Judge John Hodgman - Case: The Rainbow
Episode Date: September 6, 2023Dave brings the case against his niece, Morgan. When Morgan was around 5 years old, she stole his special collection of red skittles. And ate them! Even now, after 24 years, Dave is still mad. He dema...nds restitution! But Morgan says: she was just a kid. Who’s right? Who’s wrong?Thanks to reddit users u/Ok-Professional-7569 & u/joftheinternet for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com! Check out evidence from the episode on the Judge John Hodgman page on the Maximum Fun website or at Instagram.com/judgejohnhodgman.Judge John Hodgman’s Van Freaks Roadshow is getting ready to hit the road! LONDON! For 30% off your tickets to see us at the London Podcast Festival, use code JUDGE2023 at checkout! Visit vanfreaksroadshow.com for other dates, cities, and more information! And SUBMIT YOUR CASES along the tour route at maximumfun.org/jjho!
Transcript
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm Bill of Jesse Thorne. This week, case the rainbow.
Dave brings the case against his niece, Morgan. When Morgan was about five years old,
she stole Dave's special collection of red Skittles. Then she ate them. Even now,
She ate them.
Even now, after 24 years, Dave is still mad.
He demands restitution.
Morgan says she was just a kid.
Who's right, who's wrong, only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents an obscure cultural reference.
If we could live our lives backwards, everything would be an omen.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Dave Morgan, please rise and raise your right hands.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?
So help you, God or whatever.
I do.
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact that he's always eating Reese's
Pieces? Reese's Pieces for life.
I do. I do.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
This case is about Skittles. I don't think I've had a
Skittle since 1985.
Reese's Pieces, that's
the one I want. 1985 was
the great Skittles to Reese's
transition in American culture.
The Skittles came into this country in 1982 from Great Britain.
And I, you know, even though I don't have a sweet tooth, I have an alcohol molar.
I was curious like anyone else.
And I tried a Skittle, not for me, just sweet, not savory like a Reese's piece.
You inject a Reese's pieces with some gin, you got something there.
I'll follow that trail of breadcrumbs to my spaceship or whatever.
Aliens probably hate Skittles.
Aliens probably do hate Skittles. All right. Anyway, Dave and Morgan,
please be seated for an immediate summary judgment. In one of yours favors, can either of you
name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom? I'll give you the quote
again since it's short and it's very profound. If we could live our lives backwards, everything
would be an omen. Dave, let's start with you.
What's your guess?
I mean, that has to be John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, right?
The Grapes of Wrath.
Why does that got to be The Grapes of Wrath?
Well, I mean, one, this case is about Skittles.
And as we all know, grape Skittles are a thing that exists.
So therefore,
and then of course, moving backwards, it just fits with the whole, whole narrative.
The whole theme. The whole theme. All right. Is that the Dust Bowl novel? Grapes of Wrath?
Yeah. Right. Okay. What do you think, Morgan? What's your guess?
I have no idea. But the only thing that's coming to mind that has time that has any themes with
time is Doctor Who. So that's my, that's my thought mind that has time that has any themes with time is doctor who
so that's my that's my thought it's definitely not the answer but it's the only thing i can think of
yeah both interesting guesses both of them all wrong and i would say all guesses are wrong
now look didn't either of you read a wikipedia page about skittles like i did
five minutes ago i did it i. I did it yesterday, actually.
You think I've just been walking around
with the knowledge like it's normal
that Skittles got in trouble
when they changed lime Skittles
to green apple Skittles?
And then in response,
they released all lime Skittles?
There's a whole other thing happened
when they tried to honor Pride Month
and good for them by saying,
there's only one rainbow that deserves attention during Pride Month and good for them by saying, there's only one rainbow that deserves attention
during Pride Month, and that is pride. So we are taking the color out of our Skittles
and making them all white. You're like, I don't think the words white and pride and month should
ever be together. Honestly, just sensorily, the idea of a bag of white Skittles seems terrifying
to me. It's like a stalk of celery after Benicula eats it.
Oh, yeah.
Great writer's house client, author of Benicula.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
And do you think that I knew until literally this morning that there was a Skittles musical
that was performed one time at the theater called the Town Hall in Manhattan in the theater district.
It's not a Broadway house, but it might as well be. Starring Michael C. Hall,
the actor for whom the Town Hall was named, I believe.
Seems right.
The music was by Drew Gasparini. The book was by playwright Will Eno and Nathaniel Lawler,
and the lyrics were by Nathaniel Lawler. It premiered February the 3rd, 2019, as obviously a promotion for Skittles surrounding the Super Bowl. It was a 30-minute
musical. And you haven't read about this, so this is a treat that you get to enjoy in the future,
Dave and Morgan. But if you read this Wikipedia page, this is the most annoyingly meta musical
there is. The set is a recreation of the exterior of Town Hall
with audience members protesting
a commercial musical for Skittles.
It's like a snake eating its own tail
if the snake was made of Skittles.
I mean, anything that starts with the premise.
The Super Bowl's in town.
Let's put on some musical theater for candy.
Like they tried to book Michael Strahan
and they ended up with Michael C. Hall.
Yeah, we'll take any Michael, any acting Michael.
And the one line that is quoted here
is the only line that I could find from this musical.
If we could live our lives backwards,
everything would be an omen.
I mean, it's a great line.
Like, well, you know, he's a good playwright.
This is bananas, bananas stuff. Dave, well, you know, he's a good playwright. This is bananas. Bananas stuff.
Dave, are there banana Skittles?
Not in the normal pack, but they do exist.
There's a variety of flavors at this point.
Well, okay, let's get into it.
Who comes to my fake court seeking justice?
I do.
And that would be Dave.
Dave, what is the nature of your complaint?
Basically, the Porg is a dirty, rotten thief who stole all my red Skittles.
The borg?
The porg.
The porg?
The porg is what I call my fellow litigant, Morgan.
Morgan, who is your niece, correct?
Who is my niece.
All right.
You can certainly use actual names.
Okay.
There's nothing to hide or identify.
The porg is what I call her.
You call her the porg.
Her name is the porg. He doesn't call me anything else. Other than the porg. P-O what I call her. You call her the Porg. Her name is the Porg.
He doesn't call me anything else.
Other than the Porg.
P-O-R-G.
Yeah.
I think the last time he called me Morgan was when I was really little.
It's been the Porg for quite some time.
Permission to call you the Porg?
Sure.
Very good.
The Porg.
You have been accused of being a dirty, rotten thief.
the porg you have been accused of being a dirty rotten thief and i will complete the sentence by saying that dave accuses you of eating all of his red skittles that he had collected some almost
25 years ago or whatever how do you respond that that was 25 years ago or whatever um and
allegedly i ate all of his Red Skittles.
