Judge John Hodgman - Court Martial, Martial, Martial!
Episode Date: April 10, 2024Is THE BRADY BUNCH a classic sitcom? Robert says, yes of course it is! His friend, Karl says it's just not good enough to be considered classic! Neither of them will admit defeat. UNTIL TODAY. Who’s... right? Who’s wrong? Who will have a sunshine day?We are on TikTok and YouTube! Follow us on both @judgejohnhodgmanpod! Follow us on Instagram @judgejohnhodgman.Thanks to reddit user u/UsefulBiscotti9548 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!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, court martial, martial, martial.
Robert brings the case against his friend, Carl.
They both belong to a text group with friends.
Recently, Robert entered the chat and said that the Brady Bunch is a classic sitcom.
Carl said, wrong.
The Brady Bunch is not good enough
to be classic.
The rest of the group
is split
and neither Carl
nor Robert
will admit defeat
until today.
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.
All right,
you put a shiv
in my partner.
You know what that means?
God or whatever, damn it.
All winter long, I got to listen to him gripe about his bowling scores.
Now, I'm going to bust you for those three bags,
and I'm going to nail you for picking your feet in Poughkeepsie.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Robert and Carl, 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 hogging
the phone?
I do.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Robert and Carl, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment.
In one of your favors, can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as
I entered this courtroom?
Carl?
Robert? Who wants to go first?
I will, Your Honor.
All right, Carl.
I will guess a Honeymooners reference, the bawling in Poughkeepsie.
A Honeymooners reference.
Okay, that guess is wrong, but I'm going to give you another shot because you both deserve a hint.
This is an obscure cultural reference.
I am quoting a film that is perfect for 11 year olds. Okay. So do you want to take
another guess, Carl? I'll pass. No, you have to guess. The Honeymooners movie. I think there was
one. I'll put it in the guest book. I'm even going to take this pen and pretend to write on this piece of paper to show you.
That's what it sounds like.
Me writing.
Also, you getting ASMR response.
You're welcome, listeners.
Robert, what's your guess?
Well, it kills all my Brady Bunch guesses.
Yeah, did you think I was going to come in here
with a Brady Bunch quote, most quotable?
Mom always said, don't play ball in the house.
Oh, my nose.
Whatever.
I was all prepared with a reference to Greg's book,
Barry Williams' book.
Barry Williams' book, which was what?
A very Brady book or something?
Growing Up Brady, I think.
Growing Up Brady.
I read it while sleeping on an air mattress
in Amy Radford's apartment in Seattle in the 1990s.
I read it as well. Probably the
same, not the air mattress. Yeah. You ever meet Barry Williams? I have not met Barry. You ever
rent him a video in a video store in New Haven in 1992 or so? Nobody wish I had. Yeah, well,
I don't wish I had because I did. And what was it? The Oxbow incident, but there's more to the
story. I think you have to read about it in medallion status
because it's a little bit of a grown-up story
for this podcast.
Robert, let's stop playing.
Come on.
What's your guess?
The Biggest Loser?
The big...
A film.
A film.
Yeah, Giamatti's movie.
A feature film.
Yeah, maybe I got the title.
The Biggest Liar.
The Biggest Liar.
Because The Biggest Loser is a reality show, I believe.
The Biggest Liar.
Or Big Liar.
Big Fat Liar. With Frankie Muniz I believe. Right. The biggest liar or big liar. Big fat liar.
With Frankie Muniz.
Yes.
And Amanda Bynes.
Yes.
You both are attorneys, right?
Yes.
Counselor, can you explain your line of thinking here?
There isn't a line of thinking around.
I was trying to think of a movie for an 11-year-old that would have the word shiv in it somewhere.
I got you.
The quote again is, all right, you put a shiv in it somewhere i got you the quote again the quote
again is all right you put a shiv in my partner you know what that means god or whatever damn it
all winter long i gotta listen to a gripe about his bowling scores now i'm gonna bust you for
those three bags and i'm gonna nail you for picking your feet in poughkeepsie all guesses
are wrong of course this is the famous children's movie, The French Connection.
