Judge John Hodgman - Cape Codable
Episode Date: August 14, 2024Is it ok to take your home dishes on a camping trip? Is it ethical to shop at thrift stores if you can afford to buy new items? Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn answer these disputes and mor...e this week, as they clear the docket! PLUS some Hot Actuary Gossip!We are on TikTok and YouTube! Follow us on both @judgejohnhodgmanpod! Follow us on Instagram @judgejohnhodgman. Judge John Hodgman: Road Court! Tickets are on sale NOW! For dates and more information, go to maximumfun.org/events.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bill of Jesse Thorne.
We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket.
And with me, as always, is the ever capable, though perhaps not quite so ever capable,
as producer Jennifer Marmer, Judge John Hodgman.
Yeah, I'm only medium capable at best.
That's always been the case.
Jennifer Marmer, she's the most capable.
And what about you, Joel?
You're Cape Coddable, right?
Originally? Oh, no.
Yes. I made you know I made Joel crack.
Yeah, I'm here.
I'm here in Maine still at the solar powered studios of W.E.R.U.
in Orland, Maine.
Jesse Thorne, it's nice to see you.
I don't know if you can see on your camera
here in the, check it out on our YouTube page and our TikToks and everything else. My hair's
a little wacky today.
Oh, look, it's got like a little cowlick.
Yeah.
You look like a cool 12 year old in a TV show about the 50s.
I look like a member of the Little Rascals, the one that kid that had the beard.
In any case, yeah, I got a little callot going because I drove here in a vehicle
without a roof with wet hair that I put moose in to see what would happen.
And if you want to see the before or after, make sure you check out our
socials, Judge John Hodgman on Insta, Judge John Hodgman Pod on YouTube and,
and TikTok or whatever. It's a plug. It's a plug for my my hairstyle
But then I got a little late didn't I Joel because there's some Jesse
I need to tell you there's some some road work being done on route one. Did you know that Jesse? Oh, wow
I had no idea. Did you know that Joel? Yes, I did know that. Oh, you noticed that did you I have to go through it
Every day twice, right? Okay. My advice, Joel, take Backridge Road.
I could do that.
You could take Backridge Road. Yeah.
That's what I'm going to do on the way home.
Backridge Road, Jesse. That's the workaround.
Joel, that's a little advice from a local.
Yeah.
That's me. I'm your judge, John Hodgman, representing team from away here in Maine today.
As we roll into another rollicking docket.
We have a docket today, Jesse?
That's what's happening.
We're clearing the docket.
Jesse Lee We're clearing the docket.
What happens is the cases build up.
We can't address them all in a full court session.
We just don't have the time and resources.
You know how impacted the court system is.
So once in a while, we just try and blaze through the docket and take care of business.
Jesse Lee We got to pack the court with a rollicking docket.
Hey, before we get into that business, I forgot Joel Mann.
When I walked in here today, what did you say, Joel?
You said, do you like it hot?
Right?
Yes.
And I was like, I'll see you later.
I'm leaving.
Yeah.
But none of you meant was some hot salsa, right?
Joel?
Yes.
This is a, was in the refrigerator here at Community Radio and it had a label on it.
The big red letters hot.
This is some hot salsa.
Hot.
Now, when you said I want you to try some hot salsa because we did a bunch of fun food
fights with Justices last time I was in.
When you said I want you to try this hot salsa because it's really hot.
Yeah, I was I thought you meant that it was like commercially prepared
salsa from the Hannafords.
Instead, you're telling me this is just something from a, a weird jar
in the break room fridge.
Well, it's pledge drive week right now.
So people bring in food.
This is homemade?
No.
Okay.
This is store bought.
Store bought.
But it has, it has been sampled already.
It was in the break room.
Yes.
I like salsa very hot. And when when I tasted this it went wow okay I
gotta get I gotta get you on to try that sorry Joel what what did you say wow
yeah cuz all that food he made me eat at Christmas time I still haven't
forgiven him that's true we did do we did do that holiday party where I made
Julie a lot of weird food so this is is payback. So this is revenge.
Yeah.
You say it's pledge drive time for WERU.
Yes.
Yes.
And people want to support the station.
They go to weru.org.
There you go.
Right.
Member and community support it.
All right.
I'll try it out and I'll tell you what I think.
Wow.
Whoa.
Yeah.
That's an after kick too.
Well it's like, I feel like it's crawling its way down my throat via the roof of my
mouth, like Tony Collette in Hereditary, you know, when she's up on the up on the
ceiling. That's a spoiler.
Wow. Now, instant hiccups.
Joel, you're supposed to be a radio professional.
Why are you allowing me to do this?
Payback.
Holy, wow.
Is that something?
Okay, well, I'm gonna have the hiccups
throughout this doc.
There has never been a more compelling case
for people subscribing to our YouTube channel
at Judge John Hodgman pod.
And the faces John has been making
for the last 75 seconds or so.
Joe, we're rolling, right?
Yeah.
I need you to go get me some water.
Okay.
Okay, here's a case from Nisha in Portland, Oregon.
My husband John regularly takes cookware from our kitchen to go camping with.
Then he will dump said dishes soiled with mud and food
into the sink.
Please order my husband to stop taking our regular dishes
on his camping trips.
Okay, Joel's out of the studio now.
I feel like maybe I should nail the door shut
and I'll let him back in.