Do you deny it, the Borg?
I don't remember it.
You don't remember eating the Red Skittles?
I don't remember eating the Red Skittles.
Morgan, I don't remember going to my aunt's NRDC company picnic and then coming back
and saying I pooped on the beach like a dog. It doesn't mean that it didn't happen. That's fair.
But I'm just saying, I don't remember.
That's why I used the word allegedly.
I'll admit I may have eaten them.
I don't remember that.
But I think it's time has passed.
It was a small infraction and we should move on.
I see.
The Pork, Dave is your uncle,
but I think he's like only about 10 years older than you.
Can you explain this?
Yeah, so he's my mom's brother
and he was the youngest of the siblings to be born,
or to be born, I don't know.
And then I-
To get around to being born.
Yeah, and then my mom had me
and we just happened to end up being about 10 years apart.
We definitely function more as like we have more of like a sibling relationship.
And we're super close.
So, yeah, he's always been really close in age.
He's always taught me like video games and like fun stuff and been way more fun than most uncles.
Definitely more like a sibling.
Or simply like a funcle.
Yeah, definitely a funcle.
Definitely a funk.
Super close, though, except for this point of contention.
Right, Dave?
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
As the Porg stated, we are very close in age.
We grew up in the same household for many of our raising years.
That's what they're called.
So the porg very much is like the little sibling I never had.
My wife, who is a whole human being in her old right, refers to the porg as my nibbling.
Right.
That's an internet coinage for non-gendered niece or nephew term.
But yeah, the porg has always been that close little nibbling to me. And then to be
betrayed by her just hits the heart in a place that I can't imagine. Tell me the story. How old
were you when you were collecting these Skittles? If the porg was five or six, I would have been 15
or 16. Okay. So this is like prime years. You're collecting Skittles to impress girls. Exactly. Exactly. Like all 15, 16-year-old boys do.
I had a three-pound bag of Skittles.
All right.
And I love red Skittles.
And so in my mind, I decided I'm going to meticulously eat none of the red Skittles out of this bag.
Pick them out, place them in a glass jar, and save them. That way, when I've finished the three-pound bag of grape, orange, yellow,
and green, whether they're green apple or lime, right? Yeah. When those are all gone,
I will have this treasure trove of red Skittles. Every time I opened the door, I just heard the emanating from the jar. I just realized I have a question.
You work for Skittles or something, Dave? How do we get tricked into doing a product show?
You work for Skittles, don't you? I do not. I do not. I'm actually a federal employee.
You're in the packet of Big Skittle? You're a federal employee?
Federal employee. I do government oversight work for Veterans Affairs. I work
for the Office of Inspector General. Okay. We're doing a Skittle show. I just realized it. I just
realized it. I don't know why I got tricked into this. Maybe this is why I got tricked into it,
because I'm curious. Because as I mentioned, I've never had a Skittle in a long, long, long time.
They're just plain sugar, right? They don't have flavor,
do they? No. They do have flavor. No. Okay. The pork? No, they don't. I'll allow that objection.
So Skittles, the company, if you look this up, they don't actually have flavor. They only have
smell. So essentially like they scented the Skittles to trick you into believing that they
have flavor. Now you can argue the semantics of that all you want, right? But at the end of the
day, they don't actually have a flavor profile. They're not flavored. They just smell like each
thing. So like red smells like strawberry and green smells like green apple. Green apple
or lime. Or lime. Right. So you're saying that Skittles are essentially lip smackers?
Is that how lip smackers? Yeah. I mean, I guess. I mean, I've eaten a lot of lip smackers.
Have you eaten a lot of lip smackers? Yeah, they're a sham entirely. They're just. Wow.
Yeah, they're a sham entirely.
Wow.
Fighting words, Dave.
Yeah.
Hitting words.
Let me ask you a question, the poor.
You work for Whoppers or something?
Are you the opposition?
No.
You tell me you work for Whoppers, you win the case.
Maltesers?
I don't.
No?
No.
I work for an EV charging company.
It's not nearly as fun.
Electric vehicle charging company? Yeah. Oh. I work for an EV charging company. It's not nearly as fun. Electric vehicle charging company?
Yeah.
Oh, cool. All right. I just want to make sure that there's no undisclosed bias here or attempt to buzz market.
I wish I worked for Willy Wonka, but I don't.
That's why I have to ask these questions and do these background checks because
candy is a mean business. If Skittles got Dexter to be a Skittles musical,
who knows what length they'd go to to get onto our podcast.
I shouldn't think about these things.
I should have been afraid.
All right.
So the pork says that they have no flavor.
Dave, obviously flavor is subjective.
And the truth is aroma is part of flavor.
Judge Hodgman, I've done some exhaustive internet research over the past 120 seconds.
Yes, sir.
And according to perhaps the greatest scientific research organization in the world, TodayShow.com, while there is a neuroscientist who conducted a non-peer-reviewed quick study where he put nose clips on people and had them tell whether they were eating
the Skittle he told them they were eating. And he determined that while they have different flavors,
which is the sensation that we get by combining taste and smell, they had identical tastes.
The Skittles Corporation, Skittles Incorporated, whatever the company is that
makes Skittles, maintain very clearly that each Skittles candy does have its own taste
as well as its own flavor.
Let me put it this way.
Dave, have you ever done a blind taste test where you eat one Skittle and try to identify
the flavor or taste?
I did.
I did.
The Porg and her partner forced me into this to prove their
point in which they forced me to plug my nose and eat Skittles. I made the same contention that
I can't tell the difference between bourbon and gin with my nose plugged because smell is such
an important part of flavor. So I take you, you failed the test. I failed the test. But in general, you can tell the
difference because you can both see and smell. Absolutely. Absolutely. And I would, I would
contend even without my sight, I would be able to tell the difference. Right. Do you believe Dave,
when he says that with his nose unplugged, but his eyes closed, he could tell the difference between
a red Skittle and a lime Skittle. And I remind you, you're under fake oath. So even though you know what you want to answer
as the annoying nibbling,
I want you to be as honest as possible here.
Yeah, no, I believe him.
I did the blind taste test myself.
But yeah, so they don't have a sense of taste.
But I also kind of lost the desire
to pick different ones out, understanding that they're all the same
that's just kind of like i'm like why do you care if they're all the same they're they're basically
just yeah right so let's take a quick recess and hear about this week's judge john hodgman sponsor
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Here's an interesting question, the Porg.
If you hate Skittles so much, why did you eat all of Dave's Skittles?
Because I was five.
Ah, so you admit that you did it.
If I did it, I was five.
I don't know.