Now, Jesse's laughing because what he knows,
and Carl and Robert, you don't know,
is that we recorded an episode with the wonderful Kurt Braunohler,
a juvenile court episode,
in which an 11-year-old was petitioning my court to be able to watch The French Connection,
an R-rated film with a lot of inflammatory language in it
and a gritty and realistic portrayal of New York in 1970, 1971.
But I said that they could watch it because, yeah,
because it's a good movie.
But why did I mention it in this case?
Now, Robert, counselor, you seem to have an idea.
Why? Why?
Because Gene Hackman was originally thought of to play Michael Brady.
Boom.
Hang on.
That's the sound of a big gavel.
Does it mean you won the case?
No.
That was a gavel of appreciation.
You know that, Jesse Thorne?
Sherwood Schwartz, who created the Brady Bunch,
number one choice to play Mike Brady, Gene Hackman.
Wow.
Would have been a different show.
Very much so.
Would have been a different world.
Would have been a different show.
He would have been a much beefier and football-y dad than Robert Reed,
who, by the way, incredible actor and obviously iconic in the role.
It worked out the way it was supposed to.
We're here to talk about the Brady Bunch.
Before we get into it, Carl and Robert, you're old friends, right?
Yes.
You're both attorneys, right?
Correct.
You met each other as adversaries in court originally?
Correct, Your Honor.
And the dispute in that courtroom was,
if a Reuben has mustard on it, is it a Reuben?
Correct?
Exactly.
Yes, Your Honor.
Yes, it was.
That's not what the dispute in your courtroom was,
but that's a dispute you were having off mic with me
before we started recording, right?
It is.
All right.
Can I just say for the record,
I don't know who believes what side of this,
but if you put a mustard on a Reuben,
it's not a Reuben anymore.
Certainly if you substitute mustard mustard on a Reuben, it's not a Reuben anymore. Certainly if you
substitute mustard for Thousand Island.
Carl, you
were on the anti-Reuben side of that
argument? Yes, that's correct, Your Honor.
Alright. Thousand Island or Russian is a
main ingredient. Without it, it's not a Reuben.
Russian dressing is the correct
one. I'll allow Thousand Island,
Counselor. Same here, Your Honor. I will not
allow mustard. It's a different sandwich. What would
it be called? The Robert?
I like that. The Bob.
The Bob? The wrong Bob?
It'd be a Bobwich. It'll be a wrong Bob.
That's what it's called from now on.
Because you were wrong on that one, Bob. Robert, I mean.
I look forward to seeing that on menus.
All right. Who comes here? Robert,
is it you who comes seeking justice
in my court? It is, Judge. All right. It says here that you? Is it you who comes seeking justice in my court?
It is, Judge.
All right. It says here that you believe The Brady Bunch is a classic sitcom. For our younger audience, who may be listening with their parents and may not know and didn't grow up with this show,
what is The Brady Bunch? Go ahead, Robert.
The Brady Bunch is a family sitcom with a, what is now called a blended family.
The father with three sons marries the mother with three daughters.
Each episode is about half an hour long.
Now we're getting into the weeds when we're talking about running time.
Those are the weeds? Okay.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think we need to know.
Yeah, it's a sitcom, 30 minutes long.
Right.
Single-camera sitcom, very, very big cultural phenomenon.
1975 seasons, I believe.
I could be wrong, but early 70s.
Very groovy outfits.
These kids grew up in front of our eyes.
Greg was a measly twerp, the eldest son,
played by Barry Williams.
Ended up maturing into a true Johnny Bravo, right? a measly twerp, the eldest son played by Barry Williams ended up mature,
maturing into a true Johnny Bravo,
right?
Yes.
Very,
very famous.
Lots of catchphrases,
lots of influence.
Then there was a couple of reunion movies,
a couple of parody movies, big,
big,
big cultural,
uh,
touchstone for a lot of people my age and a little bit younger and a little bit older
because I grew up with it watching it on channel 56 every afternoon when I got home from school
Robert your your claim is that this is a classic television show yes and Carl you say no what's
your problem with the Brady Bunch I don't have a problem the Brady Bunch and Bob is Robert is
free to like
what he likes. But to be classic, something has to be of high quality and have enduring excellence.
