so important for this show and all
the shows on the Maximum Fun Network. And this is the best time to join if you're not already a
member or if you are a member to upgrade your membership to the next level or just boost your
membership by a dollar or two. All of it goes to get us closer to the goal of making Maximum Fun
a sustaining community of great podcasts for you. Now, we'll talk more about this later in the
show, but why not just get it out of the way now? Go to MaximumFun.org slash join. You'll feel
better. I'll feel better. MaximumFun.org slash join. Okay, now here's the show.
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. This week, amicus beef. Casey files suit
against his friend Sean. They go to baseball games together a lot. Casey says that Sean's antics at
the games cause him stress. One of the more appalling antics, says Casey, is the time Sean
brought his own hot dogs into the stadium. Sean says, bringing your own hot dogs is well within your rights.
Who's right?
Who's wrong?
Only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents an obscure cultural
reference.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast had a longstanding and valued relationship with the Dodgers.
a longstanding and valued relationship with the Dodgers.
After the 2019 season, the Judge John Hodgman podcast made the difficult business decision not to renew its contract with the Dodgers.
Unfortunately, through the latest contract negotiations,
we were unable to come to an agreement that was beneficial for both parties.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear the litigants in.
Casey, Sean, please rise the litigants in. Casey, Sean,
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 served as a historical consultant on Ken Burns' landmark documentary series, Baseball.
I do.
Yes, I do.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Yes, Jesse, that's right.
I was a paid expert on the baseball documentary.
You may remember the one episode that was devoted entirely to
my giving the oral history of the four baseball games I have seen in my life.
Three of them major league baseball games.
John, I think you are probably best known for having given Ken Burns that one Walt Whitman quote where he says,
In our sundown perambulations about Brooklyn of late, we have happened upon several games of base, a certain game of ball.
Yep, that was me.
I'm looking forward to baseball this summer.
The Portland Seadogs are back.
Jesse Thorne, Portland Mains, one of their, I don't know how many A's team.
I think that's a AAA team, John.
AAA team. Probably
training recruits for a Major League
Baseball team would be my guess. I don't know
which one. Seems fair to me.
I've been to a Cyclones game
out there in Coney Island. That was fun.
Those are fun games. Baseball's a fun
game to sit around and not
pay attention to. You know who the Cyclone's greatest star is?
No, who's the Cyclone's greatest star?
Grandpa Al Lewis, best known from his work on the Munsters.
Oh boy.
Yeah.
Also known for his work on Coney Island.
You can sit in the stands and watch the ocean waves and not watch the baseball.
That's the beauty of Brooklyn Cyclone Stadium.
I love baseball. That's the beauty of all baseball, John. You don't have to watch the baseball. That's the beauty of Brooklyn Cyclone Stadium. I love baseball.
That's the beauty of all baseball, John. You don't have to watch the baseball. That's what's
so great about it. It's calming and therapeutic. I'll tell you something. I just had lunch
with a person I cannot name because they are part of a scientific project
at a major university where for the past three years, they have been as a test subject going
through psychotherapy with a trained analyst, which is great, specifically under the influence
of clinically administered ketamine. And I was like, I'm in, I'm a grownup.
I know therapy is good intrinsically, but I can't seem to get myself
there. If you want to upsell me with a ketamine lodge lozenge, I'll be there. But now I feel like,
why is there not psychotherapy at baseball games where you go out to the baseball game with your
therapist and just talk the entire time. I found out recently, John, that our MaxFun colleague,
and it is MaxFun drive time,
so this is the kind of thing that your support is going to.
Our MaxFun colleague, Dave Holmes,
does therapy with his therapist,
and they're both on surfboards.
I think that there's a lot of different kinds of therapy
that I didn't know about.
In the ocean.
I want to be clear, in the ocean.
It's not just a weird office.
No, no, no.
Although it could be a tank.
Could be a pool.
I'm renting this from the folks at Hobie.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
We have a podcast to do.
Sean and Casey, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of your favors.
Can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I enter the courtroom?
I believe that is the...
Go ahead, Casey.
Oh, sorry.
Excuse me.
No, that's all right.
Look, you're familiar with the format because ahead, Casey. Oh, sorry. Excuse me. No, that's all right.
Look, you're familiar with the format because you are a Maximum Fun producer.
Is that not so?
That is correct.
You are a member of the family.
I am.
The community, which is the theme of this Max Fun Drive.
Yes.
And yet I am not recusing myself because why?
I can judge this fairly.
I'm an expert in baseball.
Casey,
what programs are you affiliated with in the maximum fun community?
Currently? I am the producer for the untitled iffy Drea and Alonzo project,
terrific as a movie podcast.
We're actually holding a naming contest currently to rename the show.
And you would say you are currently working on that show because you expect to be fired.
Those are the stakes, Casey.
If I find against you, you are fired.
Oh.
Sean.
Oh, wait a minute.
What was your guess, Casey?
Oh, I think that was the press release from Farmer John's Hot Dogs about breaking ties
with Dodger Stadium.
Okay.
Press release from Farmer John's Hot Dogs about breaking ties with Dodger Stadium because they supplied the hot dogs.
Yes.
That's your guess.
Sean, what is your guess?
Okay.
That was also my guess as well.
Oh, okay.
Same guess.
Doesn't happen often.