I was young and I didn't know. I didn't know any better. I liked
sweet things because I was a five-year-old or six-year-old, I guess. So we can dispense with
the pretense that this didn't happen. Yeah, no, I don't think that it, I don't know for sure that
it didn't happen. I just don't know if it did happen. I realized on the car ride over here
that for a very long time, my uncle has
told me that this story happened and was very grandiose about how it happened, said all these
different things. And then I realized that I never like tried to fact check. I never went to my
family. I never was like, mom, you know, did this happen? What was the grandiosity in his telling?
Did it all, did he say it all happened on an enormous sweeping
staircase or something? No, okay, so maybe grandiose isn't the right word, but it's like very,
like, I don't know, like very overblown. High emotion. Yeah, like very big and very, like,
this is a really big deal. You know, Morgan's a thief. And this was just in the car ride over here.
Yeah, this is what I pondered on the car ride over.
And how often does he bring it up?
I would say almost every time we see each other.
Like it is so much more often than I feel like it needs to be.
Let's say he and I see each other between five and ten times a year.
It's happening between five and seven times a year that he brings it up, I would say.
Dave, do you dispute that?
No, that sounds accurate.
So in your most grandiose style, explain, first of all, where you kept the Skittles, how many you estimated you had, how long it took you to collect them, and when you noticed that they were missing.
Absolutely. So as I stated previously, it was originally a three-pound bag. So I had collected
all of the red Skittles as I ate a handful at a time by placing them in a glass jar that was located on a large cabinet speaker right next to my bedroom door.
So within my bedroom.
Like a jam jar.
So a little bit smaller than a pickle jar.
Right.
And it got pretty full.
I'd say maybe, I mean, one-fifth of three pounds.
I mathed that.
I don't know.
All right.
Yeah.
So a good amount of Skittles.
And I'd say it took me
about a month to curate that collection. As you were working your way through this one three
pound bag. Correct. Correct. So yeah, just taking a handful, maybe two at a time, picking out the
reds, eating nothing but grapes, you know, purple, yellow, green, orange. Right. What is red flavor, by the way?
Supposedly cherry or something?
Supposedly, I believe it is strawberry.
Strawberry, okay.
And what was your plan for this jar full of red Skittles?
The plan was to enjoy it all in one, not in one serving.
In one sick Bacchanal.
But just to enjoy nothing but red Skittles.
I've always had a lifelong dream of opening up a fruit-flavored treat and having nothing but the red ones.
You know, the grapes, the limes, the lemons, they're just there for filler, right?
Right.
I mean, everybody always wants the red Popsicle, the red Skittle, the red whatever it is.
The red Baron.
Yeah, that's true.
The lime Baron was terrible.
Like, you pull the lime Baron, that's the worst.
One of the worst Barons.
No one wanted to be shot down by the lime Baron.
That was just embarrassing.
But I believe I discovered it when I had actually finished the bag.
So I had left the jar of Red Skittles unattended, went to school or whatever, knowing that when
I came home, that jar of Red Skittles was going to be there.
I was going to go up the stairs, open the door and see that jar of Red Skittles just
awaiting for me.
So I opened the door and I looked to the jar and saw not a jar of red Skittles,
but a jar of two red Skittles. I like that five-year-old Morgan left two for like plausible
deniability. Like, no, no, there's still Skittles in there. Yeah. See, and this is one of the,
this is, to me, this was insult to injury.
Not, she didn't take all of the Skittles.
She left me two.
You're welcome.
No, you miscounted previously.
There are two now as there were previously.
So I immediately was enraged in an enraged state, turned around, looking to the hallway area that was outside of my bedroom
and saw the porg who just laughed. And so, of course, did you eat my Skittles? No.
The telltale of a five-year-old lying. Just red smeared across her face like a cosplay Joker.
Yeah, asking me if I wanted to see how she got these scars and then immediately called
my mother, her mother into the room, voicing a complaint that my roommate had stolen my
Skittles.
And then as punishment, my sister told the Porg that she had to apologize to me.
And so I got a, I'm sorry. Was it an, I'm sorry? I was like, I'm sorry.
It was the latter. She was not sorry. Was her mouth like the brightest red?
Did you have physical evidence? I did not have physical
evidence. I believe she had done it earlier. After the initial denial, once she had been caught,
there was never a denial beyond that. I see. So let me get this straight. You came home,
there are two Skittles left. You go out into the hallway. The Porg is laughing at you.
You take that as a tacit admission of guilt.
You accuse her of eating the Skittles.
She says, no, I didn't.
Then you narc to your mom or hers?
Both.
Both moms?
Both moms.
Double narc.
Yeah.
One of them compels an apology from her,
which you take to be as tacit admission that she did it.
She did it.
Right.
When she denied doing it, she was like, wasn't me?
Or did she come up with an alternate series of facts?
No, there was no alternate series of facts.
It was just, no, I didn't.
Like, couldn't even finish the it wasn't me.
Couldn't even finish.
I know, right?
I wonder if she was even able to separate her jaw, given the amount of sugar that had
just compounded between her molars.
You're saying you caught her on the counter.
She said it wasn't me. You saw her eating Sk caught her on the counter. She said it wasn't me.
You saw her eating Skittles on the sofa.
She said it wasn't me.
Yeah, right, exactly.
She said she ate them in the shower.
It wasn't me.
Yeah.
Okay, one-fifth of three pounds of Skittles
is roughly 9.6 ounces.
Let's say that that's 10.
Each Skittle weighs 0.11 ounces.
So that means you could collect it in that jar,
roughly speaking, 90.90909090909090 repeated Skittles,
red Skittles, about 91 red Skittles,
which is about twice as much as a standard bag of Skittles, red Skittles, about 91 red Skittles, which is about twice as much as a standard bag
of Skittles, all red. A standard 2.17 ounce bag of Skittles contains an average of 56 pieces of
candy, those candies being Skittles. Boy, I mean, for someone who loves red candy so much,
just thinking about this must make you so excited. Oh man, I mean, the joy I was expecting.
Did you even know that you had gotten two bags
worth of Skittles until I did that math? I thought I always assumed it was one bag.
Yeah. Even more of that went down the drain of the Porg's digestive system.
Yeah. Was this uncharacteristic or was this characteristic of her behavior towards you?
This was fairly uncharacteristic. Generally speaking, we got along really well.
you? This was fairly uncharacteristic. Generally speaking, we got along really well.
The Porg and I are closer in age than her mother and I. The Porg and I really... I've already done enough math for one show. Yeah, yeah.
I don't need any more logic puzzles. And how did it affect your relationship after the betrayal?
Was there a cooling of relations? There was a cooling initially. I certainly
did not trust her initially. I believe
I even requested a lock be added to my bedroom door because of the incident. Eventually,
the Porgy and I did become besties again. But of course, one of our family traditions
is stories never die. They just keep being retold and retold over and over again.