Jesse, you ever go camping? You never go camping? I have been, I went camping once. I'll tell him back in. Jesse, you ever go camping? You never go camping?
I have been, I went camping once.
I'll tell you what happened.
It was before I had children.
My wife and I bought a tent and went to a state park,
you know, near Los Angeles with our then dog, Coco.
And we put up the tent, we ate something,
we cuddled with Coco.
Cuddled with Coco, of course.
Hugged and kissed.
Yeah.
Went to sleep.
Yeah.
Woke up, remade the fire,
made some bacon and eggs or something.
Yeah.
And then I got so mad and bored that we left.
Yeah. I was like, we already cooked.
What else is there to do?
Yeah, once you have that bacon and eggs on the fire,
you might as well go home.
Yeah.
I wasn't ready to wait a further 12 hours
for the next hugging and kissing.
Yeah, exactly.
Time to go home after that.
You've had the whole experience.
Joel, you ever go camping in Maine?
Motel 6.
We got a situation here where Nisha's husband, John, go home after that. You've had the whole experience. Joel, you ever go camping in Maine? Motel 6.
We got, we got a situation here where Nisha's husband, John regularly takes
their regular old cookware and regular old dishes from their kitchen on camping
trips.
Like, what are we even talking about here?
Like your Joseph Heller plastic plates or your rowan trees?
Like real, real China, bone China, maybe? I didn't know about this type until recently
as a city boy, a lifelong city boy.
I did not know about this type of camping
where you, like, put a refrigerator into your car.
Uh-huh, uh-huh.
And then you, like, sleep under the car or something.
I don't even know how it works exactly.
Like, you bring a volleyball net.
And, you know what I mean?
Like this whole thing was completely foreign to me
until recently I learned about the depth to which it goes.
Mostly I think I learned about it
by like wandering past something in Costco
and being like, wait, that's for camping?
Yeah, no, my one experience with camping
was when my wife was a whole human in her own right.
Right after we first started coming up here to Maine, she's like, you are going to go camping.
And I'm like, I went camping once as a youth. I hated it. I chopped a stick in half. I was done.
That was my whole thing. And she said, no, you're going to come. So we drove all of our equipment
over to her dad's house on the lake,
and then we put that all in a canoe, and we canoed over the campsite,
and we set up our tents.
And it was already terrifying because our daughter, who was younger then, not yet an adult,
was like, I don't understand why I can't have several open candles in my tent.
It'll be fun.
Like, no, you can't set yourself, this is terrifying to me.
I like, I'm going to be, it's going to be hard enough for me to sleep.
A, because of fear of ghosts and aunts and specters and bears.
B, because I'm afraid you're going to set yourself on fire.
And C, because my wife was a holy moon in her own right told me, no, you don't
need any, any kind of pad to lie on.
You don't need a cot. You just sleep on the ground. That's how I always did it.
And you know what, Jesse? You need a pad or a cot.
Yeah.
No one sleeps on the ground. They sell these things. They're good.
And after one night of sleeping in pure pain on the ground, on the floor of the forest,
my wife, whole human being, et cetera, has banned camping from our lives.
There's an appeal to, do you remember a case
on Judge John Hodgman that we had
where people essentially built a,
like a full-scale post-apocalyptic tent village?
I'm so glad, yes, I do remember
and I'm so glad you brought it up.
These people had a real setup.
They would drive out in their big old van and then they would put up several different,
it was a whole Burning Man situation.
They had a whole geodesic dome just for putting on band-aids or whatever.
They created a whole campsite that seemed like a semi-permanent living situation.
The gear is the fun. That's why there was that John Glaser show gear.
So the idea that you're going to take your fiesta-wear, your big heavy fiesta-wear,
out to your campsite not only goes against, I think, the spirit of camping, but also
you're putting Nisha back there at home in the city of Portland, Oregon,
at a disadvantage because they don't have the plates and cups that they need to use in order to live.
There's no point. There's no point in any of it. I'd like to go back,
but I would want to do it with the gear. It's like John Muir said, famous naturalist,
are you really communing with nature if you're not using one of those Swiss army knives only
instead of a Swiss army knife, it's like a fork,
a spoon.
You know that thing I'm talking about?
Gosh, that is the coolest thing.
Yeah, but what's the point of camping
if you don't have the fun toys?
And those fun toys are things to put your beans on.
Here's something from Tim in Los Angeles.
Why, that's the city in which Jennifer and I live.
I use a blank Google document to keep track of all of my to do's
and upcoming events.
I can add and delete things quickly and use color coding, images, links,
and bold text, everything I need to keep a neat and orderly life.
I do not impose this system on anyone else.
All right.
My husband, Mike, wants me to get rid of this document
and instead use a personal or shared calendar.
This is extra work and I don't wanna do it.
Jennifer Marmer, we often use,
look, it's not buzz marketing, one of the major monopolies.
We often use Google Docs to organize,
to write our scripts and organize ourselves
here on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Yeah.
I guess that's an invitation to hackers now,
to find that stuff.
I think you would agree with me.
It's not a perfect system, right?
Yeah, very imperfect.
Very imperfect.
This is a bunch of glitches, wouldn't you say?
I would say.
Like for example, this script that you sent me via email,
the link gets me to the script,
but I can't find it in my shared folders anymore
because something changed.
You know what I'm talking about?
I hate that part.
I hate that.
That's wild.
Like it was shared with me.
Why isn't it shared with me?
