Judge John Hodgman - Citation For Glittering
Episode Date: June 30, 2021Rudy, of RUDY'S PLACE, returns to Judge John Hodgman's court and brings his wife, Mary, with him! Rudy can’t stand glitter. He says that Mary keeps bringing it into the house and would like her to s...top. Mary says that Rudy needs to find a better way to cope. Who’s right? Who’s wrong? With Guest Bailiff Jean Grae!The Rudy's Place theme song: Lyrics written by Judge Hodgman, performed by Jonathan Coulton.LINKS DISCUSSED IN THIS EPISODE: bit.ly/dicktownMaximum Fun's I, Podius with John Hodgman, Elliott Kalan, and Jordan KauwlingElizabeth Glibert's Pilgrims and Stern MenJean on Instagram! Follow her @jeanniegrigioBlue Man GroupAdam Savage at tested.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Jean, Jean, Jean, it's me, Judge John Hodgman.
Jean, thank you so much for guest bailiffing today.
Of course.
Thank you for asking me.
But I need to give you some background on what is about to happen on the show.
Okay.
Because this has never happened before.
This is never.
This is a previously on Judge John Hodgman segment.
Yes.
So today we're hearing a case between a person named Rudy and his wife, who is a whole human
being in her own right, Mary, about glitter.
But you have to know that Rudy has been on the show before.
Oh.
Yeah.
He appeared some weeks ago in verdict number 518.
There's an app L at court for that.
Rudy was the defendant.
there's an app ellett court for that rudy was the defendant uh his grown son patrick was taking his dad rudy to court because rudy would not stop pitching his idea for a new social networking app
what's the app well first of all you have to understand it's called rudy's place
and it's a virtual hangout slash bar where people could hang out together and then they could
buy each other drinks using the app where do the drinks come you've seen yeah right you see some of
the problems already their own i presumably their own refrigerator or liquor cabinet or sarsaparilla it's more like um a metaphorical drink anyway
patrick and his sister bridget who had been hearing about this idea for all this time
time and time again every family gathering rudy would tell patrick and his sister bridget
and any of their many many many cousins by dozens, that this app was a good idea.
They said that it was not a good idea.
But Rudy kept saying, this is my gift to you.
One of you should make this app and become a millionaire.
And Patrick was like, I'm not going to do it.
I just want to be left alone.
I want you to order my dad to stop pitching Rudy's Place.
And I did.
And Rudy accepted that. But then
Rudy turned around and revealed that he has a separate dispute with his wife and whole human
being Mary because she loves glitter and he hates it. That's what we're going to hear today.
Rudy is a weird dad, but we ruled an interesting dad. Okay. He retired last year from a career in
energy and environmental policy. He's now getting a PhD in philosophy of technology.
Ambitious. With his thesis being technology is evil and bad. energy and environmental policy he's now getting a phd in philosophy of technology ambitious with
his thesis being technology is evil and bad that's why he's that's why he wants to develop
this app right loves the minnesota vikings hates yachts fears sharks but does not hate sharks
i've also learned recently that he is a jeopardopardy champion and absinthe drinker,
and he can, quote, source the lyrics of Disco Inferno to an obscure English philosopher, end quote.
That quote comes from one of the several very, very long letters
that Rudy and Mary's friends and neighbors have been sending me
since the last time Rudy was on this podcast.
You listed a lot of things, but maybe you could have just led with a drinker of absinthe and then
explained everything after that.
Everything else derives from that.
I have a feeling.
Jean,
these people,
Rudy,
Mary,
Patrick,
Bridget,
cousins,
friends,
neighbors,
taking over,
taking over this podcast.
We had to make a segment,
a weekly segment called Rudy's place to deal with all this rudy content and jonathan
colton even wrote a theme song do you want to hear the theme song i what okay yeah well no
oh no because this is my podcast it's got my name on it the judge john hodgman it's not rudy's place
this is a judge john hodgman podcast so we'll play. So no, Jean, I'm sorry.
Well, actually, we'll play it at the end of the podcast.
Anyway, that's the background on Rudy, Rudy's Place, Mary, and everything else.
Oh, I forgot to say one thing.
They live in an unnamed town on a road called Big Toad Road.
I don't. What do you mean an unnamed town?
Oh, because we can't say.
I'm not saying the name of the town,
but I know that their road is called Big Toad Road.
Big Toad Road.
I suppose there was a extremely large toad at some point
that someone had to be like, it was so big,
get rid of the other name.
Well, Jean, that's all.
That's it.
You can start the show whenever you want.
Can I take a nap?
Yeah, let's take a little break.
All right.
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm guest bailiff Jean Gray sitting in for Jesse Thorne.
This week, citation for glittering. Rudy can't stand glitter. He says that Mary keeps bringing
it into the house and would like her to stop. Mary says that Rudy needs to find a better way to cope.
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. As a further preliminary matter,
you should know that I have been to Big Toad Road on many occasions. I can assure you that
whatever mental images you and your listeners have conjured up are absolutely accurate.
and your listeners have conjured up, are absolutely accurate.
Guest bailiff Jean Gray, please swear them in.
Please rise and raise your right hands.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?
So help you God or the holy construction of checker cabs in the 70s and 80s that had flip-top stools in the back with no seat belts.
So help me, RBG.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling despite the fact?
Oh, there's usually a joke.
No, that's it.
That's the joke.
Despite the fact.
I do.
Absolutely.
Wonderful.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Rudy and Mary, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment.