I wish I was called on first.
Now it seems like I'm copying Casey, but that is my guess.
Well, here's a question.
Here's a question for you, Sean.
Are you employed by Maximum Fun?
Do you work at Maximum Fun on any of their shows?
I have no affiliation with Maximum Fun.
This is the sound of a gavel.
I find in Casey's favor.
Wow. a gavel i find in casey's favor wow look i had a feeling you two baseball brains would know what i
was referring to that big news in the world of baseball food breaking shoes as our friends over
the doughboys would say in the past couple of weeks long-term supplier of hot dogs to dodger stadium for their famous
dodger dog farmer john is no longer supplying hot dogs they have not yet announced who will be
commissioned by the queen of hot dogs to supply the royal hot dogs to dodger stadium
but they are even though they haven't announced it they're still serving hot dogs to Dodger Stadium.
But even though they haven't announced it,
they're still serving hot dogs, I would imagine.
The good news, John, is that the legendary Dodger dogs of Dodger Stadium are exactly the same as all other hot dogs.
Slightly longer.
That's the big difference between Dodger dogs and non-Dodger dogs.
Let me say, I did a fair amount of Dodger dog research coming up because this case revolves around hot dogs at the baseball park.
I was struck by how long those dogs were.
I never knew that they were foot longs, right?
I think they're less than a foot long.
Maybe 10 inches would be my guess.
The point I'm making is we're in the midst of this interim hot dog period at Dodger Stadium.
I mean,
you knew that farmer John was supplying them before there is a supplier yet
to be announced,
but right now there's enough mystery in a hotdog to begin with.
You don't need to have some questions about his provenance.
We don't need to,
we don't need to be worried about what farmer will be bringing them to the
stadium.
Even though you both technically guessed correctly
in that you referred to the subject
that I was referring to,
neither of you guessed
the Los Angeles Times,
April 26, 2021 article
entitled,
Say It Ain't So, Vin Farmer, John Dodger,
Dogs Are No More,
filed by Bill Shakin at 4 a.m. Pacific time.
That is the only answer I would have accepted.
And by the way, Farmer John is owned by Smithfield.
So technically it was a Smithfield press release.
So I gotcha, sporties.
Now I gotta hear this case.
Casey, you seek justice here in this court before me.
What is the nature of your complaint?
So Sean and I are good friends and we go to
Wait, can I just say? Yes. I can
attest to that because as usual
when recording a podcast, the best stuff happens
before we hit record.
There was a ton of
incredibly friendly, intimate banter
about what is it called? The dash
egg cooker? Yes. Before we
got into this and I tried to get you,
I said, save it for the air, you guys.
This will prove that you are friends.
Your friendly banter about the Dash Egg Cooker.
But did you save it for the air?
No, you ignored me,
and you just kept talking about that egg cooker.
And then Jesse came in,
having just used the same egg cooker,
and the three of you had friendly banter,
and where was I? Left out. So, I don't even know what this egg cooker. And the three of you had friendly banter. And where was I?
Left out.
So I don't even know what this egg cooker is.
You got to get one of these cookers.
Okay.
You're good friends.
You love eggs.
What else?
Yes.
Well, I will just say that Sean actually gave me that Dash egg cooker as a gift.
I see.
That's how I first came in contact with the Dash egg cooker.
So Sean and I are good friends.
Right. And we go to baseball games together frequently.
I've probably gone to more baseball games with Sean than any other human.
And he frequently has little antics he likes to pull when we go to the Dodgers games that make me incredibly uncomfortable.
Little antics.
Little antics. Little antics. Major antics. The most troubling one was when he brought in his own
hot dogs from Costco instead of purchasing the Dodger dogs. Wait, which Costco? The Las Feliz
Costco? There's actually a little bit of a disagreement. My memory is of bringing the hot dogs in, preparing them at home, bringing them into a thermos in the car, and then transferring them into buns and then bringing them into the park.
You brought a thermos full of hot dogs?
Yes.
That was my favorite Spin Doctors album, by the way.
There is video evidence of this as well this is captured on video we shall
get to the evidence casey okay okay the question is on the table did the hot dogs originate at
costco and was it the los feliz costco because apparently this is a local los angeles podcast
where i have no place there is a costco approximately 15 to 20 minutes drive from Dodger Stadium. I pondered the
notion of stopping by that Costco to procure the dogs. But at that point, it seemed like too much
work. It was easier for me just to make the dogs at home and bring them in. Where were the dogs
from? It's the Hebrew National brand from the supermarket. All beef kosher hot dogs.
Yes. By the way, Sean, when I eat a hot dog, Hebrew National, it's the best. Nice. We're in
agreement. Really, really good hot dog. I don't know if it's any farmer, John. I don't know if
I've ever had a Dodger dog. All right. So you did send in some video evidence. Let's take a look at that.
This will be posted on the Judge John Hodgman page at MaximumFun.org.
Jennifer Marmer, would you please share your screen and share the video with us here in the virtual courtroom?
What's happening right now?
I'm getting the dogs out from their temperature-controlled thermos. And where did you get the hot dogs? I'm sealing the surface, the thermos. And where did you get the hot dogs?
Unsealing the surface, the thermos.
And where did you get the hot dogs?
They're Hebrew Nationals,
which actually tastes better than Dodger dogs.