Sure. Grudges. Yeah.
One of the family traditions is drubbing up old grudges.
I wouldn't even say it's drubbing up grudges.
It's getting a laugh, perhaps at the expense of somebody else in the family done with love.
Who's bringing up this story?
You.
Oh, I bring, I'm the one who brings up the story.
Yeah.
Right.
You're trying to get family yucks by telling the story over and over again that the Porg is a thief.
Yeah.
Trying to get attention.
That's accurate.
That's accurate. I do like me some attention.
Is it successful?
Oh, yeah.
The story goes over really well.
I'll talk to the Porg for a moment here.
When we talk about the family of the Porg, what family are we talking about?
What is the shape of this family?
And what was the conditions in which you, what family are we talking about? What is the shape of this family?
And what was the conditions in which you guys were living together with two moms, sisters?
Yeah. So we lived at the time, we lived with my grandma and grandpa, my mom, which is his sister, and my uncle.
Right.
Right.
So what, five, four, five people?
I don't know.
Five people.
Right. Right. So what, five, four, five people? I don't know. Five people. So, and then now that we've grown, we like, he and I both have partners. So it's, um, my aunt, his wife,
and then my partner, and then my mom, my other aunt, which is his other sister.
And then my grandma and I have a brother and then my other aunt has a son his other sister, and then my grandma, and I have a brother, and
then my other aunt has a son.
So it's like, you know, a little under 10 people, I think.
But not all living together still in like Skittles Mansion or something.
No, not all living together in Skittles Mansion.
But having an annual picnic on Angel Island in the San Francisco Bay where everybody comes
and says, do you remember that time that you pooped on the beach and then said you pooped on the beach like a dog?
We get together every holiday, almost.
Like there's very few holidays that we aren't together.
And then we also have occasions every now and then where we'll get together for like a Dodger game or something else where we get together.
And he tells the story with some frequency, not just to you, but to the whole family.
Yeah.
Do you think it's more important to him that you hear that you're a thief or that the family
hears that you're a thief and they all laugh and pat him on the back and say, good story,
all at your expense?
I think whoever he can tell that I'm a thief, he thinks it's funny.
Like, as long as it's told in his perspective
with love as a joke, then he's fine with whoever hears it.
How do you feel about it when he's telling these stories and your family laughs at you?
I'm just over it. Like, it's been going for so long. And my partner also thinks it's hilarious.
My partner's on his side on this case, which is very annoying because he thinks it's also really funny, but he's only heard it like twice. So if he had heard it the amount of times that I've heard it over the course of my life, I'm sure he'd probably be like, this story's whatever also. betrayal at this point has cooled you no longer feel it particularly keenly you're only dredging
this up in order to participate in the in the family tradition of telling jokes at each other's
expense at this stage of the game the the porg is one of my closest not only family members but just
one of my closest people in the world i i care for the poor deeply I hold no ill will towards the Porg other than this is a
great story that I love to tell.
And I think...
It's a good enough... Obviously, I
took the bait. Here you are on the
podcast. But it's not like...
There's not a lot of twist to it. The best part of the
story is that this weird kid collected
two packs of all-red
Skittles. That's the story.
Morgan, when I said, how does it make you feel when he tells this story?
You said, I'm over it in a way that made me believe that you were born over it.
Like, surely you never were really under it.
If it happened and if you're being truthful, you have completely forgotten it.
You didn't seem to care one way or the other whether or not you got blamed for it or not. You denied it, then you admitted it. You said you were sorry. Obviously,
you weren't. Ha ha ha, hee hee hee, agent of chaos. Exactly correct for a younger niece or
sibling. But surely now that you're an adult, hearing the story year after year after year,
your funcle saying, my friend and family member is unreliable and should not be
trusted. That's got to take a toll, no? Yeah. Okay. So my mom always used to say there's truth
in every joke. And so I think that's always kind of stuck with me, even though like I know he's
joking and he's even like told me like, hey, like, you know, like this is a joke, right? There's
still this like little part of me that's like, what if he actually like thought that at any
point in time? Or like, have I ever actually like thought that at any point in time?
Or like, have I ever other than that given him any reason to make him think that?
So like it's not that big of a deal.
Like, you know, hearing it over and over. But it does kind of subtly worry me a little bit that like there might be something there when it's told as often as it is and how often I hear like little teeny tiny jabs.
Like what form would a little teeny tiny jab take?
Kind of what I mentioned earlier.
So like the, you know, like, oh, well, like she can't be trusted because she,
you know, like don't trust her around your food.
Don't trust her around this.
And it's usually like a food-based trust level.
He doesn't usually take it farther than that.
But it's like, don't leave those around.
You know what I mean?
So it's like this little subtle jab.
Dave, do you acknowledge that she has not stolen any more of your precious red Skittles?
I mean, we haven't lived together.
Yeah, we have.
We have not lived together in quite some time.
My wife and I lived in Colorado, and the port was going to move in with us.
In fact, she did move in with us.
And the Porg was going to move in with us.
In fact, she did move in with us.
And then right after her stuff all arrived, she met a boy in Southern California and decided to stay in Southern California. And so I just had a room full of Porg stuff for the time that we were in Colorado.
And that giant glass carafe of red Skittles that you had collected in order to tempt an entrapper was all for naught.
Do you still like Skittles?
Skittles are a little on the sweet side for me now.
I enjoy them on occasion, you know,
generally in the fun size packet,
like you get at Halloween.
If they came out with an oops all red bag,
would you get it?
Would you enjoy it?
Absolutely, I would.
In fact, there is another candy that does that.
They came out with an all reds and pinks.
And it was actually the Porg who first alerted me to said candy coming out.
Why don't you say the name of the candy unless you are actually a shill for Skittles?
Because they're the opposition to Skittles and I would blow my cover if I said Starburst.
Oh, no.
Got it.
Did you ever bother to collect the red Skittles again?
No, my dreams were dashed.
Now, I will say...
What are your dreams were dashed?
How long did it take you to fill up this jar of red Skittles?
Like a month.
Yeah.
How many months have you been alive?
There are 12 months in your 15th year alone.
We've already established we're not doing any more math.
Don't you dare.
I'm just wondering how important to you it really was if you didn't even bother to recreate the red Skittles jar. We've already established we're not doing any more math. Don't you dare.
I'm just wondering how important to you it really was if you didn't even bother to recreate the Red Skittles jar or even go bigger and put it in a vault.
It was recreated for me when I was dating my wife.