In one of yours favors, can either of you guess the source of the quote that I offered you?
I've been to Big Toad Road on many occasions.
Is that a planet from Next Generation?
I've been to Big Toad Road on many occasions, I can assure you.
It sounds more like a Walt Whitman.
It sounds like more Walt Whitman.
I thought you guys were going to get this
because I was certain that you had been CC'd
on this particular letter that was sent to me
from one Mark.
Does that name mean anything to you?
I did not see the letter.
Cousin Kathleen's husband.
Yeah, this is a letter dated June 12, 2021. Mark is the husband to Mary's first cousin Kathleen, honorary uncle to Patrick and
Bridget, your children. It is a lovely letter in support of the concept of Rudy's Place, the app,
and very much in support of Rudy personally in a very moving way. I'll forward you the letter and
share it on the show page. But I will also point out that it's been in my inbox for 10 days.
I only just read it this morning because it is 1,423 words long.
I'm touched.
1,423 words.
Mark sent a letter to me.
I then received a letter from Kathleen,leen mark's wife in support of mary
pointing out that glitter is fun and festive that mary is an incredibly generous of spirit and she
gives cards and gifts adorned with glitter and wonders how rudy will even keep glitter out of
the house when he cannot prevent a simple squirrel infestation more on that later
kathleen wrote i quote in fact i noticed a parked car yesterday that had a pink glitter steering wheel cover and thought it would be a perfect gift for Mary.
End quote.
That's 27 words.
That is just 27 words from her 702 word long letter.
702.
That's half of Mark's letter.
That's better.
You know, we all grew up with print magazine.
That's a whole page in a print magazine.
So we'll post Kathleen's letter as well.
But I'm issuing on my own behalf a restraining order.
Mark and Kathleen may not write me again.
I don't need this homework.
1,400 words, Mark. Get your word count down. So now let's go to the courtroom. Finally, finally get someone some justice here. Mary,
we already know a lot about Rudy. He's been on the show before. So let's get to know you a little
bit. You are, I says here, uh, you were a prosecutor in Manhattan in the 1980s and you are now a law professor.
Guilty.
Lingo.
And now you teach prosecuting in what field?
So, yeah, well, this is kind of the opposite of glitter. So my day job, my day gig is a little heavy. So I work on a lot of violence against women issues. And so, you know, intimate partner violence, sexual assault stuff that's kind of heavy, right? Not usually at a comedy show. So I would say that the work is heavy. The rest of my life should have a little bling in it.
All right. And you noted before we started recording that you have fairy lights behind
you, but it's not your fault. No.
Right. That is your daughter's former. Well, actually, I like them. No,
now that I think about them, I think I did put them up. Oh, dear. Guilty again.
Where did you live in Manhattan in the 1980s? I couldn't afford to live in Manhattan initially
in the 1980s. So I lived in to live in Manhattan initially in the 1980s.
So I lived in the Bronx and my parents downstairs after law school, I had to, you know, it's
the usual immigrant experience of my parents.
I lived in the Bronx.
And then my friend was able to, because she worked at a private firm, was able to find
a place in Brooklyn and offered me a room in it.
find a place in Brooklyn and offered me a room in it. And we shared a room on, it was like fourth and 10th, I think, but it was not the Brooklyn you see today. But it was a really interesting place.
And now you live up there on Big Toad Road.
Oh, yeah.
Against your will.
No, that's not completely fair fair i want to be fair about this
right i am more adaptable than rudy so i could live in a lot of places right i can live on big
toad road i can live in brooklyn i could live in what about uh long snake ave could you live there
no no you're right i'm not that adaptable i also says here speaking of
glitter in big capital letters is told to me you are not a crafter no see i feel like i was
unfairly presented by well just that in general people make assumptions when he kind of goes on about glitter, that either I'm, you know,
in head to toe, go lame with glitter.
Which, by the way, for the record, you are not.
And for the record, I am disappointed.
I know.
I do have my RBG descent necklace
and earring, matching earrings.
And I was thinking, Judge,
that a little lace collar on your,
you know, a little something like an RBG thing on your robes might be a little, you know.
So there you go.
I do like a little bling.
Flair.
But I'm not a crafter.
I'm so domestically impaired.
Like, Rudy's the one who would pick up a vacuum.
He's the cook.
He's really very, he brings home the bacon and he fries it up in a pan.
Got it, got it, got it.
So what are you using this glitter for?
I wouldn't have identified my house as a house with glitter in it.
So what happens, John, is I have 56, I think, first cousins on one side of my family.
And there's a lot of birthdays.
There's a lot of first communions and weddings
and back and forth thank you cards. And then there's Christmas. Right. Big into Christmas.
And, you know, where we live on Big Toad Road, it's like dark and dreary at four o'clock in the
winter. Sure. So I think that Christmas and festive occasions, family stuff.
Now also they have glitter on wrapping paper now.
So I think I'm like inadvertently bringing in glitter
in the house, but I do like light.
I do like shimmer.
So I don't feel like there's a lot of glitter in our house.
Like I think-
It's incidental. You're saying it's incidental glimmer.
Yes.
That's it.
Your honor, you exactly captured it.
Thank you.
It's not my job to make your case for you, but your claim would be that you don't bring
in more glitter than a normal human being would track into the house, say, after a light
glitter sprinkle outside.
Correct.
Yeah, I got you. It's like part of the weather of being a human as far as you were concerned. Correct. Yeah, I got you.
It's like part of the weather of being a human
as far as you were concerned.
Yes.