People don't know.
They're still hot.
Ooh, they're hot to the touch.
Feel? Touch?
Oh my god, these are fresh.
And they're log fat.
He's wrapping them in foil.
What?
So, if anyone out there is imagining a system that makes sense,
I want to disabuse them of that idea
what sean is holding is a commuter mug full of hot dogs but we're talking about just bear cooked
dogs which he is fishing out with chopsticks and putting into a piece of foil that he brought
then turning that into a sort of dog brick, which I presume he stuffs in his pants, spinal tap style, to sneak into the stadium.
You got really focused on the thermos there, Sean.
Was that you who shot the video, Casey?
No, that was my friend Patrick Mallon who shot that video and narrated it.
The focus on the thermos was taking everyone's attention away from the fact that you were using chopsticks to root hot dogs out of it.
And then this is one of these answers that only pose more questions.
What happens after you put the hot dogs in the foil?
Well, Dodger Stadium actually allows outside food into the park as well as sealed water bottles.
Outside of that, obviously bringing in alcohol or things like that is not allowed.
Right.
You're well within your rights per stadium policy to bring in outside food.
Really?
Any food at all?
Even the weirdest foil-wrapped hot dog?
Yes. food. Really? Any food at all? Even the weirdest foil-wrapped hot dog? Yes, and that's actually
a tradition from some local
Italian delis, people bringing in
subs, and I've seen people
bring pizza into the park as well.
Are we talking here, Sean, about
Eastside Italian Deli? That's the one.
Oh, boy. Local news
with Jesse Thorne and these
guys.
Favorite hot spots of Los Angeles.
Oh, I really can't wait to get back.
I'm just jealous because I'd love to be there in Los Angeles and go to a baseball game with you, Jesse.
That would be so much fun.
Let's go.
Let's hit up Eastside Italian Deli.
Get some sandwiches with some firemen.
Now they know some of the tricks of the trade.
I could get a sub sandwich.
Oh, even better than this.
I could get a hot dog, hollow it out, and pour a gin martini in there.
Put a little, top it off.
Plug it.
Plug it with the plug.
Sammy Sosa style.
Mm-hmm.
And then none's the wiser.
I got myself a gin dog.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, Sean, you answered a question but evaded the one that I asked.
Are you eating these things bunless?
You just walking in with this foil packet of dogs and then just snacking on them with
your fingies once you get in?
Sure.
Well, the whole system was designed to make sure that the dog would be as hot as possible
when I was enjoying it in the stadium.
So it came straight out of the insulated thermos with hot water using chopsticks
for sanitary reasons naturally and then wrapping them up in foil and then when i got into the
stadium i would transfer the warm dogs into the bun and uh it was a nice nice way of enjoying a
hot hot dog where was the bun the bun was was in a bag uh separate were you steaming it
in a dash egg egg cooker that you had that you were charging off a solar panel i imagine sean
with all the buns underneath a 10 gallon hat
howdy on his right hand inside my trench coat that's where i store the the buns so you're also bringing in your own buns
are you bringing in your own condiments i do not bring in my own condiments you just ate them bare
you ate these dogs bare well this is where my case is on a little bit shaky footing and i might
have to throw myself on the mercy of the court not Oh, this is! Not the part where you're fishing hot dogs
out of a thermos with some chopsticks.
I have, on occasion,
procured condiments from
the condiment section
of the stadium.
And you are concerned that I
will deem that to be theft.
Yes.
I see.
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.
Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join.
And you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. And you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast
is also brought to you this week
by our pals over at Made In.
Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio,
the famous chef, right?
Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
And did you know that most of the dishes
at that very same restaurant are made with made-in pots and pans?
Really?
What's an example?
The braised short ribs.
They're made-in, made-in.
The Rohan duck.
Made-in, made-in.
Riders of Rohan.
Duck.
What about the Heritage Pork Shop?
You got it.
Made-in, made-in.
Made-in has been supplying
top chefs and restaurants
with high-end cookware
for years.
They make the stuff
that chefs need.
Their carbon steel cookware
is the best of cast iron,
the best of stainless clad.
It gets super hot.
It's rugged enough for grills
or an open flame.
One of the most useful pans
you can own.
And like we said, good enough for
real professional chefs, the best professional chefs. Oh, so I have to go all the way down to
the restaurant district in restaurant town? Just buy it online. This is professional grade
cookware that is available online directly to you, the consumer, at a very reasonable price.
Yeah. If you want to take your cooking to the next level,
remember what so many great dishes on menus all around the world have in common.
They're made in Made In.
Save up to 25% this Memorial Day from the 18th until the 27th.
Visit madeincookware.com.
That's M-A-D-E-I-N cook, dot com. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought
to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel. Did you know that learning,
the experience of learning causes a sound to happen? Let's hear the sound.
Yep. That's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel. We're talking about quick 10-minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that can help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks.
Let's hear that sound.
Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations, and delivered with conversation-based teaching.
So you're ready to practice what you've learned in the real world, and you get to hear this sound. It's not just like a game that pretends
to teach you a language. It's also not a rigid, weird, hyper-academic chore. It is an actually
productive app that actually teaches you while you are actually having a nice time.
And you get to hear this sound.
Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners right now.
Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription,
but only for our listeners at babbel.com slash Hodgman.
Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman,
spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman.
