Judge John Hodgman - Beyond a Reasonable Bout
Episode Date: April 11, 2018MaxFunDrive is still happening! Become a member today and support the production of Judge John Hodgman every week. This show could not exist without your support! Visit maximumfun.org/donate to contr...ibute and to check out what kind of sweet thank you gifts you can receive! This week on Judge John Hodgman, Brandon files suit against his wife, Marie. A few months ago, Brandon won his first and only amateur boxing match. He’s starting to get the itch to compete again but Marie is opposed! Who’s right? Who’s wrong? Thank you to Ryan Stratton 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.
Transcript
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, beyond a reasonable bout, Brandon brings the case against his wife Marie.
A few months ago, Brandon won his first and thus far only amateur boxing match.
He's starting to get the itch to compete again, but Marie is against it.
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.
Many fighters choose to listen to music before a fight. It gets them pumped up. Me,
I choose to listen to your podcast. I find it properly enraging.
So thank you.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Brandon and Marie, 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?
Yes.
Yes.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact that he's obviously biased as a screen boxing legend known for his fisticuffs in the hit television program Bored to Death?
Yes.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Brandon Murray, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment. judgment in one of yours favors can either of you name the piece of culture that i referenced as i entered this fake virtual internet courtroom well what do we say uh we start with uh marie
what's your guess i don't know the movie rocky the movie rocky is definitely a piece of culture
on the subject of boxing that That was the original tagline
for Rocky, I believe.
Oscar nominated, by the way.
I mean, Oscar winning.
Did it win Best Picture, Jesse?
I believe it did.
And also, I hope you're not about
to say something bad about Rocky.
No, I'm not saying anything bad about Rocky.
Okay, good, because Rocky is awesome.
I also love the movie Creed,
wherein
I cried while they were doing
the training montage.
And I like the movie
Rocky Balboa. So there.
Well, after,
what is it, almost seven,
more than seven years of doing this podcast,
I'm still learning things about you, friend. I had
no idea you had this fondness
for the expanded Rocky universe.
Yeah, I don't think that I would like
any of the other Rocky movies if I watched them now,
even though one of them has Mr. T.
All right, Brandon, I put Rocky in for Marie
into the guest book.
Now it's time for me to laser etch
your guess or guesses
into the golden plates that are the pages of this guest book.
Very heavy book.
I'm going to go ahead and I've never read it.
I've seen the movie, but I'm going to say Fight Club, the novel, not the movie for that one.
Fight Club, the book, not the movie.
All guesses are wrong.
When I came up with this piece of culture to reference,
and I make reference to a podcast,
and I was going to direct it to Jesse,
I was going to say,
I listen to your podcast, Jesse.
I find it properly enraging.
I was like, I can't be mean to my bailiff.
Some would even describe us as friends.
I definitely agree that some would.
Here's the thing.
We are friends, but in the courtroom,
we have to keep a professional collegiality.
That's true.
But then I almost got mad
at my outside the fake court friend, Jesse,
because he gave it away when he was swearing you in
he was making reference to the same thing i was making reference to we double reffed
bored to death the tv show season one episode eight titled take a, directed by Paul Feig, featured me as the jerk Louis Green, who bullies the main character, Jonathan Ames, played by Jason Schwartzman, my friend and colleague in acting.
That was me.
I was referencing myself, you guys.
And Jesse gave it to you on a golden plate,
the same kind we use as pages in the guest book.
But now I close this guest book because you both failed.
Good guesses, though.
Why Fight Club the book and not the movie, Brandon?
I've seen the movie a few times,
and I don't recall that line ever being in it.
So I figured, oh, it's fight-related. Maybe it's line ever being in it. So I figured it's fight related.
Yeah.
Maybe it's in the book.
You were just like, it's got to be Fight Club.
It's got to be some version of Fight Club.
I don't remember that from the movie.
I've seen that.
Maybe it's from the book.
Maybe it's from the Bollywood remake of Fight Club.
Oh, Jesse Thorne.
Come on.
I just made someone a billion dollars.
But this is about your fight club, Brandon.
You wanted to test your own toxic masculinity in a fight.
You wanted to test your mettle in a boxing match.
And you did it.
And you said to Marie, your wife, that's it.
But now you'd like to go back into the ring.
Tell me about what's going on, Brandon.
Well, I had my first fight in November, and I had a lot of fun, and I thought that would be it for me.
But as I've continued training, not so much to fight, but just to more keep in shape.
training, not so much to fight, but just to more keep in shape. But the more I,
I involve myself, the more I'm feeling like I want to get back in the ring and kind of not really prove to anyone other than myself that my, my win back in November, wasn't just a fluke.
Just a one-off.
Yeah.
Right. And what do you do and where do you live?
So we live in a little city called Pleasant Grove, Utah.