She, having heard the story, because of course she did, she recreated the jar of Red Skittles for me and gave it to me, I think,
at a one-year anniversary. At your wedding? And at the altar? Prior to the wedding, but it's definitely one of the reasons I married her, for sure. Right. That's very adorable of your wife
to do that. I thought so as well. But seriously, is Morgan unreliable? Yes or no? No. Morgan is
incredibly reliable. Right. Does she steal food off of people's plates or whatever it is that you're accusing her of?
She does, but I do too.
Like, we share food.
That's perfectly acceptable.
Like, ooh, what is that?
Share is different than steal.
Well, I mean, we take without asking.
Okay.
Steal.
Yeah.
All right.
I'll make a note of something here.
Yeah.
It should be noted that Dave takes food off my plate very regularly.
Absolutely.
He also strategically plans his meals to make sure that you get something different than what he gets.
So that way you know that he's going to take something off of yours that he wants to try.
Okay. You know, like what? What is he stealing from your plate? What's he going for?
Like what? What is he stealing from your plate? What's he going for?
So like let's say like if I got the chicken tenders, he would get the hamburger so he could take a piece of my chicken tenders and make sure he got to try them. He wouldn't even have the decency to eat one tender. He'd be he'd be grubbing into your tenders, tearing them into pieces.
He might use a fork. He wouldn't just, like, manhandle the chicken tenders.
I would only take part of a tender if she didn't get that many.
Like, if she got 50 tenders, I'm taking a tendy. Like, that's that. But if she got five?
Right. You're saying if she gets five or three or whatever, you only want a bite, and hygienically, you're going to break that off with a fork.
Exactly.
Right. And obviously, you're going to break that off with a fork exactly right and
obviously you're going to ask her before you do this i mean there's an implied again she's getting
part she's getting some of my food too all right dave he took care of her stuff in colorado that's
true did you eat any of the tenders that she sent from southern cal to Colorado for her room. Yeah.
Her storage tenders.
I mean, they would have gone bad if I didn't.
Yeah, that's a fair point.
Do you steal food from his plate, Morgan?
No, I ask.
I don't steal food from anybody's plate.
I don't steal food from people.
Well, I do steal food from Steve's plate, my partner.
But he knows that's coming. Let the record reflect that Dave has offered a 45 degree head tilt to indicate.
I mean, it's really important to your case that you present yourself as reliable and non-deceitful.
Yeah.
So I'm going to ask you again, aside from your partner, because Dave is showing a tilt of the head that suggests that you're not telling the truth.
Now, this could be him laying another bad accusation at you. I want you to answer truthfully.
Yeah.
Do you take food from your family members' plates without asking?
Not unless they've stated it's okay to do so, or it's been implied that we are sharing plates.
Okay. And Dave is now nodding.
I would agree because anybody who eats with me,
especially within family, knows that that is always implied reality. Because that supports
your point of view. Does Dave do anything wrong that you don't also do with regard to taking food
off plates? Does that make any sense? Yeah, no, it does. I'm trying to think. I don't think so.
So you do, it's the same deal.
Will you take a bite of his chicken tendie?
Maybe, if I wanted it.
I don't know.
Sometimes, I feel like sometimes it's like this, like, he always sets the precedent that we must share food.
Like, that's just how it is.
And so, like, it's just there at the beginning of the conversation.
Morgan, has any of this brought up details of the day that the Skittles went missing?
No.
I mean, literally, you have no memory at all.
Even a false memory that he's implanted into your consciousness by telling the story over and over again.
Nothing.
Yeah, the interesting thing about the story is, first of all, it started off as as a two pound bag. The cup type has changed. It wasn't always a jar. Sometimes it's
been a cup. I thought for a period of time it was a red solo cup. Yeah. The location of the jar or
cup has been changed because I know for a fact it was right by the door because that's how I saw it
and I clocked it. But at one point I think he said it was like up on a shelf um for the holiday season yeah just to show it off
but I do remember I very vividly so this is why like I think it could be true I very vividly
remember the two Skittles and I don't know if he showed it to me and was like, did you eat this? Or if I ate them and looked at it and was like, ha ha, this is funny.
I don't know.
I do think it should be noted we also had two dogs at the time.
So things going missing or somebody helping me.
What were your two dogs' names?
M and M?
Bart and Lucy were their names.
Oh, that's cute names.
Bart was named after Bart Simpson because that was like David's favorite character growing up.
And Lucy was named after Lisa Simpson?
Peanuts. Linus and Lucy.
Linus and Lucy. Got it.
Yeah. So I feel like if I did have help, that's who helped me.
Because if I was that young, I don't know.
The idea of eating that many Skittles today gives me a stomachache just thinking about it.
But I know when I was a kid, I had an iron stomach.
Actually, no, I didn't.
I had really bad tummy troubles when I was a kid.
So I don't know.
Do you think it's possible that eating half a pound of red Skittles cured your colic?
I think, if anything, it contributed to it.
You know that Skittles were originally invented in England as a patent medicine, Jesse.
They were originally called Skittles Nerve Tonics, and they were good for your thymus gland.
They improved memory and skin tone, and they cured sciatica originally.
I take them whenever i have
the gripe yeah totally they're terrific for gout as well but only the purple ones for some reason
because they're very different each one is different it cures something else purple are
my favorite oh by the way this is a reminder don't take medical advice from our show skittles are
candy skittles are not medicine. Don't take them.
How many podcasts do you think have to offer, Skittles are not a medicine?
Well, they look like little red pills, right? Little red pills.
On some of these podcasts, they don't even bother saying that.
Were you trying to get red-pilled before that was even a thing, Dave?
Yeah, the Matrix had not come out yet. I was not going for the... You're saying you invented the idea.
Yeah. That's right. Somebody owes me
some money. Open your eyes and taste the rainbow.
Alright, Dave.
It says here that if I were to rule in your favor,
you would want me to
order the Porg to give you
a heartfelt apology
and for the Porg to recreate the red skittle experiment,
to do it all over again and give you the red ones.
But importantly, she has to eat the non-red skittles.
Why is it important that she has to eat them?
Because that was part of the betrayal,
was that I suffered through the non-red skittles with no red Skittle to make that enjoyable.
I see.
Your favorite candy was also existential punishment.
Right.
I understand.
And also you offer you an extra regular sized bag of Skittles?
As interest.
As interest, I see.
Even though your wife already did the Red Skittle thing.
Without assistance from the porg.
Morgan, you would like me to rule that Dave never brings it up again and for him to stop smearing your name.
Correct.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Dave, how do you feel about your chances?
You know, I have no idea.
The judge is very hard to read.
I was very saddened to hear that the PORG thinks that there may be a kernel of truth in my accusations.
I do want her to know that she is incredibly important to me, and I do not think she is a person of bad character. And perhaps I should re-examine how frequently I tell the story
so that she knows that she is cared for and that it is all done in loving jest.