They changed their mind about something.
I get it.
It's not perfect, but Tim has a system that works for Tim,
it seems to me, Right? I mean...
Mm-hmm.
Mmm. Mmm. Mmm.
Oh, Jesse Thorne, please.
Tim is in a romantic relationship with his husband.
Mike.
They share a household.
Yeah.
And I'm sure that they share many tasks.
Yeah. And I'm sure that they share many tasks, many appointments,
and many priorities which have to be distributed
between the two of them.
And Tim's system is not interoperable
with his husband's system.
I don't think that Tim's husband is saying,
sweetheart, I want you to use my system
because I think my system is better.
Right.
I think he is saying, and I think it's better for you,
I think he is saying, sweetheart, we need to have a way
to organize our priorities and schedules that works for both of us
and that allows us to communicate with each other.
Well, what could be more simple than sharing a Google document?
Obviously, all you need to do is create a unique link.
What kind of insane person keeps their schedule
in a Google document?
I'm just saying.
Google makes a calendar product.
You print out the link,
and then you bring it to the town office for approval,
and five days later, you can walk it over
to their personal inbox, and then they can type in the link and then they can get an opportunity to request access
to it.
It's simple.
It works for us.
Judge Hodgman, I keep my calendar, again, sorry to plug a monopoly that is just, you
know, selling my mother's maiden name on the Silk Road, along with upcoming scripts for Judge John
Hodgman episodes.
But I keep my schedule on a Google Calendar.
My wife doesn't.
My wife uses an app called Cozy.
It's like a family app.
It has a variety.
It's a little suite of software, not unlike Google's suite.
Yeah, sweet and cozy.
But the two of them are interoperable.
So Cozy can import my Google Calendar,
and when my wife creates something in Cozy,
it shows up on my Google Calendar
if she tells Cozy to put it on my Google Calendar.
And that, I think, is fine.
That's an example of two people who prefer different systems,
but the systems communicate with each other so we know.
I know, John, that you've mentioned that you and your wife share your grocery list in your
Notes app.
Yeah.
Well, now we use Reminders, which is an Apple product.
Very much to buzz market a technological monopoly because I love Apple and I want to go back.
Take me back, Apple. I love go back. Take me back, Apple.
I love you still.
I'm a PC forever.
Anyway, yes, we use that.
And it works good, works pretty good.
And the reason that you use it is because
it is a lot easier to have a shopping list
that is shared between the two of you, right?
And I love getting notifications all the time.
I love being on all the time.
I love being on a phone call and then getting a beep going like, oh, no, are we in the middle of a new natural climate calamity or is there something happening in the
political realm? And it's like, no, your wife is a whole human being in your own
right is added beats to your shopping list.
None of these systems are perfect.
But I see your point, Jesse Thorne, that when
you are sharing a life with someone, it is reasonable to find some reasonable integration
of at least your calendar so you can know what each of you is doing. I don't think that
Tim needs to give up his system, but I do think that there should be a fairly seamless way for him to put things that Mike needs
to know about into a shared calendar at the same time.
Or just grant Mike full access to your weird document, Tim.
I mean, I hope you are anyway.
What are you hiding?
And then Mike can just add the stuff that he thinks is important to the calendar or
something like that.
But yeah, I'm sorry.
There is extra work.
You say this is extra work and I don't wanna do it, Tim,
but you know what marriage is?
Definition of extra work.
I got you all again.
Point, point, point, Tim, you gotta eat the hot salsa.
Now I'm kind of thinking I wanna have another bite
of that salsa, but it's mostly because I'm just hungry.
So I'm gonna leave it alone.
And you're gonna hear what it did to my voice.
You know what? I'm going to give you a shot to have another bite because we're going to take a
quick break. We'll be back in just a second with more cases on the docket.
All right, Jesse. I'm going to have another bite and I'll be right back.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We are clearing the docket this week, and we have a case from Julie in Mansfield, Massachusetts.
I have self-published two novels.
When it comes up in conversation, my husband Steve refers to these books as published.
I believe there's a clear distinction between published and self-published.
Whenever Steve says my books are published, I believe he's a clear distinction between published and self-published. Whenever Steve says my books are published,
I believe he is lying.
If I don't correct him, I am lying too.
If I do correct him,
the conversation turns to the publishing industry.
Then instead of feeling proud of my books,
I end up depressed.
I'd like the judge to order my husband
to stop referring to my books as published in
conversation.
Hmm.
This is interesting.
You know, I used to work at a literary agency.
Yeah.
And there was a lot of stigma at the time assigned to self-publication.
True.
Because there was no electronic publication at that time. Either you had a book printed and put into
bookstores or you didn't have a book published.
There were companies that were disreputable,
that would take money from aspiring authors,
usually middle-aged weird dads who had
always wanted to write the great American novel or whatever, but spent their whole lives, you know, working in the widget, in the, you know,
middle management of the widget company or whatever.
And now we're finally going to do it and realize that they, there was no way for them to get
an agent or get an inroads at a major publishing house.
And they would be preyed upon by these companies that would have claimed to publish your book,
what they call vanity publishing,
where you had your book, your manuscript,
and the company would say,
pay me several thousand dollars,
and I will technically print up your book.
And then you get it in a box.
With weird margin sizes.
Yeah, exactly.
As a guy who has received a lot of self-published books
in the mail over the years,
because I host a public radio show,
there's nothing weirder than a self-published book's margins.