Okay, got you.
And just a quick question.
56 first cousins?
Yeah, well, my mother was one of 12 in Ireland.
Right.
And so half of them came here.
Right.
And half of them are home and they had to leave, right?
So I do think it was a little bit of a shock to Rudy.
Like when we joined households, he never realized he needed to budget for events, you know?
Right.
I guess my point is, I just, I just, I just wanted to comment on, it's kind of astonishing
because most people don't, most people in my world don't come from such large families. And that's like, how do you find time to write birthday cards, nevermind
holiday cards for 56 first cousins at 1,400 words each? I presume you're writing 1,000,
at least 1400 words per Christmas card, right?
I have really bad handwriting from all of this.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast,
The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience.
One you have no choice but to embrace because, yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-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.
Rudy?
Yes.
Now it is your turn. We have heard
and gotten to know Mary.
Now it's time for Rudy's place or Rudy's
peace. What's the nature of your complaint? We kind of get the idea, but restate for the court
your specific complaint about the glitter. My specific complaint is that glitter, once it gets
into the house, it's very hard to remove. Even with vacuuming. It tends to sort of secrete itself
into the crevices of carpeting, the upholstery, cracks in the floor, places that it just lays
there until the angle of the lighting is just right as you're walking past and this whole stream
of light kind of bursts forth at you and what does
that light do Rudy it shatters your concentration and disrupts whatever else
you're doing in your life and if you understood from your original letter
you'll be walking through the house the glitter will reflect a beam of piercing
light into your eye yes and whatever you were
thinking about or doing in that moment has been destroyed yeah and you stand there for like 45
minutes unable to move trapped no what i well uh until recently when i started trying to work on it, I would mutter something maybe obscene about the glitter.
And then I would wet my finger and go after the piece of glitter because it will stick to a wet finger.
And then if I'm able to get it up, then I'll go put it in the garbage.
Why is the wet finger solution not a solution?
It seems like you got it covered.
That's a pretty good glitter life hack, by the garbage. Why is the wet finger solution not a solution? It seems like you got it covered. That's a pretty good glitter life hack, by the way. It's a remediation, but it's not a prevention.
I want to prevent the disruption in the first place. The best way I can describe for people
who aren't bothered by glitter, the best analogy I can draw is it's to me, it's, it's the equivalent of a sudden, very high pitched
piercing noise. Like if you're walking up your stairs, uh, thinking about what you're going to
do next or thinking about something or other, and all of a sudden just sudden high pitched
piercing sound just out of nowhere. Do you have synesthesia? I don't.
Do you perceive glitter as noise?
I do not.
I'm bothered by lots of things.
I'm easily bothered by annoying distractions.
I think I'm not alone in that.
But yes, I find it very hard to ignore annoying distractions.
So Mary, you have already made your case
that the amount of glitter is not unusual.
I am not going to inspect your home on Big Toad Road
because frankly, you and your family
have entwined themselves into my life
tightly enough as it is.
We do that.
But you have produced some evidence
that we will share with this court
uh jennifer marmer do you want to present the first film exhibit a for the defense sure
okay so a flying squirrel fell into my tub that I was running. Okay, I'm going to pause right there. Just all sorts of no.
All levels of absolutely not are involved.
Jean, tell us what we're seeing here.
So I believe this is a flying squirrel
that has fallen from the ceiling, perhaps,
somewhere into your bathtub
which i assume someone had run a bath getting ready to take a bath which is even more terrifying
um the records show that mary is raising her hand this was to be her bathtub um because you could
have been in the bath when this happens um let the record show that
mary is pointing and snapping her fingers like oh this is a podcast is an audio medium
that's that's all right um i and as a person who uh also um grew up uh uh for i spent 43 years in New York City and has in the past year moved to a big toad road of my very own.
Not the same name, but same feeling.
You have nature in your life.
We have nature, but we also removed nine flying squirrels from inside of our walls.
nine flying squirrels from inside of our walls.
And just the scratching and the squirrel fights that were happening inside of the walls
was terrifying enough.
So I cannot imagine what...
I'm sorry.
Mary's still alive, and honestly, I'm impressed.
If one of those flying squirrels had flown into your bathtub while you were in it, it would have been bad news.
It would have been bad news for me, the squirrel, everyone in the neighborhood.
I would have had to set the house on fire.
There's a lot of things that would have happened.
I see there's probably candles and a lot of substances in here that could have been used as Molotov cocktails.
So, yeah, sort of where I would have gone.
And I thought she was extremely calm and handled it really well.
Let's listen to her be calmly handling the rest of it.
And Rudy is going to try to get it out and rescue it.
This little guy is trying so hard.
He's hanging on to the booty jets for dear life.
Let the record show that Mary ends her narration before finishing the film
saying,
why did I ever leave the Bronx?
Is that correct?
Did I hear that correctly,
Mary?
Correct.
And for the record,
your honor,
it's a 2019 video.
So it was not prepared for this defense.
It's just something you've had on your phone for years.
I shared with every member of my family so they could taunt Rudy.
Yeah.
But 57 first cousins or whatever, each got a copy of this for Christmas and with a glitter card saying this cannot happen again.
Yeah.
I also want to be very clear that the Molotov cocktails were just to burn the house down. I would have also tried to save the squirrel with my bare hands because I have saved many animals from pools before.
Just walking by a pool.
Oh, no.
Got to save this one.
But the repercussions and the nightmares would stay with me.
Yeah, scary stuff.