I find the judge very easy to read. I enjoyed medallion status, vacation land.
I recommend them to our audience.
Morgan, how do you feel?
Good.
I feel like I represented myself in the best way that I could.
So whatever happens, it will be based on my character.
Do you think Dave will ever treat you like a grown-up?
Yeah.
I think that he does a decent job of it today.
We'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about all this when we come back in just a moment.
Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that
listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school
year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a
valuable and enriching experience.
One you have no choice
but to embrace, because yes,
listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney
is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you. And remember,
no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh, no running in the halls. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Judge Hodgman, the Van Freaks Roadshow is hitting the road.
That's right.
We've been talking a lot about our shows in Europe, in Dublin and London.
That's September 12th in Dublin, September 15th and 16th in London at King's Place.
Yeah, that's right. Part of the London Podcast Festival.
But Europe is not the last stop on the Van Freaks Roadshow Tour because we will be visiting the new world, America.
That's absolutely right.
Starting October 9th, we will be in a place I've never been to in my life,
Kentucky, the Bluegrass State.
Lexington, Kentucky specifically,
going to that Lexington Opera House at the Lexington Center.
We'll be bringing our opera voices.
I'm a boy soprano and you're a basso profundo.
It's going to be very exciting.
We're also going to be at the Park West in Chicago, the Majestic Theater in Madison, Wisconsin.
Jesse, you're going to be so excited to see this theater.
It's a theater that literally turns a corner.
The house turns a corner.
I can't acclaim.
Love it. Fitzgerald Theater, one of the most beautiful theaters I've ever performed in. Love it so much. St. Paul, Minnesota. The Paramount in Austin, Texas.
Again, this is just hit after hit in terms of incredible theaters and incredible green rooms.
Some of my favorite green rooms in the world are these theaters. Plus the Variety Playhouse,
where we slayed it in Atlanta. Oh, that was a fun show.
Right before we had to hide out for a couple of years. The Carolina Theater,
another beauty in Durham, North Carolina. The Paramount Theater in Charlottesville,
Virginia. I've never been there before. I bet it's gorgeous. The Lincoln Theater in Washington,
D.C. We've been there before. And of course, the wonderful State Theater in Portland, Maine.
The Wilbur in Boston, Massachusetts, and then a huge old final show
in Brooklyn at the Murmur Opera House in Williamsburg. Incredible venues, incredible
shows, incredible surprise guests that we're lining up right now. We're going to be combining
all of the litigious fun that you've come to know from Judge John Hodgman, plus songs, plus antiques,
plus roadshows, plus vans. You're going to love it,
and you ought to go over to the Van Freaks Roadshow website right now.
Guess what?
It's called vanfreaksroadshow.com to get those tickets
and to send in your disputes for all these places.
First of all, I think our podcast is the only podcast I've ever been involved with
where we get lots of letters from people
who like the live shows even better than the studio shows.
That's right.
Which, thank you very much.
Not only do you get to experience that live, but there's a lot of stuff that doesn't go on to the podcast because we want to keep it special for people who buy a ticket and come to see us.
Secret special stuff.
I'm going to sing two songs.
Might get to see Judge Hodgman sing.
We settle the disputes of the people in the audience.
We often do a little slideshow. We have a disputes of the people in the audience. We often do a little
slideshow. We have a lot of fun. One very, very special, I dare say unique thing we do as a
touring podcast, we stand up. We don't just... Yeah, we actually do a show. We don't just sit
behind a card table. Okay, you know... I mean, not that there's anything wrong with that. On
Jordan Jesse Go, we sit behind a card table. Yeah, no, not that there's anything wrong with that. I'm just saying... On. We sit behind a car. Yeah, no, not that there's anything wrong with that.
I'm just saying.
On the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We stand up.
That's right.
We wear little outfits.
We stand up.
We walk around.
We have special stools for the little.
It is a blast.
It's a great time.
We don't have an inflatable dinosaur like I saw one time on Radiolab Live, but we haven't got that kind of budget.
No, no inflatables.
Maybe if everybody comes to the show next time around, we'll have that kind of budget.
We'll have dinosaur budget.
It's possible.
Anyway.
Could happen.
Come join us on the Van Freaks Roadshow, vanfreaksroadshow.com.
That's vanfreaksroadshow.com.
And if you've got a case in any of those places, we want to hear about it.
Go to maximumfund.org slash JJHO and submit it. Let's get
back to the case. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
So one thing I have to circle back to is this contention you made, Dave, that everyone loves
the red Skittles or everyone loves red things.
Red Baron, Clifford the Big Red Dog.
I mean, obviously we don't like
Clawford the Big Yellow Dog.
I like Clawford.
Clawford's fine.
But you offer this baseline presumption
that everyone would love
a red Solo Cup full of red Skittles.
And the truth is people like what they like
and I'm not here to shame
your kinks. Red Skittles do nothing for me. But now that I say it, a red Solo cup full of red
Skittles sounds pretty hot. Next time you tell this made up story that you clearly are changing
the details on as time goes on, three pound bag, two pound bag, up on a shelf, up on a speaker jar,
red Solo cup, lock in on the red Solo cup. Because that's a good part of the story. I think that's a really good detail that really brings it home, but it makes
me feel it more. You know what I mean? I, a person who does not like a Skittle to begin with any
color. I also liked the part of the story where you're going upstairs, you're getting home from
school. You cannot wait to see your red solo cup of red Skittles because it's not in this moment,
just a story about your kink for red Skittles, because it's not in this moment, just a story about your
kink for red Skittles. It's also a story about your achievement and its loss. And then in order
for this story to have a completion to it, because we already have the protagonist on his hero's
journey to collect all red things, he accepts the call to adventure and to taste that rainbow, that rainbow of a
single color. Achieves his goal, then has the achievement stolen from him. There has to be a
thief. And you made the porg the thief. And then the story ends. I mean, the truth is that it's unsatisfying as a story because your accusation is made.
She apologizes in the moment.
No one sold a hank of hair to get a gold pocket watch to buy a hairbrush for the hank of hair.
Do you know what I mean?
Like there's something missing to your tale.
I'm glad your family enjoys it.
But if there were some kind of twist.
Yeah, yeah, I get it.
But you wanted to have more of a story.
You wanted a story to tell and continue to tell and continue to tell.
For that, you needed the Porg to be a villain for the rest of her life.
And you created a character for her, which was she's a thief and she's unreliable.
She steals food.
Before you pull a moat out of Morgan's eye,
check the chicken tender that's lodged in yours.
I think the porg is one of these admirable people
who lets these accusations of Skittle stealing
roll off her back pretty easily.