And the Brady Bunch falls far short in that respect. And that's why it's merely iconic,
in my opinion, as opposed to classic. Merely iconic.
Yes. Okay. And the points you made before about growing up watching the show, I noted you watched it in syndication. It only became iconic because of its popularity in syndication. It wasn't even that popular when first run. It was never highly rated, never a top 30 rated show, never received any Emmy nominations, much less awards.
It was panned across the board by all the critics.
And it just wasn't a high-quality show.
Though, you know, perhaps you view it that way,
or Robert views it that way,
through the prism of his older Gen X nostalgia guy.
But that doesn't make it a classic.
Let's read the roll call of honor.
All the Bradys.
Let's.
Robert Reed as Mike Brady, rest in peace. Florence Henderson as Carol Brady, rest in peace. Anne B. Reed is Mike Brady. Rest in peace.
Florence Henderson is Carol Brady.
Rest in peace.
And B Davis is Alice Nelson.
Rest in peace.
Marine McCormick is Marsha.
Eve Plum is Jan.
Susan Olson is Cindy Barry Williams.
My customer at, at a film fest video in new Haven on one notable afternoon,
Greg Brady,
Christopher Knight,
Peter Brady,
Mike looking land is Bobby Brady.
And let's not forget Robbie Rist as Cousin Oliver. These are all the people that you would like to
erase from television history, Carl. All of the working actors that you say are pure garbage,
correct, Carl? No, I think there was some fine acting in that show, particularly Mr. Brady and
Mrs. Brady. According to you, the show wasn't good and therefore is not a classic, so therefore
they're all bad actors, correct, Carl? That, the show wasn't good and therefore is not a classic. So therefore, they're all bad actors.
Correct, Carl?
That is not correct, Your Honor.
That is not a fair characterization of my testimony, Your Honor.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, do I have permission to treat Carl even more hostily?
Yeah, I mean, I'll give you permission, sure.
Judge Hodgman, go to town.
Thank you very much.
Carl, is that the way it works in courtrooms?
You're an actual attorney, right?
Yes, I am, Your Honor.
What kind of law do you two practice?
I practice general litigation.
Real estate, most of the litigation.
General lit and real estate.
Okay.
But you're saying that this, if I understand you, Carl, that this is not a classic because
even though it became well-known, certainly, iconic, indisputably, arguably loved, but also made fun of by multiple generations after its
original airing due to its popularity on syndication. It was not a classic because
no one liked it when it was on TV. No, I'm saying it's not a classic because it didn't have the
quality and the storytelling and the depth of characters. I mean, look at the characters. You have Mike. Who's Mike? He's your stereotypical father. He's the good provider, goes to work, comes home, renters his sage paternal advice to the children that Carol couldn't give while she was home all day as the happy homemaker with a smile the whole time.
With a full-time in-home helper, maid, and caretaker, by the way.
Which I never understood.
And they made the poor woman wear a uniform
and they wouldn't let her eat at the table that they ate at
for dinner that she made.
No, no, no.
She was pretty busy in her guest apartment
next to the washer-dryer hanging out with Sam the Butcher.
I don't know.
I think the show was more classist than classic in that respect. When you look at the role of Alice.
Wow. You're one of these rhyming attorneys.
My name is Carl and I'm here to say I'm in general litigation every day.
Not today. You must've seen his ad.
Wait, Carl, do you have a TV ad?
No, I don't.
I don't think...
We've rarely had real lawyers on this program,
nevermind TV or radio lawyers.
We need fake law books behind us and we all set.
Yeah, that's right.
Then you look at the older siblings.
Again, stereotypical older siblings.
You had Greg's, the cool, popular,
kind of jockey, Johnny Bravo, right?
And then you have Marsha,
super pretty and perfect and popular.
Yeah.