Of what could have been.
would would stay with me yeah of what could have been now let the record show that i know from the other video mary sent in exhibit b for the defense which is a little long we're not going to go into
it but that rudy did attempt to save this squirrel not using his hands but using two gigantic
rubbermaid tubs, it felt like.
How would you describe Rudy's effort,
Mary?
Well, it was adorably heroic.
He is
an environmentalist.
He is certainly very caring
about humans and animals.
He doesn't have...
I have similar instincts to Gene,
where you react first,
because you need to protect yourself. And, and, but you don't want to hurt anyone. But you're like,
get the hell away from me, heckle away from me. And, and so Rudy was really very concerned about
the death of the squirrel. And I was too, I offered to get a blanket. But sometimes I feel he's more
concerned about the animals than about the people who were also affected by the animals. So that's
a little tension, I would say. I have to object. Please. Sustained. Thank you, Your Honor. I just
don't think that's the case. I think my first concern was for Mary and her well-being,
and then I wanted to take care of the squirrel.
Unfortunately, it did not work out well for the squirrel.
I think the squirrel was too far gone at that point.
I'm sorry.
Thank you for injecting that note of tragedy into our later discussion.
I did not think that was going to happen.
Well, that's true.
Especially since it's not,
none of it is germane to the case.
Mary, what is this flying squirrel?
How did it get there?
And what does this have to do with the glitter case?
So my argument, Your Honor, respectfully,
is that you can,
you can have an amazingly long list
of everything that annoys you
and expect the other person to accommodate all of them.
I think Rudy's list is much longer than mine.
And I would say that what I get annoyed by is more commonly annoyed by other people,
like flying squirrels entering your house on more than one occasion and saying,
yes, we should get the pest people. Even if you think they're a racket, we need to get them.
So that's my argument. So this is an ongoing problem. You have squirrels in your house.
Oh, yes. Yes. May I interject, Your Honor? Sustained. Yes. Yes. we have way more than our share of nuisance animal intrusions compared
to the average household uh that does go with the with the location uh but i would say more
way more than your share yes we have more than our share what is the town does this town allot
you a certain number a certain number of flying squirrels and giant centipedes every month or something?
But we don't invite them in.
And unlike the glitter, we don't invite them in.
And when they are in, we do everything we can to keep them out, to get them out and keep them out.
I think Mary's point is, why are you complaining about glitter when there are squirrels in your house and that problem has not been solved?
Would that be fair to say?
Yes, Your Honor.
Thank you.
Judge?
Yes, please.
Would you mind if I ask a couple of questions?
I would love it.
All right.
Judge?
Yes, please.
Would you mind if I ask a couple of questions?
I would love it.
All right.
Rudy, I feel like there are some things that I might very much relate to you on here as the person in my household who apparently is the only person who can see things that are out of place and are glaringly obvious to me.
And I'm like, what is going on here?
But I also think that I do take it upon myself to make sure that certain things are in place. Otherwise, I will always be angry, especially after things like the holidays.
Have you ever considered after the holidays just having someone in to deep clean the house?
Because things get everywhere for months.
There are pine needles that you'll find six months later, and you're like, how could that possibly happen?
Yes. Thank you.
Well, I'm not sure about deep cleaning, but regular cleaning, certainly.
For a number of years when Mary and I were both working outside the house, we did have professional cleaners in regularly. I just think that there is something just about the mechanics of a piece of glitter and a crevice that it is able to evade. Many of them are able to evade vacuuming.
Even professional cleaners.
I'm not sure the professional cleaner's vacuum is any more effective than our own vacuum.
You're saying that standard professional cleaners can't get all the glitter.
And that is why I suggested actual professional deep cleaners,
which is a very different thing,
like someone you would hire if you're just moving into a house
or out of a house.
What I was going to ask about also,
if during the holidays,
if there were, say, things that were,
I know that I feel a certain way about glitter as well,
but I also like things that reflect light, that bring in shine.
Have you suggested anything else, maybe metallics or glass or prisms or kaleidoscopes, and suggested and brought these things to Mary in order to solve that problem of the glitter, a replacement?
Well, once again, I will say yes, but I'll probably be corrected.
But yes, I have occasionally bought clothing for Mary that has sparkly thread woven through it.
In fact, Mary just bought a pair of sandals or shoes or sandal shoes that had sequins on them and not glitter.
They don't come off into the house and they're very sparkly.
And I said, those are great. I like those.
So, yes, I'm certainly amenable to...
Your defense is that you complimented your wife one time.
Well, I say that actually just happened this week.
Well, that actually just happened this week.
May I also point out that Rudy submitted one single piece of evidence pertaining to the question that you just asked, Jean, about bringing in other festive and upbeat elements to the home.
I don't need to go ahead and share my screen again.
Oh yes, I've seen this.
Yes. I saw it earlier.
If I'll just scroll down.
Whee!
Is a single maraca.
One photo of a single
maraca. Beautiful maraca.
Yes, this is quote an example
of festive but non-glittered paraphernalia a maraca beautiful maraca yes this is an this is quote an example of festive but non-glittered
paraphernalia a maraca it's funny you don't say maraca a lot no singular not not usually it feels
like it's a little more common to say maracas right because they're usually there too there
there was another one that i'm not sure where it came from, whether Mary brought it in or someone else did.
There was one that was coated with gold glitter.
And every time it was shaken, some portion of the glitter would come off.
And I looked for that.
I know that at some point I put it into a Ziploc bag to try to contain the glitter.
I thought I put it away somewhere.