Like, I don't sense from you, Morgan,
a real sense of
aggrievement that Dave has been out there all this time calling you a liar and a thief.
Now, Morgan, you're a cool character. The Porg is pretty cool, right, Dave?
She's incredibly cool.
Incredibly cool. But I think you don't deserve to have to shrug this off.
Being called unreliable and a thief takes a toll,
even if it's in the context of a family joke.
There could have been a version of this
where the porg was delightfully evil.
A version of the story where you caught her
and you said, you ate my Skittles, didn't you?
And she shook her head no vigorously
and said, I know you did.
And then she shrugged and then spat all the skittles back
into the red solo cup. You know what I mean? This is getting lively now. Now we got a protagonist
and an antagonist as opposed to just a useful patsy, a five-year-old. But absent having a
real protagonist and a real antagonist and a struggle for authority or whatever the story
is going to be there, right?
Your story basically redounds to this five-year-old ate my candy,
which is fine.
And then the fiction
that Morgan is still a five-year-old on some level,
that she's a mischievous thief and liar
and unreliable person
when she's an adult who you care about.
That's the core of the story without
anything else. And you haven't even offered any evidence that she was that person when she was
five, other than the lone Skittles incident. I feel that you actually felt a keen sense of
disappointment. I believe you and I see you. When those red Skittles were taken from you,
that's the hardest part of the story. That's the most meaningful part of the story.
And it is fine for you to have told that story for as long as you've had.
I understand that you were wounded then.
I would focus on that.
It's not a grave offense that you've continued to tell this story, but now I think it is
time to set it aside.
I think it is unfair to the poor to continue to call her a liar and a thief, even in jest. And yet, I will say, that wound that you
felt was real, and it needs to be healed for once and for all. It is nice that your wife gave you a
jar of red Skittles at the altar of your wedding, but it seems plausible and maybe even probable
that the porg did either eat or get rid of those Skittles and
laughed at you. And the Porg has to make good. Morgan, I'm not going to ask you to eat four
fifths of a bag of Skittles in order to get the red ones. Thank you. We're not about torture here.
Cruel and unusual punishment is not part of our game on the Judge John Hodgman show.
But I do order you, however you do it, to get your hands on 90.909090909090 repeating forever,
all red Skittles, put them in a jar and deliver them to Dave and say, this makes it right.
And then I don't care. Maybe, I don't know, bury the jar with a hatchet or something.
Something symbolic.
Get in some chicken tenders.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Dave, how do you feel? You know, it's not that far off of what I was expecting.
So I'm feeling I'm feeling OK about it. It just means that I've got to get a new story.
Did I ever tell you guys the one about when the Porg and I went on an internet podcast. I can't. Morgan, how do you feel?
Good.
This was the outcome that I wanted, more or less.
I do have to figure out how to get my hands on 9.90909 or whatever, the antigen of Skittles.
So that'll be a fun adventure.
I mean, have you thought about, like, the drugstore?
Not just the separating apps. I'm not telling you how to live your life.
I'm just saying.
I got to figure out how to separate them out and then not waste the additional ones.
So there's probably going to be candy dishes all over my house for a really long time of just Skittles with no red Skittles in them.
Morgan, Dave, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Happy to be here.
Thank you.
Dave, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Happy to be here.
Thank you.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
We'll have swift justice in just a moment.
First, our thanks to two redditors, OK Professional 7569 and J of the Internet.
They named this week's episode Case the Rainbow.
Join the conversation at the Maximum Fun subreddit.
That's at maximumfun.reddit.com.
That's where we have been asking for title suggestions.
You can see evidence and photos from this show on our Instagram account at instagram.com
slash judgejohnhodgman.
Plus dank memes sometimes.
You know, sometimes we'll post some dank memes.
Yeah, sometimes we have some really cool dank memes.
We got to do something with a red solo cup full of red Skittles.
If you want to send us a dank meme, we'd love to get your dank memes.
Post them on the Reddit.
Send us dank memes at Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
This is going to be great.
All your meme-age.
All your meme-age belong to us.
Let's see.
What else?
Oh, Judge John Hodgman created by Jesse Thorne and Judge Hodgman.
This episode engineered by Yvonne Rapin and John McDonald at Cinematic Arts and Sound in Oceanside, California.
Marie Bardi runs our social media.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Now, Swift Justice.
Michael says, I want the court to rule that my five-pound chihuahua is too small to be considered a dog.
Any no-dogs-allowed signage couldn't possibly apply to him.
Of all the ways that people are trying to sneak their dogs into places where there shouldn't be,
particularly their small dogs, to say that's not a dog.
It's extraordinary.
That's the boldest and the most bald-faced of lies.
The gall, the sheer gall.
I hope you have a big enough gallbladder
to handle all your gall, Michael. Yeah, no dogs allowed means your dog. Means your dog and your
dog and your dog too. Train service dogs, obviously get in there, you dogs. But if it says no dogs
allowed, that means your dog. Here's my suggestion for a little test, a little mental test before you
make the claim that your five-pound chihuahua
doesn't count as a dog. When you see that no dogs allowed sign, imagine if in there,
they would accept weird rats, weird, enormous rats, because that's what a five-pound chihuahua is.
I love my chihuahua. I love all chihuahuas. But if you're claiming it's not a dog,
it's definitely a weird five pound rat. So.
Right. That's the only other alternative. You're absolutely right, Jesse Thorne.
I hope you enjoy your rat, Michael. Anyway, you can't bring a dog on an airplane unless it's a
service dog. Can't bring a giant rat on an airplane unless it's a service rat. But we
are headed on airplanes. We're about to travel the world. The whole world.
Well, a good portion of it to bring justice to Europe, the UK,
and a whole bunch of the USA.
And we need your cases.
Think of someone who is wrong and write to me at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
And of course, let us know that you live in one of those places so that we know,
so we can get you into the show and get your special privileges and
get you on stage. Yeah, it's going to be fun. Disputes are the engine upon which Judge John
Hodgman both live and recorded run. So were you thinking, I don't think my dispute with my niece
over a jar of Skittles is going to make the grade. Oh, it makes a grade grade A+. Get all of your disputes on any subject over to us at
MaximumFun.org slash JJHO. Hey, John, before we go this week, as we were recording this week's
episode, like literally as we were in the studio, I got a text from our former producer, Julia Smith,
that said that Paul Rubens had passed away. And folks know Paul is a brilliant writer and actor,
not least as Pee Wee Herman, his iconic character.
And so, like, I have a lot of comedy heroes, certainly, as we all do.
There's not a moment's doubt for me
that my greatest comedy hero is and was Paul Reubens.
Pee Wee Herman is the thing that made me think
that I would want to do this with my life.