Then you have the middle siblings
who are desperate for attention,
overlooked, resentful
of the older siblings. I mean, poor Jan has to
make up a boyfriend. You know, the famous
line, Marsha, Marsha, Marsha. Right.
These are all stereotypes and tropes, these
characters. And then you have the youngest siblings.
Same thing. You have Cindy.
She's just there to be cute with the pigtails,
the dyed blonde hair.
They dyed her hair so often it was falling out in season two.
Let me ask you a question.
Sure.
Is The Wizard of Oz a classic film?
I would say yes.
Even though Judy Garland was horribly abused on set and forced to, you know, take diet pills and stuff at the age of 14 or whatever?
I mean...
I'm not talking about set.
I'm talking about the lack of development of these characters.
These characters were so poorly developed.
What does the plight and exploitation of child actors
have anything to do with making classic culture?
Because her look and fit in this role
was more important than the character itself.
None of these characters were fully developed characters.
None of them were worthy of any spinoffs,
unlike true classic shows have spinoffs because they have well-developed
characters. Hang on. I'm actually writing this down. This is an interesting theory. I like this
theory. True classic shows. I'm sure you'll be- Excuse me. I'm writing it down, Carl. I don't
know why I'm so feisty today, Bailiff Jesse. Well, these guys are bringing the heat.
They're bringing some heat, right? Maybe I'm intimidated because they're attorneys and I'm a fake judge.
And they have incredible theories.
I mean, like most snobs my age, my favorite television show is The Wire.
But my second favorite television show is The Wire's spinoff show, Bunk!
With an exclamation mark.
I would watch that.
I would watch it too.
So what's a classic show?
Tell me your spinoff theory a little bit more there, Carl.
A classic show from the same era, I would say All in the Family.
Yes, you had Maud.
You had the Jeffersons.
Both high quality shows.
Good Times.
Good Times.
Good Times spun off from Mode.
Mode.
Mode.
Yeah, that was a spinoff.
That was a spinoff of a spinoff.
Yes, because of Flow.
Rest in peace, John Amos. Rest in peace, Norman Le a spinoff. That was a spinoff of a spinoff. Yes, because of Flo. Rest in peace, John Amos.
Rest in peace, Norman Lear, too.
Okay.
All in the Family is classic because I think it was probably classic for more reasons than just spinoffs.
It was also incredibly trenchant and observant and groundbreaking and taboo breaking and everything else.
Whereas the Brady Bunch was straight down the middle, pretty palatable entertainment suitable for adults and children.
Never really broached major social commentary, despite the fact that it was in the early 70s.
Although it was one of the first films to portray a blended family, which was a very big innovation at the time.
Oh, yet you would strip it of its classic status because it's just not good enough.
Robert, how did this come up even?
Okay, so this come up even?
Okay, so this came up because I use an app called Strava.
It's a fitness app.
You track your runs.
It keeps track of pace and distance and shows a little map of the area.
What does this have to do with the Brady Bunch, Robert?
So after I finish running every morning,
I try to find some pop culture reference to honor that day.
And it's usually somebody's birthday. So you name the run. I named the run. And that morning
was Mike Lickenland's birthday, who you already mentioned. Yeah. Mike Lickenland, who played
Bobby Brady. Yeah. I, for the life of, I know I sent it in as evidence. Like when we started this case, actually Adam sent it in.
But I named the run something like,
mom always said, don't run in the house.
Uh-huh, right.
Which is a spinoff of, or you know,
a spinoff, if you will, of the classic line
from the Brady Bunch.
Mom always said, don't play ball in the house
because they threw the ball, the football in the house
and it hit the vase and it broke.
Exactly. Mom's it broke. Exactly.
Mom's favorite vase.
Right.
So then I sent it to these guys.
And every morning we have a little discussion about the person who I've honored and whether or not I've honored somebody appropriately.
And Carl said, why are you doing this?
And I said, it's a classic show.
Of course I'm going to do this.
And by the way, I've previously honored Barry Williams, Florence Henderson,
when she passed away.
Like, this is not the first time
I've honored anybody in the Brady Bunch.