I looked for it and I
couldn't find it. So it's possible that it was accidentally destroyed.
Also, as someone who paints and does craft, there is the option of doing a top coat of sealant on
anything that contains glitter, where you seal the glitter in its own little Han Solo carbonite
and there it shall stay.
It still shines, but...
Judge, one last question and a half to Mary.
Mary, I definitely understand that the balance of having these light things in your life in, in contrast to your,
your job and what's,
what's been your job for years is hugely important to you.
And I think I,
I also just wanted to ask you,
I think sometimes we know like we,
we enjoy all these things and we're like,
oh,
there's so many other options to do this.
I thought celebrating my first Christmas is that I would
as someone who's never really a glitter person I was like yeah but I want like the sparkles and
the light and sort of looking for all these other ways that weren't necessarily um the invasive
nature of glitter would you be into looking at any of those options?
I would with a condition. Okay. So I've already, if you notice, the fairy lights are not glitter.
Yeah, they're lovely.
So I feel like I've done that here. You know, you have both crystallized for me during this session what my stubborn objection is to.
Crystals are very shy and very receptive.
Because I am being stubborn and so is Rudy.
Okay.
Rudy always chooses things that have another purpose as well.
The maraca also makes music, right?
Frivolity is about things that are not productive other than the joy.
And that's, I think, where the real tension is.
So, yes, I'm interested in that.
But I think that there's feeling like there's a judgment, like it has to have another job as well.
You just want a thing to be a fun thing.
And that's it.
It's just fun.
Yes. Yes. It makes me laugh. So I'm willing to entertain that, but I need to have a little bit
more compromise coming on the other side. Okay. Rudy, do you think that there's something to what
Mary is saying? Do you have difficulty appreciating things that are just fun and don't have use? Oh, wow. Getting deep here. It's a deep question.
I certainly appreciate lots of things that are just for their own sake, things that are,
you know, artistic or beautiful or what have you that don't have any sort of
classically utilitarian function. But I probably do have a bias against sort of celebratory
frivolity items, which just comes from my upbringing. I was from a very sort of Spartan sort of upbringing.
Right.
When you were growing up,
you were lucky to get a flying squirrel in the bathtub on Christmas.
That was a heyday.
That's what we did for fun when I was growing up.
And I definitely credit Mary with, yes,
And I definitely credit Mary with, yes, making efforts to find non-glittery forms of entertainment.
I think it's really the third-party glitter is more of the issue.
Third-party glitter.
Third-party glitter.
It comes in on cards.
It comes in on wrapping paper.
And that is not Mary's direct responsibility. But on the other hand, once it's in the house, what you do with it becomes, you know, it's like, okay, here's a card.
She's got 56 cousins and relations.
There is going to be.
Oh, my God.
This past holiday season was the worst.
Was this what precipitated?
What happened?
It was the second cousin glitter bomb was bad.
The second cousin glitter bomb.
Go on.
What does a second cousin glitter bomb mean to you?
Because to me, it means nothing.
I don't speak your family language.
Please.
So it's the second cousin who sent us a card that when you opened the Christmas card, inside the card, there was glitter inside the envelope.
So that when the card came out, almost something you see at bat mitzvahs or bar mitzvahs, you know, on the table.
And it exploded all over the living room.
I called my sister.
Well, she thought, I think she wasn't being mean.
She was being festive.
And I didn't know it was in there.
So I opened the card and the glitter bomb exploded.
I called my sister and said, watch out for it.
And she made her daughter open it out on the deck.
Jean, you're nodding. you're familiar with this home invasion i have i have
seen it um i i have seen people open those um the only thing i like flying out of any envelope i'm
opening is just like uh cash um so that would be fun but but i i have seen that i think but this is a card that is designed
to kind of it's it's you're supposed to be like oh my gosh how how exciting it falls out on purpose
it dirties your house with fun on purpose litters it with fun right yeah uh it's it's a lot i didn't
mean to cut off what you were gonna say there though jean oh i was gonna say i i think i've
opened one like at a, at an event,
and my first thought was like, who's going to clean that up?
Not me.
So that's fine.
That's terrible.
Next flying squirrel you save, you should send that to her.
Send that to your second cousin.
That's a surprise.
That's fun.
It's fun in the moment, though.
Well, I would say we've identified a cards that if we get them
from this particular cousin we will open them on the deck so that i think now i don't think
it's going to be a trend um oh it's totally a trend now you think you think that mark and
kathleen aren't going to listen to this podcast and go to all of your cousins in the United States and in Ireland and be like, send them these glitter bombs.
I feel like they're going to put it in just regular mail at this point.
Go get them.
I liked Kathleen's suggestion of sort of an airport-style glitter detector at the front door.
That would work.
What do you propose as a solution, Rudy, to protect yourself from these glitterful cards and letters? it because she doesn't intentionally bring glittery stuff into the house but she will
unknowingly bring it in she'll buy something and not notice that it has detachable glitter on it
so she could be a little more conscientious about that and as far as the cards and the
and the wrapping paper and all that uh it's really a question of what you do after it has come in and containing the damage so like
the card that's obviously got glitter all over it that you open say in the kitchen
does not have to be taken into the bedroom to sit around there for a few days and then taken
into the living room to be put up on display on a shelf know, it can just be quietly disposed of.
Is that what you're doing, Mary?
You're taking glittery cards and rubbing them all over your carpets on purpose, trying to
stab Rudy's eyes?
I like to reread when someone takes care to say something loving to me.