It's just outside of Provo.
I work in an office for an ed tech company.
They make reading and math software for public schools and private schools.
I get it.
I get it.
Your life is dreadfully boring.
You're barely alive. I get it. Hel life is dreadfully boring. You're barely alive.
I get it.
Helping kids read is awful.
I understand.
Don't say any more because you're bringing me down.
No, I'm just kidding.
First of all, you guys are the latest in a long line of delightful Judge Sean Hodgman litigants from Utah.
Welcome.
I have every confidence that you are delightful.
I'm sure whatever the name of your anodyne suburban boring town outside of Provo is lovely.
I'm sure your job is challenging and fulfilling.
And you're not just sitting in a cubicle with your shirt and tie,
white knuckling through the day as you wonder whether or not you still
have any actual human feelings that you need to test by putting your face in front of someone's
fist. Am I accurately describing your incentive to begin boxing, Brandon, or what was it from
your point of view? I first got involved with boxing about eight to 10 years ago. Um, just like once a week training with a guy that said, Hey, I want to, you know, I,
I like teaching boxing.
This is something that I do.
He, he worked at like a, a boys, troubled boys school teaching them.
And he, I wasn't a troubled boy, but, uh, he'd have me in a friend.
You were hanging around a lot.
Yeah.
Someone, someone we knew from other, other places.
And he would bring my friend and I in to, to train.
And so I just on a very light level been doing it.
Um, and then it would have been, uh, last year I, I started working at my current position and we found ourselves in a financial position to where I could start going to like a legit boxing gym. Um, and so I signed up and, and after a month or so of, of training
there, the, they approached me to see if I would like to participate in their next fight night.
They do one every few months or so. Um, and that was always something I wanted to do
was get in a ring and see how I would do
just to see what would happen.
And so, yeah, I started training and I won.
Yeah, it was great.
All right.
Now, you did a very good job following the dictum
of specificity being the soul of narrative
in that you gave me a very
clear and very specific timeline of how this happened but as i talk to marie now a little bit
i want you to take a little moment and try to reach some emotional specificity in other words
i don't need to know the chronology so much as if i were to put you in the middle of the ring
and say tell me how you're feeling or i'll punch you, which is a weird form of therapy. And I apologize now for threatening you. I feel terrible. I feel
like a terrible bully. But when you say it's something I always wanted to do, I want you to
challenge yourself to give me a little bit more about why it was something you always wanted to do and what you felt when you did it and how it felt when you did not.
What's the opposite of losing?
Oh, when you won.
I don't know.
When you won your boxing fight.
So Marie, when Brandon came to you and said,
I've been training to box,
did this come as a surprise to you?
He wasn't keeping this a secret, right?
Well, he wasn't exactly forthcoming on everything. He told me that he wanted to join the gym that he
was at, which just that gym focuses on like circuit training and learning more about boxing,
like combinations and things like that. And so when he joined the gym, he just told me that he just wanted to do it as a form of exercise and a way to relieve stress in his life. And then a couple
months afterwards, he told me that they do these sparring nights. But did you know that he was
training to box at the gym when he told you that there was this sparring night happening?
I figured probably that's the direction it was going to go.
I wasn't, I was kind of surprised that it was going to be just a few months later, though.
I was thinking maybe he would train a lot more.
So you knew that he was doing some boxing training, though.
It's not like he was telling you, yeah, I'm over there on the elliptical all day long.
And then I decided I'll use this now to punch a person.
Yeah, correct.
I knew.
OK, cool.
And you said that you had a feeling that this was going on.
Did it come as a surprise to you to learn that Brandon was interested in boxing?
No, like he's always had like he he said, this weird dream bucket list item
to fulfill that he wanted to be in
like a real sanctioned fight.
And we had always talked about it,
that it would just be a one-time thing
if that ever happened.
Just, you know,
the one fight,
you check it off your bucket list,
your weird, you know,
dream is fulfilled.
Well, whatever you do,
don't condescend to his dreams it's a weird one though well i mean i think that it is not look i mean i would never go through
the rigor and exhaustion of actually training to go in the ring because i'm lazy and it's hard
I'm lazy and it's hard. But I did enjoy spending one afternoon at the gym getting some basic film boxing training from an actual boxing trainer. And I did enjoy pretending to fight. It's exhilarating
on a very visceral level. It's a weird dream, perhaps, because you are fantasizing about
hurting and getting hurt. But not weird in that it is
uncommon. It's not uncommon. And even weird in an interesting way rather than an uninteresting way.
So Brandon, I am going to strike all mention of weird from the record. And I'll ask you,
madam, not to weirdify your husband's dreams while you're in my courtroom.