Rules and restrictions apply.
What else does Sean get up to besides this?
Is this the one thing?
This was the most egregious thing,
but there have been other incidents.
Sean was under the notion for a while
that you could just walk down to the lower level
without a ticket
because there was a special type of foamy Kirin beer being served down there that
Sean wanted to procure. And Sean was like, oh, you can go down to the lower level. It's Dodger
policy. They let you down to the lower levels. And I said, no, they don't. No stadium has such
a policy. You have to have a ticket to go to the nicer levels.
So he tries to walk down the steps to go to the lower level,
and the attendant says... Get that foamy Kirin beer.
Want that foamy Kirin beer.
Hey, sports fans, you like foamy Kirin beer?
Go on over to Dodger Stadium and pop one open.
Eastern most in quality, western most in foaminess.
Sean, why not pour that foamy beer into a nice cold thermos?
Well, let me say in defense of the beer, the top is a frozen slushy of beer.
And it's the only place in the continental United States where you can buy that.
That's a statement in offensive beer.
Anyway, she says you need to have a ticket down there.
And I didn't want to go with Sean on his little adventure anyway,
but I was with Sean.
You're a good boy.
And then I'm a good boy.
I'm a rule follower.
And Sean goes, oh, my dad has my ticket, which was a lie.
And I was annoyed because I thought, Sean, you should have included me in the lie.
Now I have to come up with my own unique lie
and I don't even want to be in this situation anyway.
And basically, she blocks Sean from going down
to the lower level and Sean is mad
because, quote unquote, they changed Dodger policy,
which was never a policy.
I don't know where he came up with that.
And then the next time we go to a Dodger game,
Sean solved this problem by not buying
a more expensive ticket,
but by photoshopping a
ticket so he could
get down to the lower level to get
his foamy Kirin beer. All for that
foamy Kirin beer.
I tell you folks, people do a lot
of things for that foamy Kirin beer.
And Casey Keys saying
foamy Kirin, it's a frozen slushy
top Kirin. It's a frozen slushy top Kirin.
It's a one-of-a-kind beer.
You can only get it in Dodger Stadium or in Japan.
It's a very rare beer.
Hey there, folks.
John Hodgman here for foamy Kirin beer.
Tired of enjoying unspoiled beer?
Well, guess what?
On the lower level, you can get yourself some beer slushy.
And all you need is a forge ticket that's right people are doing
all kinds of crazy things to get that taste of that wild taste of that foamy kieran beer
eastern most in quality western most in theft just remember byot bring your own thermos
i have to applaud your leveling up of your game sean though i am myself a rule follower
and a good boy and ashamed of your bad boy antics
photoshopping a fake ticket is better than saying uh my dad has my ticket
because as far as i can tell you're not 12.
like it's very possible you're a young man.
It's very possible you could go to the game with your daddy.
But then you'll be like, daddy's holding my tickets,
and I just, can you just let me down?
My daddy has the tickets, and I want some of that foamy beer.
He went straight to counterfeiting,
a premeditated act of deception and forgery, all for a little bit of foamy kirin beer
he said in the voice of francis mcdormand oscar winner from the movie fargo okay sean how do you
defend these antics well in my defense i look at dodger stadium and many sports stadiums as reverse Titanic's in that the lower level and lower class people are placed at the top of the stadium and essentially segregated from the upper class people.
And the food options at the lower level.
Hold on.
Hold on, Sean.
To be clear, you don't see them as reverse Titanic's in that they spring
fully formed from icebergs. Correct. I see them in the sense of a reverse class system
where the upper levels have worse food and beverage options. And the lower down you go,
there's more premium private restaurants and food and beverage options. And the lower down you go, there's more premium private restaurants and food
and beverage options. And then when you get down to the lowest level, it's all you can eat. And
there's a whole buffet and there's prime rib and all kinds of crazy stuff down there.
Setting aside the moral question of this inequality, it is not a reverse class system.
It's a class system.
this inequality. It is not a reverse class system. It's a class system.
Right. I just mean on the Titanic, the upper class, the altitude is totally reversed.
Yeah. I think Sean is absolutely correct in this assertion. Having gone to a baseball game with my baseball friend, Dimitri, who works for a law firm that represents the Dodgers. I have not only sat in the fourth
row or something, but eaten at the buffet that Sean describes. There is a special room that only
people who are friends with someone who works for a law firm that represents the Dodgers can go into
and you can eat anything in there. The furniture included. It's like a Ross that's going out of business.
Yes, it's the dugout club.
And I've stayed there also as the guest of lawyers.
And it's quite stark, the difference being from the upper deck where Casey and I usually sit and going down into the belly of the beast.
It's very shocking.
So I'm trying to understand, is it that
you believe this class system should be abolished? It is morally wrong and therefore it is
morally right for you to try to foil it at every turn? Or is it that you've tasted that sweet
medallion status of that dugout lounge and you just can't help yourself. You've got to get back even at the
cost of your own soul. Right. I think it's because I've reached the medallion status. So I have to
try to claw my way back down into those levels. And also if I'm not stealing somebody's seat,
I'm just going down for some food and beverage. I don't see why I should be penalized for that when the point of the rules
is to keep the upper people from coming down to steal seats. You're going to claw your way down
and you don't care whose backs you have to reverse stand on. Casey, you've heard Sean's defense.