Yeah.
I like to dwell on it before you just throw them away right and if
they're anything like mark's letters you probably have to read them over a couple of weeks
she's not rereading it's the first time it's a very long card that glitter card was four feet
tall it was a lot of glitter they had to get the words in there yeah just i just love to curl up
in bed with my glitter card favorite characters cousin actually got out of the card through the glitter on everyone,
relayed the message, then climbed back in the car.
OK, so what would you have me order, Rudy, if I were to find in your favor?
No glitter or light in your wife's life ever again.
I don't think that's possible or desirable. I would say glitter-free alternatives to the extent possible.
No knowingly bringing glitter items into the house. And then most importantly, containing the spread of glitter from things that are sent to us.
Understood.
Being conscientious about containing the spread.
And Mary, what would you have me order if I were to rule in your favor?
So the first thing I'd like you to order, Your Honor, is that Rudy undergo hypnosis because he's done it.
Wow.
He's done it before.
He's fascinated by it.
But I think for two things,
you know, and if it doesn't work,
it doesn't work.
One would be like,
so that he gets a little less
just distracted, angry,
agitated by the glitter.
And then also that
So basically that's the long way of saying like, deal with it. Just deal with it. No, no, no, no, no, no. and then also that his first reaction...
Basically, that's the long way of saying, like, deal with it.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Hypnosis for dealing with it?
No, no, no.
I think she's saying something interesting
because it is a different level
when you're bothered by things at that level.
Thank you, Jean.
Right.
I'm not saying that I don't have some work to do, Your Honor,
but I think you asked me what my ideal ruling would be. And it would be that he work on that. I will I will defer to your wisdom on how I might be a little more sensitive about glitter.
that I think is important on the squirrels is that it's been a long time
between the suggestion that we get someone
other than Rudy solve the squirrel problem, right?
Because Rudy's kind of a handyman type.
He likes to do it himself.
Sure.
And us actually years later
finally having a pest person coming in, right?
So I think that when the pest people, the other thing, he could either do hypnosis on
the pest thing or not assume that when the pest people come in next week, everything
they do is wrong.
So Rudy is going to get hypnotized to not feel anxious about being taken advantage of
by professional service providers.
Test control people.
Right.
Rudy, you're going to need to be put under very deep.
I'm not sure hypnosis is going to.
You'll need something stronger.
Some anesthesia, maybe some absinthe.
Maybe some absinthe.
Actually, that is one of my drinks of choice yeah
i read about it in the letter
love those letters mark and kathleen and judith and also uh angela thank you for your look your
letter as well friends and family family of Mary and Rudy.
Okay, I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I am going to go into my snobby lobby, a.k.a. my chambers.
Nice.
I'll be back in a moment to render my decision.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Okay, Mary, how are you feeling? How are you feeling about today?
I feel heard, which is good. Jean, I feel like I felt heard. I also feel that you all were thinking of some good sort of compromises, I'm a little nervous that if there's a ruling that I can't
comply with, like, just because I do, I'm not as detailed oriented as Rudy is. So I feel like
the inadvertent and the third party glitter, I don't know how I'm going to comply with that,
if that's part of the ruling.
So I'm a little nervous about that.
There is also another suggestion.
There is larger than normal glitter,
which is very easy to pick up.
It doesn't have to be so small.
That might also...
Can I just stop you right there?
Can I?
No, no, no, Rudy.
No, you can't, Rudy.
No, you can't.
I'm going to finish my talk with Mary and then we're going to get to you.
Okay.
All right.
I'm sorry.
I panicked.
That's what you do, Rudy.
That's why we're here.
Because you panic.
All right, Mary.
I understand how you're feeling.
I didn't, you know what?
I didn't even have anything else to say to Mary.
I just wanted Rudy to hold, hold on.
Rudy,
how are you feeling? Is it anxious? No, I'm not feeling anxious. I'm feeling like this was a good discussion. That's good. And I think that there are obviously way more important things in life than glitter or the lack of glitter.
And I'm confident that the judge is going to see through that and come up with something that makes sense.
I just want to interject that I don't think larger glitter
is really going to be the solution here because it will,
the glitter will find its way.
Okay.
Despite how, I mean, it would have to be big, big glitter.
It's pretty big.
But before the judge gets back, I want you to pay attention to something really incredibly
important that Mary said at the beginning was that she feels heard.
And I think regardless of what the judge comes in and says, I think sometimes when you're, you know, this deep in a relationship and you're just seeing the problem and you can't even get past like the things of compromise, just the idea that someone else feels seen and completely heard without you being in your own feelings about it is so, so important.
So whatever happens, take note that she felt the need to say that today.
Okay?
Do it.
Very okay.
All right.
We'll see what the judge has to say about all this when we come back in just a moment.
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Please rise as Judge John Hodgman reenters the courtroom and presents his verdict. well you know it's very rare that i reach a decision so quickly and so completely because
the verdict is obvious and so clear the solution is large glitter as much as possible get it into
the house get a large glitter cannon you know what I mean?
No, I'm sorry, Mary.
You're smiling.
That was a joke.
It's not my order.
It's weird that you would even think that I wasn't joking.
Could you imagine me coming in here and saying,
yeah, I think there should be as much large glitter in the house as possible.
That's the solution.
You're actually nodding.