Sounds good. Now,
Marie, when Brandon went into the ring last November for this sparring night and he had the fight, were you there or did you stay home? I was there. Did you bring your children? You
have children, correct? You guys? No, we didn't bring them. No children. How old are your children?
children. You have children, correct, you guys? No, we didn't bring them. No children. How old are your children? We have a seven-year-old and a four-year-old and a nine-month-old.
You could have brought that nine-month-old. Yeah, exactly.
That's when they really love boxing matches. Yeah, nine-month-olds are super into blood sport.
It's true. You go to MMA, the whole front row is toddlers and below.
Well, if you go to the Mommy and Me fights.
Is that what MMA stands for?
Yeah.
Mommy and Me attacking.
Okay.
And who was Brandon's opponent?
Another person from one of their other gyms that they have.
You're being pretty coy about it.
I mean, you're pretending like you don't even know who this person was,
although obviously you went into the locker room and paid this person to take a dive.
Yeah.
Admit it.
Exactly.
True or false?
Did you pay?
Brandon, what was the name of your opponent?
His name was Moffy, but he went by Bubba.
Of course he did.
Also, I like the way you used the past tense.
You didn't murder him, did you?
It was like, yeah, it was a fun thing.
You know, just a community gym.
We all got together for a sparring match.
I accidentally murdered him with my fists.
And it felt good to watch the life drain from his eyes.
And I just decided, you know what?
This is for me.
All right.
So Marie, true or false, you are under fake oath now.
Did you pay Bubba to take a dive?
I wish I had, but I didn't.
I was that worried about Brandon, though.
Brandon, I presume that you wore headgear and that the length of this fight was limited.
What were the rules of the engagement?
Yeah, you're absolutely right, Jesse.
It's an amateur fight, so headgear was required.
We fought three one-minute rounds.
So it actually came and went pretty quick.
Let's take a quick recess because
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Tell me the story of the fight, Brandon, from your point of view.
Oh, well, it was pretty nerve-wracking actually I had seen
my opponent in person uh just a week before Bubba and he's uh physically as far as body
composition is considered uh much more impressive than I am we weighed about the same but I am
a lot flabbier than he was.
So I was pretty nervous going into it.
It was pretty clear that he was stronger than me.
I heard stories about how hard he could punch, and I'm not exactly a hard puncher myself.
I would imagine that that's an important part of the skill set.
I would imagine that that's an important part of the skill set.
Well, when you're doing an amateur fight, sometimes it's more how many punches you can throw as opposed to how hard you can throw since you can score more points that way.
So everything leading up to the point where I was walking in the room, I felt like I was going to pass out.
Heart just going crazy.
I hated my life. I was seeing other people and just wondering like,
how are you not like throwing up in a bucket right now? Um, and then once my entrance music turned on and I, I walked in up to the ring and got in, uh, I, I felt pretty good. And after
getting kind of through the kinks of that first round. I got really comfortable.
I settled in, and I took the last two rounds and won on points.
Like I said, I'm not a hard puncher,
but I was definitely able to score more on him than he was on me,
so I won in points in the end.
You're not a hard puncher.
You're a more puncher.
Yeah, yeah.
That's right.
Brandon, what's your entrance music uh it
was gravel pit by the wu-tang clan that's pretty good i'd have gone with annie up by mop but both
are good and i can see as a utahn why you would pick the wu-tang clan with their deep links with
the state of wu-tang with the state of wu-tang deep connections to the state of Utah. With their deep connections to the state of Utah. Yeah, yeah. Well, Utah is commonly known as Wootah.
Because they love it so much.
I was hoping you were going to say the Miamics theme song was your entrance music, but I'm going to keep that one for myself.
Should I feel so moved to step back into the ring?
And so it was exhilarating.
And how many times would you say you punched him?
Oh, gee, I never got the official count on punches from the judges.
I'd say I probably threw twice as many punches as he did, but his punches were considerably harder than mine.
But I was just getting a lot in.
What was it like to be hit?
Because they wouldn't let Jason Schwartzman actually hit me no matter how many times he begged
to do it. It's, it's, it's kind of a weird, weird sensation. I mean, if you get hit in the body,
it hurts. Um, it can hurt really bad depending on where you get hit. He got me with a, with a
right hook in the ribs, uh, in the second round that almost crumbled me over and down and was hurting
me for weeks after the fight. Getting punched in the head doesn't hurt per se, unless you're
getting punched directly in the nose or in the jaw. But if you get punched in the head,
things just kind of go dark for, you know, a tenth of a second, then you're right back in it.
dark for, you know, a tenth of a second, then you're right back in it.
Sure.
That's, I'm sure, very reassuring for Marie to hear.
You know, my high school friend, Paul, was an amateur fighter.
And he always told me, I would ask him, how could you do this?
And he would tell me, you know, the first punch hurts.