I don't know what they're getting wrong.
I can't put my finger on what's wrong about them.
But, you know, Judge Hodgman,
I was in that industry at one point.
Really?
Well, I was in that industry adjacent. I. Really? Well, I was in that industry at Jason.
I found a... I was on a middle path.
Mm.
Our friends in the Casper Hauser Comedy Group
were performing sketch comedy in San Francisco,
and a person saw them performing.
Obviously, they're geniuses.
Go listen to the Casper Hauser Comedy Podcast.
Total geniuses, right?
And at the time, I was doing some to the Casper Hauser comedy podcast. Yeah. Total geniuses, right?
And at the time, I was doing some work with Casper Hauser.
I was actually helping them with the publication
of their first book, Skymall, which is one of the funniest
things in history.
I truly published book.
And two of the guys from Casper Hauser
got this job working for a publisher
promoting a new novel.
And they did on the street-street happenings.
They, like, wrote sketches that they performed
at Book Expo or whatever.
It was like this whole involved thing that paid very well.
And I was on some sort of, I got some kind of job
on some sort of, like, focus group or something
that, again, I was getting $300 or $500 or something
for an hour. I couldn't believe it.
It was amazing.
Incredible.
And it turns out that this book was written by this tech millionaire.
And this tech millionaire had taken his tech millions.
Who shall remain unnamed and unloved.
Well, I don't know.
Yeah.
He wrote this novel and it was truly like,
it was like the world's worst, I don't know,
it had a very like strong late 60s vibe of like personal,
it was very Burning Man-y.
Okay.
And he wrote this novel, and then he took his millions
and started a publisher.
Like he couldn't get it published. Yeah.
So he founded a publishing house.
Like, hired industry veterans, multiple, many industry
veterans to publish this novel.
And then he had read, or someone there had read,
that the way Dan Brown made The Da Vinci Code a huge hit
was by ceding the book, by giving it away to many people.
And then it had become popular, fascinating.
Word of mouth spread, sure.
Word of mouth spread.
And so I, to this day, find this book in thrift stores.
Wow.
Constantly.
Because they gave away like 25,000 copies or something.
Because he figured, well, I might as well just spend
a million dollars on printing copies of the book
to give away.
And a big part of Casper Hauser's job
was figuring out ways to get people
to take his book for free.
So they were part of the unnamed tech billionaires street team.
Yeah, the book was called Wild Animus.
I just remembered.
Wild Animus.
Wild Animus. So now our, Wild Animus. Wild Animus.
So?
Now our listeners are going to be sending us pictures to the Judge John Hodgman Instagram
of when they find it in the bookstore shelves of their local thrift store.
Oh, here we go.
It's a story of one man's journey through the 60s and into adulthood.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Two stars on Goodreads.
I'm not going to name the guy.
No, we're not going to name the guy. No, we're not gonna name the guy.
And I trust that he is loved by the people
who care about him, and that was a rude thing to say.
I love him, I needed the money bad.
So, right, I mean, that kind of self-publishing
is something that gets you sort of talked about
and made fun of on podcasts years and years later.
And there was no end of people who, only was their stigma attached to self publishing,
but because there was, a lot of the self published authors who were sending us copies of their
published books were very, they liked to say that they were published authors. They were,
they were not the way Julia is presenting herself down there in Mansfield, Massachusetts.
So people who self published their books weren't necessarily presenting themselves the way Julia is presenting herself down there in Mansfield, Massachusetts.
So people who self-published their books weren't necessarily presenting themselves the way
Julia in Mansfield, Massachusetts is.
They were usually older guys who wanted to write a book because they wanted to have written
a book.
And publishing that book, even if they paid for it themselves, either by creating a publishing
company or paying money to a vanity publisher, that they needed that to complete the loop of their ego to have published that book.
And so I really respect Julie. Self-publication, I hope, has less of a stigma now,
because a lot of great authors have started out their careers by self-publishing because they can do it.
There are ways for you to publish your book electronically and distribute it through various
websites. I'm not going to buzz market any in particular. And you can market them and send
them around and share them and they show up in people's e-readers, indistinguishable from any
other book. And it's a great democratization of the publishing industry, which I think is very, very good and powerful. There are lots of examples of
great authors who have been discovered, and very successful authors who have been discovered
initially through self-publication, which is great. I mean, it's a huge part of the New York Times
bestseller list now is these self-published or small independently published books.
HOFFMAN I mean, it was one of the great
disruptions of the publishing industry ever
that these tech companies realized
that they could eliminate the role of the publisher
simply by standardizing margins.
That's true.
It's true.
And we had a tech genius come by our literary agency
and explain in the very late 90s
exactly what was gonna happen and why it was going to happen.
And, you know, look, the literary agency still thrives and it is adapted.
But the initial reaction was, that's never going to happen.
In any case, Julie, you should not be ashamed
to have self-published your books, but I applaud you for appreciating
to have self-published your books, but I applaud you for appreciating the nuance and the uncharacteristic humility of an author to say, no, I don't want to say that I have published the book,
I have self-published the book, and it makes me self-conscious, Steve.
You should not feel ashamed of what you've done, but what you have done is you have self-published
the book, and I appreciate your commitment to honesty.
I think when you say that your book is published,
what you are expressing is not that you wrote a book
or that people bought your book,
both of which are entirely possible through self-publishing,
but I think part of what you are communicating
is that it has passed through several gatekeepers, right?