To be fair, this is his experience in the ballpark. If he's going to get thrown in baseball jail for making up a ghost daddy who's holding his secret good ticket or making up a ticket, which he could probably get some kind of actual trouble for.
Not even get ejected from the park.
You're just living your upper deck life yourself.
What do you care? How does it,
why does this bother you so much? And in what form does this bother take?
Well, like I said, I am a rule follower. And so, you know, just by being with him,
I feel like I am breaking the rules and it's causing me discomfort and you are correct. It is
his life to lead. And I'm not asking him to change any of his other bizarre behaviors, which are plenty.
And I but I just at the Dodger Stadium when I'm with him in a more intimate, you know, capacity because I'm weird to get going together.
All right. It makes you uncomfortable. It makes you anxious.
What are his other behaviors that you're talking about?
It makes you uncomfortable.
It makes you anxious.
What are his other behaviors that you're talking about?
If I understand correctly, if I rule in your favor, you want me to ban Sean antics within Dodger Stadium.
But the Sean antics that exist outside Dodger Stadium that you will allow include what?
You're exactly right.
I only want the ruling to come down on his antics at Dodger Stadium because...
Please use the term Sean antics.
Sean antics, excuse me.
Thank you.
To remove the Sean antics from Sean
would be to remove Sean from Sean.
You can't take the Sean antics out of the Sean.
Yeah, you cannot.
Right.
You know, we can put them at bay at Dodger Stadium.
What are some of the other Sean antics
that Sean has gotten up to?
He doesn't explicitly break the rules,
but he pushes
the boundaries.
So, you know, Sean
was all over the GameStop
thing recently.
Sean was buying shares in GameStop, running up
the price, trying to cause
those hedge fund jerks to lose their money.
Yes. And then Sean
is also the only person I know that
you know how the Monopoly game at McDonald's?
Oh, yeah.
How they say no purchase necessary to get the Monopoly pieces?
You're telling me Sean's one of these guys who say, I'll be having a Monopoly piece and I believe no purchase is necessary.
Yes.
Right.
There's other things I could probably bring up, but that's the kind of way he lives his life. And I appreciate
that about him. I believe his brothers call him shady Sean. Uh, and, uh, but I, and I love that
about Sean. What is it? Oh, excuse me. The only thing that really makes me so anxious is when
we're at Dodger stadium together. So Sean, when you hear that,
how do you feel to hear that your friend is feeling anxious and upset by your Sean antics?
I mean, it really hurts me. I don't want to cause Casey any anguish or anxiety,
and I'm happy to go down to the lower levels by myself if need be, I sort of asked him as an offer if he'd like to come. I wasn't
begging for his company. So I'm happy to explore the park on my own. I'm a big boy.
You're a big boy whose daddy has his ticket.
And yeah, I mean, I think Casey, like he's saying, he's very much a rule follower and,
and it's by the book and I'm looking for, for loopholes. And I also like finding rules that
don't make sense and that are, that are meant to be broken. And I feel, I feel kind of sorry
for Casey too, sometimes when he's just so anxious and worried about what other people think of him all
the time. I just don't really care too much about what other people think about me. And I just think
people aren't really focused on ourselves as we are in our own heads all the time. And so I think
that that could be a useful perspective for Casey to help alleviate some of his anxiety.
Casey, is there, I mean, do you take anything from that?
Do you feel that maybe you are too concerned about what people are thinking?
Are you afraid about what your fellow upper deckies are going to think of you because you know Shifty Sean and hang with him?
know Shifty Sean and hang with him?
I'm just concerned that I'm going to get into some sort of confrontation,
which Sean doesn't seem,
it doesn't seem to phase Sean in the same way that it phases me.
But why would you be involved in the confrontation?
Just because you're near him or you don't want to be the,
you don't want to be in a situation where you have to go like,
I don't know that guy.
I came with my own daddy.
I don't know that guy at all.
Our daddies left us here together because they went off to go get some drink vodka out of a hot dog.
I guess I don't want to have to be put in that situation where I'm like, officer, I don't know this man. But just being next to Sean, I feel like I am getting pulled into some of these, these situations.
I feel you because as folks who are listening, no, we now have a virtual courtroom where I can
see everyone. And you know what? I'm just going to screenshot this right now so that we can refer
to this. Okay. This will be posted on the show page, maximumfund.org of course because we have we
have here casey who is truly the picture of a a young john hodgman just a nice good boy are you
an only child casey no i have two younger brothers okay oh so you're extra responsible
i got you who are your brothers, Shifty Sean?
I have two older and one younger, so I'm sort of a middle child.
Oh, boy, did this all fall into place.
You're a twin middle child, right?
Yes.
Sean, you're lost in the mix.
You've been an agent of chaos since the moment you were born trying to get attention and what i was going to say when i was going to post this is like i can understand young young john hodgman but casey you're a whole
person in your own right you're not a reflection of me i've i've been through my through my
psychotherapy and ketamine i've learned that other humans are not a reflection of me thank you but
like i i feel you and i can feel the chaos energy that is emanating from sean
through the internet like he's sitting there in a black t-shirt with his black beard in front in
front of a weird gray maybe brooklyn and sheet i don't know and he's just kind of weaving his
shoulders around the entire time like it's always constantly moving around and,
and you know,
standing next to Sean,
you're like,
you don't know what's going to happen.