And then after that, it's all kind of a blur.
And I believe him completely as a guy who's never been hit.
That said, he's in jail now.
So I'm going to take a look at the footage that you sent.
This is evidence that you submitted, Brandon.
And all these images and links to this video are, of course, going to be on the show page at MaximumFun.org, but also on our Instagram account at instagram.com slash judgejohnhodgman, all one word. First of all, here's a photo of you.
This is your promotional photo. You look in good shape and here you are. Well, I'll save my reaction
to your post-fight photo. But you also sent in a video that we'll link to online, which is how the internet works.
And you're wearing the blue or the red jersey here?
I'm in the blue jersey with the red gloves.
And I'm sure that you've watched this video multiple times, probably every night you get
up at about 2 a.m. and put it on the big projector and just relive your glory.
It's an eight minute and 21 second video.
Was that how long the bout was?
Almost nine minutes?
The video starts out with the entrance music.
So that's why the time's kind of inflated.
Three minute rounds.
And then I think it's 30 seconds in between each round.
So the actual fight is very short.
All right.
How many rounds again, did you say?
Three.
Three rounds.
Okay.
So what's the moment of triumph, the glory moment, since you've revisited this so many times?
In your highlight reel, what's the punch that you feel best about?
Do you have the time code memorized?
I don't, but I connected with him really well in the third round a few times.
Did you lose long-term memory after this?
No.
No, I haven't.
But the third round, once Moffy's kind of running out of gas,
it looks like he's getting pretty tired towards the end,
and I'm able to get some good shots in towards the end there.
All right, I'm going to take a look at what I—
Okay, I see the third round here.
I'm going to take a look at it.
There you go.
Nice.
Get inside.
There you go.
Nice work, folks.
Okay, you're in the blue, right?
Yep.
Oh, you're just getting smashed here.
Boom, boom. Boom.
I'm not very good at play-by-play
commentary. Oh, now you're going after him.
Oh my goodness. Brandon, you're
an animal. Oh, wow. You landed
like 300 punches
on Bubba. Yeah, and he's
getting tired.
And now men are yelling. Oh, it's
too scary. Okay, let's stop that.
Well done. Thank you. Oh, it's too scary. Okay, let's stop that. Well done.
Thank you.
So is there a moment of triumph that you remember?
What do you remember?
So at the very end of the fight, they stopped it.
They did a standing eight because Moffy was dropping his hands and wasn't really protecting himself anymore.
Right, because he had been rendered a corpse by your animal anger.
protecting himself anymore. Right, because he had been rendered a corpse
by your animal anger.
Yeah, so once the refs stopped the fight
to do the standing eight count form,
that's when I was really feeling it.
The adrenaline was pulsing.
I knew that I had it in the bag
and I was just on cloud nine at the moment.
Not so much.
I mean, I don't really do it to hurt other people.
No, just one person
specifically.
Mafi aka Bubba.
The hard puncher.
Yeah, he did punch hard.
But I'm
the most satisfaction
I get on a day-to-day
basis from when I'm boxing
is just to be able to take a really hard punch
and not be super affected by it. That's where I kind of get my thrill from boxing. So yeah,
it was great to win, but I took some pretty big hits there and I kept going. And that was also
pretty satisfying for me. So it is defeating the adversity of being punched that is more exciting to you than
punching a friend and colleague and neighbor in the face?
Absolutely.
Yeah. And now here is a photo of you directly after the fight. And you're holding the belt,
your fight night champion belt. And Marie, I'm going to say that the look, how would you describe this photo, Jesse?
The look in Brandon's eyes is that of a monstrous adrenaline addict who's never going to stop punching and being punched.
And he's growling while this photo is being taken.
There's madness in your eyes.
He looks like Ric Flair doing a wrestling promo.
Quite right.
You were thrilled in this moment, weren't you, Brandon?
I was thrilled, and Jesse,
that's not the first time I have been compared to Ric Flair
in regards to boxing, just so you're aware.
So, Brandon, there is something else in your eyes
in this photo, which I can read in this moment and I gather from your submitted evidence. It
was doubt. It was, was this a fluke? Was my punching just lucky? Why do you fear that your
victory was a fluke, as you put it?
Well, it's a very small sample size I'm working with here. Just one fight against an opponent who didn't have as much experience as me boxing altogether.
So I just kind of want to up the ante a little bit, go against someone with a little more experience and see how I do.
Okay.
Your goal basically is to kind of push forward
until you hit that special moment
when you know beyond a shadow of a doubt
that you have a traumatic brain injury.
traumatic brain injury?
I haven't given much thought
to how many fights I would like to do
all together. I'm just kind of taking it
moment to moment right now.
You're rolling with the punches.
Yes.
Yes.
And I'm not
terribly concerned about
hurting my brain.