I think that's right.
I think that is when you say published specifically, and again, there can be good
and successful books that don't, that have not been quote unquote published in that way.
Right.
But I think when you say published, what you are saying is both a literary agent and an
editor and an editor's committees and bosses all, and I know that's more than both now,
all said this is worthy of spending a bunch of money on because, you know, publishing
a book costs a bunch of money one way or the other.
So I think that she is right and sensitive to realize that the message her husband is conveying is not true.
Exactly. And that does not mean that those gatekeepers necessarily are virtuous or that the work is worth more because it passed through those gates.
But that is the connotation, as you say, Jesse, that you that you can note when you say I've been published. When you say my book has been published, that does not mean I've hired some young men to try to push it into people's hands on street corners.
That's pamphleteering.
Or at Book Expo.
Yeah, for example.
In any case, I mentioned this book, Wild Animus, that was self-published by your former boss, two stars in Goodreads, and I'll just go ahead and say,
Julie's book is called Yeshu, Y-E-S-H-U,
and you can find it wherever, well, not wherever books are sold,
but you know where to find it if you're curious about it.
And I wish you the best of luck.
And Julie's husband, who is a whole human being in his own right, Steve,
got to eat some hot salsa as punishment.
Ow.
Here's something from Michael.
I have a dispute with my wife, Carrie.
We live down the road from a thrift store
that's run by a charitable organization
and community center.
Carrie enjoys shopping there, but I feel guilty about it.
I think the store is meant to meet the needs
of our neighborhood's lower income residents.
We are not their intended audience.
Kerry says she wants to support small businesses, save money, and avoid waste.
She also says her purchases help to support the store's community initiatives.
Is it ethical for us to shop at this thrift shop?
Well, since we're Buzz Marketing Things, I'll go ahead and plug this wonderful thrift shop, which is Maison Marie Louise in Vanier, Ontario.
And well, I mean, what do you think about this, Jesse Thorne?
You are an avid thrift and secondhand shopper.
Is there is there such a thing as ethical thrifting in late stage capitalism?
I have very strong feelings about this.
So I'm just kind of out with them.
Yes, of course.
Thrift stores serve an essential role in our economy
in the reduction of waste.
The reality of the situation is that thrift stores
receive many, many more donations
than they can successfully sell.
The big thrift store chains,
your Salvation Armies and your Goodwills,
and even their for-profit counterparts,
all make a significant amount of their business
by selling, palletizing, and selling overseas
excess donations.
And a significant portion of their cost
is the cost of disposing of goods that cannot be
sold on any market, at least efficiently.
I do think that one of the essential roles of a thrift
store in the economy is to provide an accessible
and affordable source of clothes in particular for people in the community who otherwise
wouldn't be able to afford them.
That function is well served by thrift stores generally.
And I don't think that if you are, you know, speaking as someone who has shopped at thrift stores
out of economic necessity, and in my childhood particularly, it is not, there is not a shortage
of product, right?
If you need a coat to be warm, you will be able to find a coat to be warm at a thrift
store.
It will not be, you know, taken from your hands by
someone who is shopping for themselves out of, you know, interest or interest in reducing waste,
or even interest in moving it through the marketplace, right? Like I buy a lot of goods
secondhand at thrift stores, garage sales, flea markets, every
source I can find to stock my store.
And I feel I have no moral discomfort with doing so because all of those things are being
taken out of the waste stream that the profound affluence of so-called first world countries like the
United States create.
And yeah, I know from experience that thrift stores can serve multiple purposes.
Right.
I'll also sometimes hear, you know,
that thrift stores are exploiting their customers
by pricing items closer to their market value.
And I also feel pretty strongly that thrift stores,
especially nonprofit thrift stores,
are absolutely within their rights to do that.
You know, they are trying to keep the lights on like anyone else is.
Whether you agree or disagree with their mission or believe that they are the most
efficient charitable organization in the world is a separate issue.
You know, I think, for example, that a lot of people have objections to the mission
of the Salvation Army because of their faith-based underpinnings, which I think are reasonable
objections.
But, yeah, I just don't think that shopping at a thrift store is for because you like old stuff better or because you want
there to be less trash in the world is taking clothing off the backs of anyone.
Right.
And the place like, like clearly just going through this website for Maison Marie Louise,
and I don't even
speak a lot of French anymore, I can tell that this is not just a thrift shop or a vintage
shop.
This is a whole organization that is designed to help low-income families in need to get
– they have all kinds of programs for nature outings, to get people out of the city.
They have programs for helping people get set up in new apartments
with the furnishings and cookware that they need.
And all of this is supported by the sales of the thrift shop.
So you are, I think, pretty clearly,
it's pretty clear to me, Michael, that Harry's purchases from the thrift shop,
as she claims, are supporting the whole suite of services
that this one organization is doing. And if you feel guilty about it still, there's nothing stopping
you from making a further donation and paying some of those Brooklyn vintage t-shirt prices
for those Ontario t-shirts that you're getting at the thrift shop. And that can help alleviate
some of the guilt you feel. But you know, rather than simply coming to a podcast
to say that you know better than your wife as a whole,
him being in her own right, just off the top of your dome,
another thing to do would be to contact Maison Marie Louise
and ask them, what do they think about
more affluent members of the community
buying stuff in the thrift shop?