I'm so excited about the idea
that this is the greatest show business honor
anyone could earn,
to have your passing marked
by one of these runs being named
after a reference to you.
I think it's right up there with the mention of the Oscars.
It's just like the monuments at Yankee Stadium or the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Hey, Jesse, you haven't seen this evidence.
And you can take a look at it at the Judge John Hodgman show page or
her Instagram account at Judge John Hodgman.
But we have a couple.
Robert dedicated a couple of runs to our podcast, Jesse. So before you start turning your nose up,
we got one here, a one mile run called Here Run the Judge.
And then a 3.61 mile run called Only Run Can Decide.
Both of those are pretty solid. I mean, I think if we've learned anything from today's case and from Judge John Hodgman,
it's that Jordan Jesse Goh is a classic podcast since this program is a spinoff of Jordan Jesse Goh.
Good point.
That's an excellent point.
Really good point.
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Let me ask you, Carl.
Yes.
Is this podcast a classic podcast?
I don't have the expertise to opine, Your Honor.
I apologize.
Hmm.
So you really don't know what makes anything a classic,
and therefore I should
throw you out of the score. I've watched plenty of television, your honor. I have not listened to
many podcasts. Yours in fact is the only podcast I've ever listened to your honor. All guesses are
wrong. This is absolutely a classic podcast. Contemporary classic Webby award winner Webby
award winning a Webby award. You think the Webby is handing out awards to non-classics best of
iTunes, best of iTunes, Carl.
I will have to defer, Your Honor.
I've never listened to any other podcast.
They're terrible.
I can't recommend them.
Carl, how do Robert's runs end up becoming a conversation in your text group among your friends?
It's a morning ritual.
It's as important to my waking up as coffee.
Rob runs the crack of dawn every day, seven days a week. Rain or shine thank you every every day six o'clock in the morning he's out there 20 degrees snow rain it doesn't matter
and then he comes back and he posts it on strava uh which manually from his watch this all migrates
over from his running watch um and then he looks at birthdays, famous people,
and chooses a person to honor that day.
It's generally a musician. And our rule is we try to do musicians first.
And so then Rob texts us his Strava link
with his little pun in the picture
with the expectation that the others in the group,
mostly me, will chime in and come up with other puns, usually which mock Rob, as most of his puns mock him as well.
And if Rob expects to be mocked, I will surely not disappoint him.
So we end up sharing song lyrics and song titles for the honoree, just making fun of each other, but mostly Rob.
So, Robert, what's your definition of a classic TV show?
Okay, so I don't know if by illustration.
I'll tell you why I think the classic TV show is a show that stands the test of time.
That people still watch decades later.
That has resonance with people decades later,
that has a second life.
I'll say it again.
Hmm.
Let the record reflect that the judge says, hmm.
Hmm.
That's one of those things that make me go, hmm.
I'm trying to decide if that's good or bad.
Well, it's a reference to Arsenio
Hall. Okay.
I think that's good. So good. Probably good.
Yeah, good. Speaking of coming to America,
also, yeah. I interviewed Arsenio Hall
one time, and the main thing I remember is how huge
his hands are. Just, the guy has
incredible hands.
Hmm.
You know, every, but generations
watch. Like, I can mention it to a younger generation and i think
they would know what i was talking about can you i think i can make references to things like
marsha marsha marsha and on my nose and the brady bernstein and the theme song
and people would sing it okay here's the story of a man named brady yeah that's as far as i've gotten to they were four men living all together yet they were all
alone and then one day when this fellow met this lady and they knew it was much more than a bunch
you guys are litigators you know that we can't get in trouble with ASCAP BMI here.
We haven't got that kind of budget.
It's true.
It's true.
But I mean, I really love the idea of this going out.
When we put this on the YouTube channel at Judge John Hodgman Pod, let's make sure that you catch us not just singing this, but also in this Zoom configuration where we're stacked up in boxes. Right right the way they are in the opening to
the brady bunch now i'm gonna i'm gonna venture to say this robert there is probably a tenant
like this despite despite that all of the kids who listen to this program tend to be super smart
intelligent old souls who deserve to watch the fringe connection i bet you a fair amount of them
did not know what we were doing
when we started dad-humming the Brady Bunch theme.