I can tell it's not a priority for you one way or the other.
No, I mean, for one thing,
you had a hard time remembering the word brain.
We'll chalk that up to podcast nerves.
When people step into the podcast ring,
they become something else.
They don't, they're not human anymore. They can't even remember simple words. I understand it.
Marie, did Brandon make a promise to you that he was only going to fight this one time?
Yes. That is what we had talked about. Yep. Describe the nature of the promise. Was it in
writing? No, it was a verbal agreement.
And were you sitting at your kitchen table screaming,
Promise me! Promise me!
No, but I think he knows exactly how I have felt about it.
Sure.
And so he knows the anxiety it's caused me.
How did it make you feel to see him fighting?
And what is the worry of what's going to happen next?
Well, I think what made me really worry is when I realized that he was nervous and he was worried before the fight.
Because I trusted that he had, you know, worked hard enough to be able to fight well.
But when I saw how nervous he was, it made me doubt it a little bit.
And then just seeing someone that you care about get punched multiple times,
really, I don't know, that triggers some fear, some anxiety,
just that something's going to happen. There's definitely a, some anxiety, just that something's going to happen.
There's definitely a lot of anxiety.
So, Marie, there was definitely a period of time where you did not have faith in your man,
and you were concerned that he was going to be destroyed in front of your eyes and be humiliated in front of all of his friends, and I understand that.
And obviously you were afraid for his safety.
But you had this promise.
You had had a conversation before the fight.
Brandon, do you deny that this is true?
I may have said
something
at some point saying this would be the only fight
to
hopefully
get her off my case a little bit.
So your defense is
I may have made that promise, but
it was obviously a lie.
He made the promise.
Now, before the contract pedants write in, I need to ask you, Marie, did you offer consideration?
That is to say, did you offer anything in return for his promise?
Such as, if you promise this is your only fight, I will give you a dollar or some other consideration, a return promise.
Well, it was just the fight that I was concerned about.
So I told them that he could, you know, keep boxing at the gym, that he could go, you know, three times a week.
They have like practice sessions where you can go get punched.
And that was never like completely off the table.
So if he wants to get hit in the face, he can still go do that on occasion.
But yeah, the fight was just a one-time thing.
Right, but that is not consideration.
Giving him permission to get Paniwani punched in the face, that's not consideration for his promise. This is therefore an agreement and not a contract because he's a grown man. He can arrange to get punched
in the face anytime he wants. He doesn't need mommy wife's permission to go get punched in the
face in a controlled environment. Yeah, he just needs a Craigslist.
But I do gather that there is something about a boxing match that is more troublesome to you than fight training, including gym sparring and getting punched around in a gym environment in a more controlled, less, I mean, without an audience, I guess.
Is that correct?
Yeah.
correct? Yeah. And with, if he's training for a fight, then he's doing, um, getting punched in the face at least three times a week for a matter of months. And that, um, length of time kind of
is concerning to me. I think that's one of the biggest things, not just the fight, like where
people are going all out, but getting, you know, when he was training for it, he would come home,
you know, a couple of times a week, every time with bloody noses and black eyes and things like that. And so that over and over again, just doesn't seem like the healthiest thing to be doing.
How did your children process the fact that their dad was coming home all messed up?
coming home all messed up? Well, our four-year-old son thinks it's really cool to like fight bad guys and stuff. And so obviously he doesn't understand the difference between the sport of boxing and
just like hitting people. And so that was definitely concerning to me that he would
just know that his dad was hitting people and not know the difference about it and that it was okay.
Brandon,
did you explain to your son that,
uh,
that Bubba was,
is not a supervillain,
but just another dude.
That is a,
a lesson I've had to teach him multiple times.
Is he hitting on Bubba too?
He,
he just likes hitting things
and sometimes me.
I've just had to say,
you know, we don't do that.
If it's boxing in a
ring, you're fine to do it, but
don't go around hitting people.
It's a bad idea. But you can appreciate
that there is a certain mixed message you're sending
because you are basically
begging this court for permission to keep on hitting and being hit.
But it doesn't bother you, obviously.
The distinction is enough to satisfy your concerns as a parent.
The boy will get it through his head at some point.
I'm sure he will.
Well, that's encouraging.
Brandon, how many more fights do you want to do?
I know you haven't thought about it, but I'm asking you to think about it now.
Okay, so if I had to make a decision right now and say,
how many fights do you want to do?
And then you're done, you're ready to retire.
I would like to do at least two more.
To make it three?
I'm doing the math for you.
That would be three.
That would be a career of three.
How are we to know, given the fact that you had agreed to fight one fight and now want to fight more, that after three fights, you're not just going to George Foreman it on out until you're 65 years old?
That is a very good question.
I couldn't guarantee either way.