You don't where this kid's going to go.
You don't move,
John.
You can't see all the angles.
I know.
I feel like it's exactly right.
I feel like Sean is looking for the angles at all times.
How am I going to sneak into that room?
How can I get past that barrier?
How can I break this rule?
How can I get that foamy Kieran beer? I can see why you feel a little unnerved also i'm i'm very tall i'm six
foot six inches i'm very short and i believe how tall are you casey five nine i'm five seven sean
that's very kind of you and you're and you're five seven well let's look at you two mutton jeff
Look at you two mutton, Jeff.
Those are cartoon characters.
Casey, I have a question about your experience at the ballpark with Sean.
I grew up going to baseball games at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, where it was cold and miserable,
and there were about 11,000 people in a 45,000-seat stadium.
You went to games in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis, I'm sure, where outside of those years when the twins were really great, it was
probably a pretty similar situation, only with more plastic bags lining the outfield walls.
Dodger Stadium is very full, almost all the time. And so enforcement of going to different levels is pretty active. If this were a situation more like the Metrodome when you were a kid, and when you and Sean wandered down to the lower level, no one stopped you, would you feel the same way? Is it the rule breaking or the embarrassment of being caught?
Is it the rule breaking or the embarrassment of being caught?
I think it is both because in my mind, if there is no one there to stop you, that is the stadium's way of saying we don't really care if you go down to the lower levels.
But at Dodger Stadium, a woman's job is to stop Sean from getting the foamy Kirin beer.
And so in my mind, Dodger Stadium is saying we do care about this.
And also, I am not a man of confrontation, except with Sean.
But that's another issue.
So I would say it's both rule following and the confrontation.
I have a question. Is it possible, baseball fans, that the Dodgers Stadium could have once been a place where they didn't care about people
going down to the lower decks? Is Sean's memory of a policy totally fictive? Yes, you used to be
able to move around the park at your whim. The thing to remember about Dodger Stadium too is
it's built in Chavez Ravine. And so it sort of has a dark history of evicting a lot of Mexican American
families there. They stole a lot of the land and paid undervalue through eminent domain.
And instead of building the promised public housing, they ended up giving it to the Brooklyn
Dodgers to help get them to move into LA. So your plan is to get a foamy Kirin beer and donate it to displaced persons and their
families as reparations?
Sean, it's Max Fun Drive time.
And I'm grateful that you took the time to plug my bullseye interview with Eric Nussbaum,
the author of Stealing Home, Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and The Lives Caught in Between. You can find it on NPR.org or MaximumFun.org or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Go ahead, Judge Hodgman.
Your plan for that foamy Kirin beer is to get it and to give it to the families of the displaced communities
as a kind of reparations or as your plan to drink that delicious,
undeniable taste of foamy Kirin beer served only on the lower decks
to the best people eastern most in quality western most in exclusivity well known to jesse's friend
dimitri not necessarily i'm saying that a system that's built with such arbitrary and classist rules isn't necessarily a system that
you should be afraid about trying to circumvent or work around or be embarrassed or anxious about
having a minor interaction with a security guard over. All right. You're saying the whole system
is effed and therefore it's okay to sneak a beer. Exactly.
All right.
There's something to that, I got to say, Casey.
That has nothing to do with sneaking hot dogs into Dodgers Stadium.
Oh, right.
Sean, I'm about to go into my Skybox chambers and enjoy some foamy Kirin beer and come to my verdict.
Bringing it back to hot dogs. You would like me
to rule in your favor. And if so, sentence Casey to make his own hot dogs and bring them into the
park and eat them with Sean. Is that what you want me to do? Not just to leave you alone. He's got to
proactively bring in his own wiener thermos. Well, Casey clearly has a lot of anxiety and trauma over bending the rules. So I think it
would be a really natural way for him to help confront his fears and grow. Okay. I think I've
heard enough in order to make my decision. I'm going to go into my skybox and get myself some
pigs and blankets and some cheese cubes from the silver trays and sit in my recliner seat
and listen to the game as I formulate
my verdict. I'll be back in a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Sean, how are you feeling about
your chances in the case? I'm really alarmed. I was really alarmed when the judge referred to Casey as a younger version of himself.
That really put me on shaky grounds.
How are you feeling, Casey?
I feel pretty good, like Sean said.
The judge referred to me as a younger version of himself, which was very kind.
I wasn't sure how this was going to go, honestly, because I've told this case to many
people and it's been pretty 50-50. Have they seen the video though? 50-50 when you describe it,
but when you show a grown man trying to fish hot dogs out of a commuter mug with some chopsticks
so he can drop them into some foil he had in his pocket. Yeah, this is usually just when I'm verbally telling the story.
I haven't shown the people the video.
But yeah, I feel pretty good.
Sean, it looked like you drove to Dodger Stadium.
If you're such a wonderful schemer,
how come you didn't take the gold line to Chinatown and walk up the hill?
I should have.
I have done research on that, and it is part of my
future schemes. I just, I don't think I could ever get Casey to go along with that one. Yeah,
Casey's very lazy. As his employer, I can confirm that. Okay. I would go along with that, Sean.