Is that good for them or bad for them?
They're the ones who know, not just you, me, and Jesse Thorne.
You know what they're going to say?
Hello, it is, we prefer that you not shop in our store.
Thank you.
Look, if they're French speaking Canadians, they very well may say that.
I mean, they're a pretty feisty bunch, but, uh, but that's
the way to find out for sure.
Okay. Look, we're, we're gonna, we're going to be back in just a second with more on the
docket, including some very hot actuarial goss. Got that actuary goss. We'll be back
in just a second on the Judge John Hodgman podcast is headed out on tour starting September 11th at the City
Winery in New York City, then heading thenceward across the Northeast, the Midwest, and the
West Coast.
We're going to have a good old time.
And I hope that if you live in one of those places,
you've already got your tickets or are about to get them
because I don't want them to sell out on you.
MaximumFun.org slash events.
I mean, we are nearing a sellout, I believe right now,
in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Maybe by the end of the episode, they may be gone.
Meanwhile, New York City, Philadelphia,
Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
Addison, Wisconsin, St. Paul, Minnesota, Burlington, Vermont, Portland, Maine,
Turner's Falls, Massachusetts, my hometown of Brookline, Massachusetts, Vancouver,
Canada, Seattle, Portland, Oregon, Los Angeles, and stay tuned for the San
Francisco SketchFest. They're all available to you now at MaximumFun.org
slash events. And if you live in one of those cities, we need your disputes
because we hear them live on stage.
Every show's a little different thanks to you and your disputes, which you should submit
as soon as possible to the tune of now at maximumfund.org slash JJ HO.
Let us know if you've got a dispute for one of the cities we're on tour and we'll consider
it.
Maximumfund.org slash events, maximumfund.org slash JJ HO, maximumfund.org slash Judge John
Hodgman Road Court. That isFun.org slash Judge John Hodgman, road court.
That is all.
Guess what, John?
What?
I'm so excited about this tour that I learned how to put a capo on my ukulele.
People don't know necessarily if they only listen to the show that you play the ukulele
and sing songs during these shows.
And I'm going to sing a song too.
And you only see it if you see it live on stage,
maximumfund.org slash events,
maximumfund.org slash JJ HO to submit your disputes.
And that's everything you need to know
about the Judge John Hodgman Road Court
is about to hit the road.
Let's get back to the docket.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Here is a case from Lawrence in Sandy Spring, Maryland.
All right.
I often have to be in Zoom meetings with fellow senior citizens.
One regular attendee uses a doctored photo that is at least 25 years old in his profile.
So when he turns off his video, he looks really great and makes the rest of us look bad.
Please, please order him to use a photo
that shows what he looks like now.
Is this a professional Zoom meeting
or a social Zoom meeting?
Does it say one way or the other?
It doesn't say.
I'm just, you know, I'm not a fan of pranks necessarily.
Uh-huh. But if this is just among friends,
I just think a solution might be to get the message across
is that when he sets his profile image as himself 25 years ago,
what you do is Lawrence and Sandy Spring, Maryland,
you take a screenshot of him as he is now, preferably like having a funny look on his face, like he just ate some
spicy salsa or whatever.
And then you distribute that to entire group and then you have the entire group changes
their profiles to him as he is now and just turn off your camera simultaneously.
So he just sees himself as he is now the way he is now.
That would get the message across. Don't you think, Jesse Thorne?
I was thinking maybe you just change your profile picture
to, like, George Clooney.
Oh, okay, very good.
Maybe even George Clooney from 25 years ago even.
Like, ER George Clooney.
The honest truth is that I don't think it makes everyone else look bad.
I think that's a picture that this person likes and likes.
We all choose photographs that are flattering of ourselves.
This isn't, he's not like entering a, he's not like entering a youth contest with a false
photograph.
All right, Jesse Thorne,
but if he's like on a dating app.
Yeah, if you're like, if he was representing himself
as that's how I look now, then it would be a problem,
but he's not, he's saying this is a picture of me.
What about the fact that I routinely use as a headshot
a picture that I took of myself in 2015?
I support it.
This is show business, baby.
Yeah, flash that up on the YouTube channel.
Flash Daniel Spear, our video editor,
make sure you flash a picture of my 2015 headshot
next to me now having eaten some hot salsa.
Yeah, you know what, Jesse Thorne,
you have turned my
judgment around. I agree. If he is not misrepresenting himself, but rather representing himself in
a light that he finds flattering to him, we all deserve that. We all deserve to represent
ourselves in the light that feels most flattering. We get to choose our own lighting on Zoom.
We get to choose the light in which we represent ourselves. And so, we should also get to choose our own lighting on Zoom. We get to choose the light in which we represent ourselves.
And so we should also get to choose our setting and we should feel comfortable
well in, in real life and in zoom.
Like I don't understand why people don't find a spot that has good lighting.
Um, that they, they wear a nice, they wear some nice clothes.
Maybe they use a nice microphone so that they sound good and they look good.
And therefore they will feel good as they're communicating
via virtual teleconferencing.
So, sorry about that, Lawrence. You gotta eat some spicy salsa.
Take a picture of yourself and send it in.
Ow.
OK, I wanna hear this actuary gossip.
Oh, Le Gosse Show? Let's do it.
Mm-hmm.
So, if you're a new listener, you may not know that a little ways back in episode 658, cease and delist, we had two wonderful litigants, Tyler and Abby.