But I think three would be enough to where I'm done. I mean, you've already displayed and basically tacitly admitted to being a liar whose word
is worth nothing.
Now, John, don't say he's a liar whose word is worth nothing. Now, John, don't say he's a liar whose word is worth nothing.
He's a bloodthirsty liar whose word is worth nothing.
Believe me, I would not be saying this if I were anywhere near Utah.
I'm saying this from the safety of Brooklyn, because I know this beast can't punch me through
a microphone.
Marie, does he ever do anything?
Is this out of the ordinary for Brandon?
Does he do anything else risky like this?
Maybe not risky, but he really does crave like being slightly uncomfortable in his life.
I think he gets bored if he's not.
So like for instance, we're in the process of moving right now.
And it's something for me that gives me a lot of anxiety that I hate doing.
And the other day Brandon was like, isn't this the best?
Because it's something different and it pushes us beyond what we think we can do.
And I was sitting there in a corner hyperventilating being like, no,
this is awful. And so I think he really does with fighting. I think it's that domino effect.
Like he'll never stop because he if he wins, you know, it fuels that weird passion. Right.
Oh, sorry. Not weird. That passion he has. I'll allow it. I've changed my mind. You can say weird.
Oh, good.
And if he loses, he has to, you know, keep proving himself that he can do it and be, you know, slightly uncomfortable.
And let me ask you this.
If I were to rule in Brandon's favor, what would that mean to you?
Well, I don't know.
I think Brandon's going to do what he wants to do no matter what.
Even if I were to rule against him?
Well, I think if you ruled against him, I would hope that would give him enough that it's not just me saying no,
that there's other people that think that he shouldn't do it as well.
Maybe that would make him stop.
It's not just his wife who he loves. It's a stranger on the internet.
Exactly.
Jesse Thorne, you say that like that's a joke. But of course, a stranger's opinion
on the internet is much more important than your spouse's. And I'll explain why in my verdict,
which I'm about to give in a moment. I'm going to go back into my chambers,
which is a cooler full of sides of beef that I,
I punch with my mind and think this over and render my decision.
But here's the problem,
Brandon,
if I were to find in your favor and I were to say,
okay,
you can,
you can do two more fights.
I have no faith or confidence that you would stop after two.
And we'll just be back in this courtroom again
because you'll have the taste for it
and you have been proven to be a liar already.
So what enforcement mechanism is there, Marie,
that I could put in place that if you were to violate,
if I were to find in his favor, which is by no means settled,
what enforcement mechanism could I put in place
that would be sufficient punishment if he goes beyond
my ruling? That he's done with boxing, with the
gym, forever. He cancels his membership and he's done.
Okay. So instead of...
Yeesh. Yeah, right? Yeesh. That's right, Brandon. I'm just
concerned. Have you ever had to face consequences before?
Many times.
Truly.
I mean, you're facing the consequences of going into that ring and getting punched in the ribs and the neck.
Okay.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going into my chambers full of beef sides, and I'm going to punch them up, and I'll be back in a moment with my decision.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
How do you feel about your chances in the case, Marie?
I think I have a pretty good chance. I think I brought forth a pretty good case.
What about you, Brandon? How
do you feel you stand? I'm kind of hoping there's some sort of compromise, you know, kind of meet
somewhere in the middle. And I will stay true to my word, whatever the verdict may be.
What would constitute a compromise? Maybe you use
Cold As Ice
by M.O.P.
instead of Annie Up?
The Meow Mix song.
Oh my God!
Brandon,
I'm not a judge,
but I hereby rule
that if you're willing
to use the Meow Mix song
as your walk-on music,
you can have as many fights
as you want.
We'll do that.
You know, compromise will be one more fight.
You know, I think I could live with that.
Well, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say about this when we come back in just a minute.
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.
Thank you. And remember, 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
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We are so close
Stop podcasting yourself
A podcast from MaximumFun.org
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom
and presents his verdict.
Meow, meow, meow, meow,
meow, meow, meow, meow,
meow, meow, meow, meow,
meow, meow, meow, meow.
Meow, meow, meow, meow,
meow, meow, meow, meow, meow,
meow, meow, meow, meow, meow,
meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow. What you can't see right now is I'm in my chamber sort of like
Jumping around in a silk robe
Now I'm going to take it off
I'm taking off my silk robe, I'm in my trunks
I look like an oiled Adonis
I am ready to make my ruling and I'm putting my mouth guard in.
Oh, I'm going to take my mouth guard out, actually.
Do you think that was the problem with Rocky that Sylvester Stallone accidentally wore his mouth guard the whole time?
He still has it in.
Okay.