I mean, the thing is, I can see you both because we are now podcasting via the magic of teleconferencing,
the evil magic of teleconferencing, the curse of teleconferencing. But I do enjoy seeing your faces because here you are uh with a with a very big smile uh framed by fairy
lights mary in a bright upstairs bedroom full of natural light and there's rudy below you
in a shirt designed to match the closed drapes the same color of murky pond water in a green tinted room with a creepy ceiling fan behind him looking like he's in the basement of Captain Nemo's submarine.
Oh, no.
Different attitudes.
Yeah.
I think, Rudy, you were the first to even say, not you would be the first to say, you were the first to say to me that Mary is full of light, metaphorically and to a degree, literally.
Absolutely.
And I am so happy that the two of you balance each other out.
And I'm so appreciative that I have no doubt that you appreciate Mary because you spoke of her so highly in all of your emails to me, even when you were annotating her emails to me with little notes like off topic.
You would also go to great lengths to explain how important she is in your life.
That's an understatement.
And I believe that, you know, I appreciate the fact that she feels heard.
She said it.
I think Jean's note is a good one for all of us to take with our partners, especially as we have all been living in fairly close quarters for a long time.
Oh, boy.
It's taken a toll on all of us.
Make sure that your partners feel seen and heard even when their problems might not be as glaringly obvious as a flying squirrel in the bathtub.
But I would say to this, Rudy, I hear you.
I particularly heard you when you jumped in on Jean on this large glitter idea.
Like I could see you too.
I could see what I felt like was genuine panic.
And I don't think that Mary would be suggesting hypnosis,
although I'm still,
it's not clear what she was suggesting the hypnotherapy for,
but I don't think she would be suggesting hypnosis.
If she did not acknowledge to a degree that some of this stuff genuinely is out of your control and a little traumatizing to you.
I don't know anyone in the world except for Rudy, who has a problem walking across a carpet that has a single piece of glitter in it and then getting stunned in the eye, in the eyes, breaking this train of thought.
I'd never heard of that before.
And I want you to know, I hear you.
And I think, honestly, Mary, I think you need to hear Rudy on this one.
Like he, he doesn't want you to forego brightness.
He loves your brightness.
He loves the fun.
He appreciates the, the glimmer and shine that you bring to his
life presumably to your children's lives to the many thousands of cousins that you have etc etc
but this is one thing this one literally very small thing glitter it is on the one hand impossible to get rid of.
That's part of the problem.
Adam Savage,
formerly of Mythbusters,
now of tested.com and a friend of this show has referred to glitter as the
herpes of the crafting world,
because once you have it,
it's difficult to get rid of,
if not impossible.
But with glitter,
paradoxically,
it's easy to avoid.
Don't get glitter.
Don't get it.
Don't bring it in your home.
If you know your cousin's sending you a glitter bomb,
open it outside like your other cousin did.
Use the wisdom of the cousin crowd.
These are your resources.
I'm not going to go so far as to ban glitter from your home
because you can't help but get these cards
from the glitterati out there.
But I think that Rudy deserves some consideration.
I know that Rudy, from the video that you sent in,
you had suggested that Rudy put that squirrel in the mudroom so I know you have a mudroom you got to have one on big toad road what are you going
to do you can't be out on big toad road without a mudroom I would I would say whether it is the mudroom or another area,
maybe it's the kitchen,
maybe it's a pure hard surface area.
The glitter stays in that area.
We have spent a year and a half trying to figure out how to prevent contagion
and having to quarantine parts of our lives and compartmentalize emotion not only
quarantine our physical bodies but compartmentalize whole areas of our emotional lives in order to get
through this together and i order rudy can pick a room in which glitter is allowed and is not allowed to leave.
And I would suggest it be a hard surface room like a kitchen, you know, where it can, but you can't be curling up.
Can't be curling up with a glitter card in your terrycloth bathrobe in your bed anymore.
Keep glitter in its place. And when you go out and buy wrapping paper, don't get stuff with glitter on it. Look. When you see that glitter,
look deeply into that glitter and see your reflection in it and be like, no, I'm not the
person who's going to bring glitter into this house. There's a lot of other wrapping paper,
and there are a lot of other ways
to make things bright and shiny.
So that is my ruling.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules, that is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
All right, we're going to start with Rudy.
How are you feeling about the decision?
I'm a little stunned. I rarely win discussions like this in any in any venue. So I think it's a good, good ruling. I will try, you know, will be reasonable in implementing it.
And yeah.
I'm excited.
I'm excited for, for you moving forward.
And I feel like I'm definitely feeling that you, you are stunned and you're like, oh,
I didn't think it was going to go this way.
No.
Awesome.
Mary, how are you feeling about the decision?
Well, I feel like I need a little clarification.
So I'm okay with, I would love to have some input into the room.
And knowing Rudy's and our relationship of over 30 plus years of relationship, we'll find a room.
My problem is we already have glitter on our Christmas ornaments.
So what am I supposed to do with that?
They're already in the house.
They're stored away.
The call's coming from inside the house.
Well, I think that could easily be done by something like I was saying, like, you know,
just seal those up.
And it'll even make storing them in containers.
You know, when you take those things out next year, you're like,
ugh, it's such a mess in there.
And it doesn't have to be that way.
So I think it sort of helps everyone.
You keep your ornaments.
You spray some acrylic coat on there.
I'm writing this down.
It's acrylic spray.
Yeah, acrylic spray your ornaments.
Yeah.
Or, I mean, it's not very ecologically sound,
but you could store the ornaments in Ziploc bags
and then also hang them on the tree that way.
Okay, I'm so not doing that, Judge.
You are now pushing it.