I like public transportation. It's just sort of hard to tell with casey you never know what's really going to trigger him and and set him off sometimes i'm i'm even embarrassed to to propose new new
ideas this guy's a powder keg there's no doubt about it i've known casey for 15 years and there's
no question that at any moment he could explode he's been holding it inside this whole time making
documentary films about pie and at at any moment, he might lash
out, Sean. I don't think you're wrong about that. We'll see what the judge has to say about all this
when we come back in just a moment.
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.
you have no choice but to embrace because yes,
listening is mandatory.
The JV club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on maximum fun or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S T O P P O D C A S T I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there? Yeah'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-p-a-d-i it'll never fit no it will let me try if you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
First of all, Casey, I'm flattered that you would take my labeling you
as akin to a young John Hodgman as a compliment.
For even as I meant it as such, I also knew that saying it is actually something of a curse.
You don't want this. You don't want this. You don't want this.
You don't want to be young John Hodgman.
You want to be Casey, last name withheld.
No, O'Brien, I'll say it.
Probably you're on the website, maximumfund.org.
I am.
You want to be yourself.
And in one way, you are not me at all, in a very important way, right?
Which is that you are the eldest of three kids
whereas sean is the second youngest of four and while i am no expert in siblings because i have
none never needed him that's what i said to my mom and dad seems unnecessary one and done that's
how i feel this should be this family i do know enough through observation and talking and extended
family to know that and i don't want to generalize but you know older children tend to be the
responsible ones and tend to be kind of a surrogate parents to their younger kids that was definitely
the case in my father's growing up who was the oldest of three whereas younger children and especially middle children especially the second youngest where
you have two middle children who are fighting it out for most middle-est to paraphrase my brother
my brother and me you know that's a very different personality trait. That is someone who is like, yeah, my world is pure chaos.
Why should I not be part of the chaos?
Which is how Sean strides into Dodger Stadium.
Armed with a certain amount of cultural critical sophistication.
sophistication. That this whole system known as Dodger Stadium is built on lies, material inequality, a formalized class system, the dispossession of marginal communities, and
much like the United States itself, should be burned to the ground. Or at least I should get
a free beer. I mean, John, as a Giants fan, I would argue
that there is no greater foundational evil than simply building a stadium in which the Dodgers
play. I'm just going to say that, you know, Sean, your cultural critique is astute, but is it a moral basis for what you are doing my instinct is that you are applying it to
get out of trouble that as it may you are built to create chaos you seek it out you exploit chaos
where you can and i can tell you that as a younger and not even much younger John Hodgman, but as a throughout my years of being John Hodgman, I have found spiritual older brothers like you, Sean.
go to the baseball game with who were much less rule followy than me and who would do things like get away with stuff just because they could or would challenge my automatic acceptance
of rules that are arbitrary or unfair or purposefully exclusionary so i've stood next
to those tall shans casey and i've lived that danger. I understand the attraction and I also understand the benefit because it has caused me to challenge some of my instinctive shying away from confrontation.
It has caused me to be a little bit, a little bit bolder.
And if I'm going to follow the rule rule i think about it first before just automatically
doing it i'm not saying that you're an automatic rule follower casey i'm saying i know where you're
coming from and you are getting something out of this relationship i'm not going to order you to
stop being friends so i think that when sean says that you you know you might you might gain
something from his Sean antics.
You can explore for yourself, whether you think that there is truth there or not.
But I can say for myself,
I've,
I've engaged in Sean antics before and I,
I wouldn't change that part of my growing up,
but Sean,
you know,
we're here psychotherapizing Casey.
I think you have some blind spots that you haven't examined.
Mostly that you're six foot six.
Yeah.
You may or may not be aware of this privilege, but you can get away with a lot of stuff at 6'6".
You can break a lot of rules at 6'6".
You just walk through the world in a different way
than Casey does at 5'7".
I shrunk, by the way, last doctor's appointment.
I lost an inch.
5'9", now.
I can't be...
It's a
different thing when you, when you stride the earth, like a demented God, like looking to
sow chaos and get that rich foamy beard. I think you should be considerate of that. You know,
how old are you, Sean? I'm 32. Yeah. You're 32. You're a grown man. You're not a kid.
I'm 32.
Yeah, you're 32.
You're a grown man.
You're not a kid.
Your daddy doesn't have your ticket.
You have your ticket.
You're not yet at, but kind of right on the bubble of an age when Sean Antics, it's time to put childish Sean Antics behind you because all the points have been proved.
The world does not need you to get a free beer that you haven't paid for in order to understand that capitalism sucks.
Like, you know, ultimately you're a human being and sharing space with another human being.
That's what we're all trying to get back to through this pandemic experience, the chance to be in the same space with human beings and share their air and everything else. And I will say that Casey put his finger on something that perhaps you haven't examined,
which is that the person who is guarding the gate to that lower level, they didn't come up with this system. They're doing their job and they are, you know, mostly just kind of brushing back
people who get lost or trying to con a beer or whatever it is. But, you know, their job is to
hold that line, right or wrong. And a six foot two guy coming up and obviously lying about his
daddy having his ticket, that's a flag for them. That makes their day harder. It doesn't make
their day easier in any case. And on a basic level, you're a participant in the system to begin with because i presume you're not
sneaking into the ballpark you were paying for the ticket you could pay that's the that's the
secret of medallion status it's it's bogus all you do is pay for it it's not given to you by god
or whatever so this is uh what we call in the sport of baseball a split decision sort of
casey i know feels anxious and i think you is made anxious by your shenanctics and i think
you should hear him ultimately sean i'm going to rule in your favor however with the provisos I've already given you
to do some reflection upon
why you are able to break rules
and how those breaking of rules may affect
other human beings directly like the people
that you are swindling with a fake ticket but
you are an independent human being who can
go and try out any shenanigans he wants
and is willing presumably to accept the consequences i mean i i don't know what
would happen if you were caught with an obviously forged ticket you might be kicked out of the game
poor casey would be up there in the upper decks never knowing if he's ever going to see his friend
again and the other thing that i would order so I can't find in your favor because Casey doesn't really have standing aside from his own feelings.