So boxing is a sport. it is a primal sport to the most reptilian
portion of the biology of the brain uh it speaks a very very very primal biological evolutionary
impulses to fight or fly and resisting that urge to run away from someone who is attacking you and instead stand
there and take it i can appreciate why it is extremely alluring especially if you've done it
once and survived it and you feel like brandon looked in that, like to cite the title of a different Bored to Death episode, like a demented God.
Bored to Death, now available on digital versatile disc.
Go check it out.
I think I get a little royalty.
So please, everyone buy a thousand copies.
It's a great show.
I wish they hadn't canceled it.
I was going to be my job forever.
But guess what?
You don't win them all.
You don't win them all. You don't win them all.
And yet, sometimes you win them one.
And you're left to wonder, was it a fluke?
Adrian, was it a fluke?
Or am I really the greatest puncher of all time?
The GPOAT, as is known in boxing.
But for all of that primal stuff that goes on in boxing,
even in fake boxing, I felt it.
It is still a sport.
There are rules.
You won on points.
You didn't win because you hurt another person the most.
There was a judge there who was counting how many times
you punched the other person.
There are enforced breaks.
There is a contract that is made when you touch gloves
that you will follow the rules of this particular sport
that circumscribing the bloodlust within it
to make it somewhat halfway, maybe one-eighth civilized.
You follow the rules in boxing.
Now you're asking me, Brandon, you're coming to me and asking me to excuse you from the rules,
the common sense rules. Now look, what you had, Brandon and Murray, was not a contract,
but an agreement and a pretty common sense agreement between spouses.
but an agreement and a pretty common sense agreement between spouses.
You're going to do this one time.
And not only are you asking me to excuse you from that promise, Brandon,
but you basically acknowledge that you never meant it when you said it.
Like, I think I said something like that to get her off my case.
How can I have any faith that you're going to follow any of the rules that I put down now? By rights, I should just hold you to your promise
and let you face the consequence of my law punch to your breadbasket.
However, the court is also forced to acknowledge that Marie is on your case.
Marie, you're on his case.
And when I said that this verdict hinged on the fact that a stranger on the Internet's opinion is worth more than one spouse,
I meant it.
I meant it.
I mean, the fact of the matter is you marry someone and you do so presumably because you love them
and you respect them and they are your best friend.
You care about them.
You don't want to hurt them.
You want to protect them from hurt.
And sometimes you have to acknowledge
that your being hurt hurts them.
And as far as I can tell, you guys are in love and you have a healthy relationship.
You obviously have some communication about boxing matches.
So there's at least an open channel of communication there.
But even though you make these promises in a marriage, you each continue on as individuals.
And there are certain tests and obsessions that we feel as individuals that
will not make sense to the spouse.
And sometimes you have to do what,
uh,
Jess Moss's mother said when I was house-sitting for Jess Moss's older sister's
apartment on the Upper West Side. And I was so excited to be there because they had a roof deck.
And then Jess Moss's mother called and said I had to get out of the apartment because she wanted to
stay there that weekend instead. And I was so angry and she could sense it. And she said,
and I've said this on the podcast before, she said to me on the phone, I know it's wrong,
And she said, and I've said this on the podcast before, she said to me on the phone, I know it's wrong, but I'm doing it anyway.
Sometimes you have to do things, you know, even if it's like taking a job that's going to disrupt your family life and take your kids out of school and away from their friends because this is a job that you've always wanted, you know.
Or having another kind of dream that you need to follow.
And even though Brandon's dream is weird,
I do not mean it in the pejorative sense.
I mean it in that sort of weird, eerie sense in that it speaks to some pre-human, almost, impulse.
He doesn't know if his win was a fluke or not.
He'll always wonder.
And it won't help if his wife is telling him
he's allowed to get punched in the face under very certain circumstances,
that he's not allowed to fight,
but he can go down and play with his friends in a different way.
And a wife giving a guy permission to go this far, no further?
I hate to put it in such heteronormative terms,
but we are talking about real dumb-dumb masculine stuff here.
You're only tempting him to go further at that point
when you tell him you can play in this sandbox,
but that sandbox that you were in before, that's off limits now.
Oh boy.
That's when the opinion of an internet stranger is the most important opinion in the world.
Because that's when you got to get outside of the deep emotional interplay of spousal
relationships and just hear from an outside party to say, no, dude, or okay, maybe, or whatever.
So it now then falls to me. It should seem that it should not fall to me
for my opinion to count more than Marie's. I think that you need to hear what Marie is saying,
that it is hard for her to see you come home bloodied and beaten,
that this is a kind of trauma to her and a confusing message to your son who loves to hit.
So I have to weigh the fairness.
What is fair to Brandon as a human being?
What is fair to Marie as a human being? What is fair to Marie as a human being? I have to weigh the fact that if I rule in Marie's favor, I know Brandon is always going to be wondering, could I do it again?