And Abby complained that Tyler's top five list making hobby was too annoying.
But she also told us some hot gossip from her work as an actuary.
She told us off mic, if I remember.
She didn't want to reveal the actual gossip,
but she told it to us privately.
And so we loved that hot goss,
and we put out a call for more hot actuary gossip,
and we got some.
I can't wait to hear this update.
Bailiff Jesse, what's the goss show
in the world of Les Actuaires?
Matt says,
I am an actuary working in the pension sector
in Canada.
I'm writing in response to your request for hot actuary goss.
Our CEO recently made an internal feel-good town hall speech
to prepare.
We did a deep dive into the data.
By the way, if you work at an actuarial company,
yeah, that's how you prepare for literally anything.
You're like, well, tomorrow's Easter.
Let's prepare by doing a deep dive into the data.
Deep dive into the data, triple D.
We discovered a 100-year-old survivor
was actually collecting two survivor benefits.
She had been married to a plan member who retired
and subsequently passed away at age 73.
She was left with a survivor pension.
She then remarried to another retired member from our plan.
When he died a few years later, also at age 73,
she began receiving a second survivor benefit.
Note that while this makes the goss less hot,
it is totally legal.
Wow.
Our little old lady just so happened
to have the first name Ivy.
So when our CEO shared her story in the town hall, the legend of Poison Ivy was born.
Sadly, she recently passed away at the age of 102.
Look, I have a dispute with the adverb sadly there.
She had an incredible life.
Yeah.
We don't even know about the husbands that she murdered
that weren't part of this retirement plan.
Well, I mean, you know,
she was just waiting for them to turn 73 apparently.
Exactly.
Well, that is an incredible,
not only an incredible story,
but also it may be my new retirement plan.
Now that I know that it's legal to become a black widower in Canada.
I would love for my mom to marry a soon to die 73 year old with a good pension.
She could really use some survival benefits.
If you're an older Canadian and you're feeling lonely and you're in the market for an incredible life partner like Jessie's mom.
I mean, specifically Jessie's mom.
One of the smartest, funniest, and kindest,
and most interesting people I've ever met
who's got an eye for the antiques, I dare say, as well.
Maybe she's got an eye for you, you old antique.
Why don't you send your photo in
and we'll send, we'll send them
over Jessie's mom and I want real photos, up to date photos, please don't send them.
My don't send in your 2015 headshot of me.
That would be weird if you send in my 2015 headshot, send in a recent photo of
yourself and, uh, and get ready to sign that pension right on over as Jessie.
Jesse's mom has got it going on.
Jesse's mom has got it going on and she needs some financial stability.
Yeah. I can only do so much.
Some of that Canadian style financial stability.
You know what I'm talking about.
Three disabled children.
Speaking of Canadian...
Marry my mom, please.
And by the way, if you're coming to our Vancouver show,
go to MaximumFun.org slash events for that.
And you're an elderly Canadian fellow
who's looking for a good time.
And a life partner.
Let us know. We'll say hi to you there.
Send some pictures.
All right, the talk is clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Judge John Hodgman created by Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman. This episode engineered by our pal Joel Mann,
the Maine man at WERU Community Radio in Orland, Maine.
Our social media manager, Natty Lopez,
our video editor, Daniel Spear.
This podcast edited by AJ McKeon.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Photos from the show are posted on our Instagram account
at Instagram.com slash JudgeJohnHodgman.
We're also on TikTok and YouTube at JudgeJohnHodgmanPod.
Follow and subscribe to see our episodes
and video only content there.
Yeah, you can see me eating this hot, hot salsa
that Joel made me eat on behalf of the WERU pledge tribe.
And guess what?
I'm going to have another bite.
This is my contribution to the pledge tribe.
But if you like community, we know that you like community supported media.
And you're probably and wonderfully a member, listening member and contributor to the maximum
fun.org, which we encourage you to do.
But if you've got a little extra time and attention you want to pay to WERU, go ahead
and get it.
Here we go. Hot stuff coming in.
Why did I do that? It was terrible.
Did I just get off my shift at the factory or is John's head a steam whistle?
Wowie zowie. OK.
It's a hit. It's a hit and in this.
I'm going to power through this.
Thank you so much, by the way, to Steve VMD on Apple Podcasts It's a hit and a miss. I'm going to power through this.
Thank you so much, by the way, to Steve VMD on Apple Podcasts for your wonderful review
and five-star rating.
Steve VMD said, this is an all-timer.
This is what got me hooked on podcasts years ago when I thought they all could be as interesting
and informative as Judge John Hodgman.
It is, and it's also funny, warm, and insightful.
True gem.
Thank you so much, SteveVMD.
Look, we only exist because of your support,
so if you're listening on Apple Podcasts,
give us a little review.
Spread the word wherever you listen to podcasts.
Leaving a review and leaving a few stars around,
maybe up to five even,
really help people discover the podcast,
as does sharing our videos on YouTube,
as does sharing our social media posts
on Instagram and elsewhere,
or as does just telling a friend about it.
Hey, Joel, you're a friend of mine,
even though you made me eat the stuff.
I hear WERU is good to listen to.
Have you ever heard of the Judge Sean Adrin podcast?
No.
Well, give it a try sometime.
Maybe when you're- Sounds interesting.
Maybe when you're stuck in traffic on route 1 and you forgot to take Back Ridge Road.