Which is rough, you know, Casey, but that's that's baseball.
You know what I mean?
That's baseball.
But Sean cannot be putting those hot dogs in that thermos anymore.
That's just a that's just a crime against hot dog entity.
Like hot dogs as a food do not require a lot of respect.
But you as a human deserve some self-respect.
I think bringing in your own hot dog, since it is allowed, I mean, why not do it?
But I think that there's a, as a someone who is moving from the young rebellious portion of your life and eventually maturing into the older weird dad, I got to come up with a new system portion of your life.
Start thinking about a better way to keep those hot dogs warm that do not require transfer from a thermos to tinfoil.
There's a lot of insulated packaging that is available now.
You can keep that heat right in there.
You can get those hot dogs really hot,
put them in tinfoil, put it... I don't think you need to put them in...
keep them in hot water
because there's nothing grosser than that.
And I challenge you to come up
with a bun steaming mechanism.
And yes,
not only do I order in your favor because you are a free and independent agent of chaos
but also when you have perfected if and only when you have perfected your new hot dog into dodger
stadium system then you and casey will have those hot dogs together in the upper decks
where people like you belong.
This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Sean, how are you feeling about this split decision?
I'm really elated. I felt like the judge really ruled in my favor in order to keep on
bringing hot dogs into the stadium.
I just have to come up with a less obtrusive system than the thermos one.
And I'm also going to reflect more on my tall privilege and also how my actions can cause Casey stress when he's along with the ride for me.
stress when he's along with the ride for me. I mean, I'm not here to tell you how to bring hot dogs into Dodger Stadium, but I'll go ahead and tell you how to bring hot dogs into Dodger
Stadium. 10-gallon hat. I mean, the answer is right there in front of you or right there on
top of your head. Casey, how are you feeling about this decision? I feel okay. I'm glad I don't have to bring in my own hot dogs
with some strange thermos contraption set up,
so that makes me happy,
but I'm also disturbed that
if Sean brings hot dogs in his pockets or something
that I'm going to have to eat those in Dodgers Stadium.
That's an unsettling thing to think about as well.
So I feel okay,
and I feel seen by the judge.
I'm not going to make you eat pocket dogs, Casey. You will have to sign off on the scheme.
And I would like to be kept in the loop. As soon as the MaxFun office reopens,
we're having pocket dog day. Everybody brings hot dogs to the office in their pockets.
day. Everybody brings hot dogs to the office in their pockets. Casey, Sean, thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. This is it, the end of the MaxFunDrive, our very final pitch.
Thanks to everybody who's become a member at MaximumFun.org slash join. If you haven't yet,
it's quick, it's easy. We're grateful for all your support of every kind. And like I said,
we promise it won't be until next year that we ask you again. But seriously, on my behalf,
please make John and Elliot make that podcast. Go to MaximumFun.org slash join.
Another Judge John Hodgman case in the books. Thanks to everybody who's become a member of Maximum Fun by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. In That's where we put out our calls for submissions.
You can follow John and I on Twitter, at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman. Please do not tweet us
corrections about the fact that I should have said John and me. I realize it. Can I just leave
it in my drafts then? Yes, please. Just leave it in your drafts. Hashtag JJHO and check out the MaxFun subreddit to discuss this episode.
That's at MaximumFun.reddit.com.
We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
John is personally on Instagram at John Hodgman.
I am at put.this.on.
Make sure to follow that Judge John Hodgman account for evidence and other fun stuff.
Our producer is the brilliant Jennifer Marmer.
Now, swift justice, where we answer your small disputes with quick judgment.
Lauren says, instead of replacing dirty placemats, my husband turns them over and uses, quote, the B-side, unquote.
He needs to stop this and just replace the dirty placemat with a clean one. I don't have a problem with what Lauren's husband is doing, unquote. He needs to stop this and just replace the dirty placemat with a clean one.
I don't have a problem with what Lauren's husband is doing, Jesse.
I think it's perfectly reasonable if the placemat isn't that dirty, you can flip it over. I don't
care. All I care is that they don't have placemats that look like 45 RPM record albums
of hits of the 50s, and one of them is the A side and the other is the B side.
Then I would be like, get me out of this retro diner.
That's it for this week's episode. Submit your cases at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO,
or email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org. No case is too small. And remember, it's MaxFunDrive time.
fun.org. No case is too small. And remember, it's MaxFunDrive time. Visit maximumfun.org slash join to become a member of Maximum Fun. We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John
Hodgman Podcast. MaximumFun.org. Comedy and culture. Artist owned. Audience supported.