And is that fair to him? But if I rule in Brandon's favor, Marie is always going to be wondering, will my meathead husband come back with a true meathead and forget who I am?
These are hard things to judge.
And it's adding to the point that there is no faith.
Ruling in Brandon's favor would be ruling in favor of breaking a promise.
in favor of breaking a promise.
And since he has already shown willingness to break a promise,
the court has no faith
that he can adhere to any promise
I force him to make right now.
And yet,
that look in your eyes
in that photo, Brandon,
that triumph
and that wondering,
it haunts me
Brandon
you're gonna make a promise right now
and I want you to repeat after me
I'm going to fight one more time
I'm gonna fight one more time
and that is it. And that's it. Marie, keep repeating.
Marie. I apologize for breaking my promise. I apologize for breaking my promise.
This man is making me say these words. This man is making me say these words.
If I were the husband
that I want to be.
If I was the husband
I want to be.
Then I simply would
never fight again ever.
Then I would simply
never fight again ever.
But John Hodgman
is making me fight
one more time.
But John Hodgman
is making me
fight one more time.
Because John Hodgman
has won a mental boxing match
with me right now and owns my very brain
I don't think I can repeat that
no because you forgot the word brain I understand
but you get the point
no matter the outcome
no matter the outcome
if I even propose fighting a third time,
if I even pose fighting a third time,
I will tear up my membership card at the gym.
I will tear up my membership card at the gym.
This offer good for boxing and MMA only.
This offer good for boxing and MMA only.
If I take up Taekwondo,
that's my business.
If I take up Taekwondo, that's my business.
Right. Okay. So my ruling is now that you have made that solemn affirmation and as well, there is a punishment mechanism in place. My ruling is that you fight one more time.
You train and fight one more time.
That you explain to your family, including your children, that this is the last time you'll be getting into the ring.
You will walk into the ring to the Meow Mix theme song, of course, using either a recording of me singing it or the original.
It's up to you.
This will be recorded and will be put on our Instagram page and submitted to this court
as due evidence that you followed my rulings.
And I hope you lose.
Even if you win, I want every punch.
We want you to know that that is punishment for breaking your promise to your wife.
That I am allowing
so that you can learn whatever it is
you need to learn about yourself.
And I hope you lose
because then you will have the full
gamut of the boxing experience.
The thrill of
what is it?
Winning? I always forget which one it is.
I always forget about the winning.
And the horrible aching feeling of defeat where you wish, oh, if I could just do it one more time, I could do it.
But then, then that is when you will feel the full wrath of my judgment because you will not be allowed to do it again.
You will just have to live with the pain
of loss and get over it and get beyond it and realize that you've already won because you have
a wonderful family and wife and you live in Utah, Wu-Tang's own country. And I also urge you to
take up Taekwondo or some other kind of martial arts training that has a meditative quality in it.
So that you're looking inside yourself in a more directed way than just
putting yourself up for punishment.
Those are all of my rulings.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Brandon, how are you feeling right now?
I feel that was very fair.
One fight will be really good to just focus all my energy onto that one,
and I'm excited to see how things go.
Marie, how are you feeling?
I think one more fight is fair. If it's just the
one more, then I can live with that. You got to admit, it's going to be a real thrill to watch
your big, powerful husband jogging into that ring to the sound of the now mixed song.
I'll go just for that part Brandon Marie
thank you so much for joining us on the Judge
John Hodgman podcast it was a pleasure
another thrilling Judge John
Hodgman case in the books before we get
to our swift justice
our thanks to Ryan Stratton
for naming this week's episode beyond a
reasonable bout if you'd like
to name a future
episode like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook, we put out our calls for submissions there.
You can follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne, J-E-S-S-E-T-H-O-R-N, and at Hodgman.
Hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO. I always love to see them. And you can
check in at the MaxFun subreddit at
MaximumFun.reddit.com to discuss this week's episode. This week's episode recorded by Gaynor
Brunson at Rock Canyon Studios in Provo, Utah. Our brilliant producer on the boards here in Los
Angeles is Jennifer Marmer. Now, Swift Justice, where we answer your small disputes with a quick judgment.
Leanne says,
I'm glad that you really want to say that your friend Leanne is almost 30, despite her obvious and reasonable objections.
But I will say that as someone who is turning 47 this year, I can tell you that is beyond a reasonable doubt that that is basically 50, for sure.
But that's only because past 40, I'm already beyond all delusion of youth and accepting of my inexorable march to death.
But if you are in your 20s, hold on to those precious years.
where we'll march to death.
But if you are in your 20s,
hold on to those precious years.
You can't say you're almost 30 until you are 29 years
and 364 and a half days old.
Give your young friend a break.
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. We'll see you next time on the Judge email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org. No case is too small.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman
podcast.
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