Your ornaments will be all bagged up,
and you can think of me every time you look at them.
will be all bagged up and you can think of me every time you look at them.
But I think there's a great compromise and also understanding of, yeah, how we have learned to work with the world.
I'm proud of both of you.
And I'm proud of the judge.
Thank you.
I'm proud of you, Jean.
I'm proud of you, Jennifer.
And hey, I just I want to just say I'm proud of everyone who doesn't celebrate Christmas. We've had a lot of Christmas
talk on this podcast. And I get it. Not everyone celebrates that. So I see or hear you as well.
I just didn't want to pull my Jewish friends into the debate because I have given them glittery Hanukkah stuff.
And I just felt like they have enough to deal with around the holidays. I didn't want to bring them in.
My Muslim friends, I'm like, no, you got enough to deal with.
I'm just not bringing you into this.
G-E-O-T-G.
You know what I mean?
G-E-O-T-G.
Go easy on the glitter.
Okay.
Got it.
That's the word from Judge John Hodgman.
It's been so nice to get to know
you, your family, your cousins, your kids, and
everybody in the world down there at Big Toad Road
who knows you.
At the end of this episode, we will play
for the final time,
perhaps for now, the theme
song to Rudy's Place.
But until then, have fun
up there at Big Toad Road, you guys. Great to get to know you.
Thank you, Gerard.
Thank you, everyone. Bye.
Another case in the books.
Before we dispense some swift justice,
we want to thank Tony Montabon for
naming this week's episode Citation
for Glittering. Very clever.
If you would like to name a future
episode, like Judge John Hodgman
on Facebook. We regularly put out
a call for submissions. Follow us
on social media. I'm on Instagram
at Jeannie Grigio. That's
double N-I-E Grigio.
Guess it. The judge is
at John Hodgman.
He's also on Twitter
at Hodgman.
Hashtag your judge John Hodgman tweets hashtag jjho and check
out the maximum fun subreddit to discuss this episode don't talk about me badly i'll find you
and we're on instagram at judge john hodgman make sure to follow us there for evidence and
other fun stuff our amazing producer is is Jennifer Marmer. Yay.
Now, let's get to Swift Justice,
where we answer your small disputes with a quick judgment.
Here's the question.
I'm very involved in this.
Ash says,
my wife insists these are deep plates.
I contest that they are shallow bowls.
And then it is a picture
of a deep plate mixed with a shallow bowl.
Gene, what would you say?
Is that a deep plate or a shallow bowl?
Well, this will be on the Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Just to let you know, I'll take pictures of all of these.
So we've got this one.
This is a salad bowl.
Okay, wait a minute.
Is this Swift Justice question from you?
No.
Are you secretly Ash?
Well, let me start.
You're showing me your plates and bowls.
This is a plate.
That's a plate.
That's definitely a plate with a rim, though.
Yes, with a rim.
I like a rimmed plate.
This is the next step.
This is a deep plate.
A deep plate?
This is a deep plate where you put things.
I like to serve like sometimes curries of sorts or pastas or anything.
This just got a little more sauce.
You can lean a bread on the side.
You're not like my stuff is going to go everywhere.
Hold that up again, Jean.
Yeah, that's a deep plate.
I would say that.
And this is a salad bowl or kind of a shallow bowl.
Just a larger.
It's not as high on the sides.
I would say that it's like a soup plate or a or um or an extravagant
soup bowl or something with an extravagant extravagant soup where you have things well
let's say it's some sort of broth um and you have uh many pieces of things that you want to put in said broth.
Cream of chicken with diamonds.
Horrible.
Cream of chicken with saffron. That's actually,
I just realized that I stole that joke from David Reese who made it up for our
secret project.
So when you see the secret project and you hear the joke about diamonds,
you will know that's where this joke came from.
Yeah.
So this is a, but I do definitely consider this a bowl and not a deep plate.
And I think the one that is in the picture is closer to a shallow bowl than a deep plate.
I think it's on a higher rim.
I'm so glad you said that because I was going to say that's a shallow bowl because there's no such thing as deep plate.
But now I realize there is a deep plate.
Yes, there is.
But that is definitely a shallow bowl.
But, Jean, this letter from Judith, another friend of Mary and Rudy's, just came in.
No, it didn't.
I understand, quote, I understand that when my friends and neighbors, Rudy and Mary, will be on your show soon debating the merits of glitter.
Yeah, it just happened.
I think you should know that environmentalists like me advise against using glitter because
it is made from plastic.
In fact, it's a microplastic.
It does not yet have the status of no plastic straws due to them being lodged in the nostrils
of sea turtles, but in time it will get there.
Put me in the camp of no glitter, no straws, and no fun.
Sincerely, Judith, president of Beyond Plastics. See beyondplastics.org.
That's a valuable message in the show.
And at 98 words, a perfect email.
98 words, everybody.
Take a lesson from Judith.
Replace your plastic glitter with metal.
Just use shrapnel.
Come on, everybody.
Metal straws, metal glitter.
Let's go.
There we go.
That's it.
That's our show. Thank you very
much, guest bailiff Jean Gray. It's always such a pleasure to spend time with you, and I hope to
see you in person soon. Me too. Thank you again to Jennifer Marmer. Thank you again to Rudy and
Mary and all their friends. That is it for us. We will talk to you next time on the Judge John
Hodgman Podcast. I'm gonna ride my horse down Big Toad Road.
I'm gonna ride my horse down Big Toad Road.
I'm gonna ride till I can't ride no more to Woody's place.