It's the thing that like defined my childhood that I had no less love and appreciation for at any moment in my life.
I used to, my parents had split custody, 55-45, and the 55 was with my mom.
And it meant that every Friday night after school, I would go to my mom's house. And on Saturday mornings,
she and I, my mom, a person who truly does not understand almost any of popular culture, would watch Pee Wee's Playhouse together. And there's nothing more special to me than that.
And there's nothing more special to me than that.
And a few years ago, I got an email from my friend Nick White.
And he was working at KCRW in Santa Monica at the time.
And he said, you know, our program director had a meeting with Paul Rubens.
He wants to make a show for KCRW.
And I told him the only person to produce it is you.
And I had a meeting with the program director.
He said, do you have any ideas for what the show could be?
I did.
And he brought it to the highest ups there.
They said yes.
And I brought in Julia Smith, who was the original producer of this show. And like, it's my job to meet celebrities and artists for Bullseye, right?
Right. I will never forget the experience of sitting down in a diner across from Paul Rubens.
in a diner across from Paul Rubens.
And he could not have been more warm, welcoming, and kind to me.
And to work with him on something, I think will always be the highlight of my professional career.
And the thing that I think about if I think, gosh, maybe I should have just become a veterinarian or something, I'll think, you know, you got to make a radio show with Paul Rubens.
And it was very difficult to make.
Right.
It was monumentally difficult to make
because Paul was extraordinarily protective
of this character that had defined his life and legacy.
Yeah.
As he had earned the right to be.
And Paul didn't want to improvise at all
and was just incredibly...
I mean, it took us years to make that hour-long show.
And there was not one moment in all of that hard work
that I thought anything other than,
I can't believe that I get to make a radio show with Paul Reubens.
And there was not one moment when I thought anything other than,
this is one of the kindest, most gracious geniuses
I've ever had the chance to sit across a table from.
And considering how hard it was to make this show,
I think that's a pretty extraordinary achievement.
And, you know, Julia texted me while we were recording, as I said,
and she said, I just know that he had more art to make
and more friends to make and you know i i don't think you
could find someone who had a greater gift at either and when i thought about it like
the thing that i thought was gosh i guess i'm not going to get a text from Paul on my birthday anymore.
Yeah.
Um,
and so,
you know,
uh,
I just wanted to take this opportunity to thank him because,
um,
I feel lucky not just to have worked with him
but to have been able to
have his gift and his work
touch my life in the ways that they did
and the ways that they will continue to do
and so I hope everybody out there will go and,
um, you know, watch Pee-wee's Big Adventure or show the playhouse to their kids or just take a
moment to, to appreciate the like absolute singular genius of Paul and that character. And what a jerk Pee-wee is.
I mean, you know, yeah, but I'll just say this, that, you know, people would resonate with Pee-wee
People would resonate with Pee Wee for a lot of different reasons.
But as an only child watching that weird only child living in that house,
I was like, I get this guy.
I get this guy really good.
I understand the selfishness.
I understand it.
I am a loner, Dottie.
I'm a rebel.
The first thing I said when I found out that he had passed,
he passed apparently after struggling with cancer.
That's what's been reported, and I don't know anymore.
Only that I'm glad to, you know, any age would be too young, but I hope that he passed on his own terms as best as possible for him. But I didn't know about it until you told
me right after we finished recording with the litigants. And the first thing I said was,
thank you for not telling me, because I don't know that I would have been able to do it. You were heroically dealing with those emotions because not only your idol, but your friend passed away.
And I knew that too.
And while I met him in passing one time in an act of sheer kindness on his part, which is very common, I didn't have the relationship that you had with him.
But of course, I, like everyone else, loved him. And quite rightly, I mean, not only was he really,
really, really funny, but he was heroic. When you think about what people saw in Pee Wee Herman,
right? Obviously, weird only children saw a weird only child. But Pee Wee represented such an alternate and completely unapologetic way of being in the world that I know was very disruptive to the male MTV culture of the 1980s.
You know, the cis male MTV culture of the 1980s. You know, the cis male MTV culture of the 1980s.
And he triumphed in showing kids other ways to be,
not just in himself,
but when you look at who he put on Pee Wee's Playhouse,
you know, the backgrounds
and the way people looked on that show.
You think about how many kids looked at that show in the 1980s, never seeing anything like themselves.
And I'm not just talking about, you know, race, ethnic background, whatever.
I'm also just talking about straight up weirdness.
Yeah.
Like weird kids didn't have a lot in mainstream culture to look at and feel like, oh, I am completely, I do not listen
to Van Halen and everyone at my school bullies me, but I feel like I belong there. Nevermind the
fact that he could pivot perfectly between the downtown subversive arts scene to mainstream
culture, right? And bring people along with him. Phil Hartman, you know, was in the original Pee-wee's
stage show along with countless other, like the, when I discovered that the set design on
Pee-wee's Playhouse was by Gary Panter, the freaking visionary cartoonist and visual artist,
like what, what he curated in that show and all of his work for the world to see was a completely different way to be alive and be happy.
And it was just so meaningful, you know, and also obviously cross-generational because that was along with the Muppet movie.
Pee-wee's Big Adventure was one of the movies that I and my kids equally adored.
was one of the movies that I and my kids equally adored.
And we can still like just laugh if we just look at each other.
And I'm going to see, I'm going to see, we're all going to be together because they're out in the world.
They're adults basically now.
They are actually.
But like when I see them all together this weekend,
I know that I can just look at our daughter or our son and just be like,
I say we let him go.
I just, I, I, I, I,
I'm jealous that you get to miss him personally because that means that you
actually got to be with him. But I think we would miss him.
We miss him really terribly. And it's only been an hour since we found out. And I just, you know,
thank you. Thank you, Pee Wee. Thanks. You know, when we made the radio show,
which by the way, is on kcrw.com. You can listen to it if you want to. We booked Charo to be the
guest, which we couldn't believe we got.
Like, we're like, we have this long list of like,
Jack White made an appearance on the show,
but I couldn't believe that we got Charo.
And Charo came in and, you know,
Charo is Spanish and has a grand accent.
Right.
Central to her art is her brilliant guitar playing
and her cartoonish persona.
Also, she says, coochie-coochie.
Yep.
And she came in just in a flurry, as you would hope,
and she gave Paul a big hug,
and she said,
I love to see you, Pee-wee.
And then she turned to me and she says,
His name, it is not Pee-wee,
but I call him that. It's okay.
And so,
thanks, Pee-wee.
And thanks, Paul. Both of you
completely changed my life.
So, thanks so much. All right. And thank you, changed my life. So thanks so much.
All right.
And thank you, everyone.
Yeah.
Thank you for listening.
And we'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
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