Hey, we're just a few weeks away from the beginning of the Judge John Hodgman
Road Court Tour, and it's not too late for you to send us your cases for the road.
Are you a New Yorker fighting with a cab because you're walking over here?
I'd like to get that cab in, into the city winery,
and hear its side of the story.
What about Philadelphia?
What can we solve for you
that doesn't involve throwing a battery?
I know Washington, D.C. is our nation's capital,
but this is the highest court in internet land in Pittsburgh.
We've never brought our show to your city before,
or should I say Yin's city?
Bring your French fry laden sandwiches
and all your other hot beefs to us.
And if you live in the other cities that we're going to...
Wait, hold on.
I have to clear something up here.
I gotta clear the air.
Okay, you gotta clear the air.
We recorded some pre-roll announcements
that are broadcast locally to some of the cities
that we're visiting or the areas that we're visiting.
Local jokes get you local work.
We recorded them all in a row.
And apparently in recording the Pittsburgh one,
I accidentally said, ginsers instead of yinzers.
I know that yinzers are what Pittsburghers are called.
So I don't, it must've been me misspeaking or something.
I remember that going really well and I didn't hear you mispronounce it, but we did get a
letter from a Yinser saying, he said Ginzer or Ginzer. And maybe you were speaking about
Pittsburghians who only drink gin? I don't know.
Yeah. But anyway, I just want Pittsburghians to know that I know that you call yourselves Yinsers, which is why I was so excited to say Yinser.
I also know that there is an outfielder,
now mostly designated hitter for the Pittsburgh Pirates,
named Andrew McCutchen.
A legendary Pittsburgh Pirates player,
sort of one of those near Hall of Fame level players.
Really great player and a really lovely guy.
The Cutch.
Yeah, Cutch. He played for the Giants for three quarters of a season,
and he's still beloved in San Francisco just because
of what a charming guy he is.
Many years ago, the big furry con
is in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Sure.
And many years ago, the Pirates had a game the same day
as the furry con.
And I think they were sort of intermingling.
The crowds were intermingling there
in the downtown Pittsburgh area
where the three rivers connect.
Sure.
And Andrew McCutcheon tweeted the word furries.
Just that word?
Just the word furries.
This became an internet phenomenon that Andrew McCutcheon had just tweeted the word furries. This became an internet phenomenon
that Andrew McCutcheon had just tweeted the word furries.
People realized, especially in the furry community,
that the big furry con was going on in Pittsburgh that day.
So they knew what he was talking about.
And since that time...
Furry con, they got it going on.
Yeah, that was five or ten years ago.
And since that time, every year when the FurryCon rolls
into Pittsburgh, Andrew McCutcheon tweets,
furries.
And he's really embraced his role
as a non-furry icon of the furry community
and a hero of that portion of the Venn diagram that
is furries and pirates fans.
So if you're a furry or a pirate, you know you're welcome at our show in Pittsburgh.
If you're a Yinser of any kind. And that's right, I said Yinser.
And speaking of which, we also know the official names of all these other cities.
So if you're Ann Arbor, Michigan, you're an Arborian.
If you're a Madisonian of Wisconsin, if you're a St. Paulite of Minnesota, if you're a Burlington
Vermonty, if you're a Portlando from Maine, if you're a Turner there in Turner Falls,
and if you're a Commonwealthian child of Brookline, will be in Brookline, Massachusetts.
If you're a Vancouverite, a Seattlean or a Portlando of Oregon or a Rice-A-Ronian
from San Francisco, or a sweet, sweet angel
from the Angels, AKA Los Angeles.
You should come see us on Judge John Hodgman Road Court.
Get your tickets at MaximumFun.org slash events,
and get your cases to us for the Road Court
at MaximumFun.org slash JJ HO.
Jennifer, we've got some live episodes
from our last tour coming to the feed soon, right?
That's right.
I think when people listen to the live episodes,
I think Judge John Hodgman live episodes
are pretty much the only live episodes
ever to hit a podcast feed to a claim.
I have never, we have gotten so much positive feedbacks
about live episodes of Judge John Hodgman
and the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
It is a different show every single night of the tour,
featuring folks from the place where we are performing.
It is a thrill ride for us and the audience
every single time, as any of you who have heard
one of those live shows can attest to.
Plus, it has a lot of secret stuff
that you only get to see if you come to the show.
It is a really great time, and I hope that folks
in all of those places will go to maximumfun.org slash events
and get their tickets now.
By the way, John, we announced Ann Arbor.
Ann Arbor's full.
Sold out.
Sold out in one day. Ann Arborians are no longer called Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor is full. Sold out. Sold out in one day.
Ann Arborians are no longer called Ann Arborians. They're called sold
audios. Yeah, don't let that happen to you. Get your tickets,
maximumfund.org slash events. Get your cases in maximumfund.org slash
JJ HO. And by the way, as long as you're over there, maximumfund.org slash
JJ HO, that's where we get all of our disputes from you. They all go
directly to my eyes and ears
and love to hear from you about any dispute you might have
because after all, if we don't have your disputes,
we don't have a show.
So keep your beefs up and get your disputes in
at maximumfund.org slash JJHO.
And I did all that through a big mouthful of spicy salsa
and I feel pretty good about it.
Maximumfund.org slash JJHO, no matter what your dispute is,
but especially if you're in one of those places.
And we'll talk to you next time
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Maximum Fun.
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