That's just my impression.
Jesse, what do you think?
I mean, you're a full decade younger than me.
That's true.
I'm an older millennial.
Right.
And to me, the Brady Bunch is two things.
And to me, the Brady Bunch is two things.
It ran far longer, I think, on Nick at Night than most of its contemporary shows. So it was still for sure on Nick at Night, which I would occasionally see when I went to my friend Jody's house because he had cable, well into my childhood.
And I think that that theme song
is absolutely iconic.
I don't think that the things like
which of the Brady kids
was like a hunk or a dreamboat
or like which of the Brady kids was which,
um,
or,
uh,
what qualities the parents had of any kind other than being the parents.
Uh,
I don't,
I don't think those things have endured in the same way as that theme song.
But I do think that the theme song and the aesthetics of the opening sequence are about as a fixation of Generation X, like as a subject of mockery and discussion and, you know, like far more than any of the Partridge family or or even all in the family or any of the great television shows of the 1970s.
Like, The Brady Bunch is certainly the iconic television show for Generation X.
I mean, definitely The Brady Bunch had an extended lifespan because it was being shoved down our throats in syndication and on Nick at night for a long time.
I mean, it was just out there all the time.
If I may, Bailiff Jesse, I'd submit that the Brady Bunches to Gen X as Saved by the Bell is to your generation.
And if that Rob were your age, he'd probably be honoring Screech on Strava someday and insisting that Saved by the Bell was a classic show. I think that is a canny move, Counselor,
to compare those two shows
because it would be difficult to find a show
as iconic as Saved by the Bell
that's worse than Saved by the Bell.
The Brady Bunch is pretty corny,
but it's definitely better than Saved by the Bell.
Do I have to point out that Saved by the Bell
did have a spinoff? Which was it? Saved by the Bell. Do I have to point out that Saved by the Bell did have a spinoff?
Which was it?
Saved by the Bell, the new class, and then the college years.
Well, are those spinoffs or reboots?
Reboots.
Well, one of them is about the same kids in college.
Yeah, so that would be a reboot, I would say.
Because there was, after all, the Brady Brides.
Right.
And the Bradys, which was the adult contemporary version of the Brady Bunch that they tried to relaunch as a reunion show in the late 80s.
True.
But those aren't spinoffs.
Those are reunions.
But the new class had all new high school kids and Screech was working in the principal's office.
If they had called it Screech, then yes.
But because they called it Saved by the Bell, the new class, it was an extension.
It was not a spinoff.
If it had been Screech, and Screech was now the hard-bitten editor of a newspaper in Chicago
or something, and had completely changed tone like they did with Lou
Grant and Mary Tyler Moore, then that would be a spinoff. I mean, the point that I was trying to
make in terms of asking Jesse and so on is that I feel like, you know, I've always been astonished
by how much culture Jesse and I have in common because we are, you know, not the same age. And yet Jesse is also
an old soul, I think, and a, and a, not a consumer, but an observer of culture.
But also I think generationally, probably Jesse and I have more in common with each other
than maybe Jesse has with someone who's 15 years
younger than Jesse. Nick at Night and broadcast television were still very, very common well into
the early 2000s. Although this is in some ways like a time of renaissance for Brady Bunch style
television, right? That like there was a long period of time
where streaming meant trying to produce
the highest quality programming possible
because all those streaming services
were trying to become distinctive
by producing something that got critical acclaim
or won awards.
Yeah, they all wanted to be HBOs when HBO existed.
And just in the last couple of years, the streaming services have almost all taken a hard turn towards things that are easy to watch in large amounts, which is probably the best quality of the Brady Bunch.
It is entirely pleasant.
And, you know, that's what, you know,
they call it the suits-a-zonts or whatever it is, right?
It's like television shows.
The television shows that are easy to watch
have made a big comeback in the last couple of years.
Scripted television shows, specifically,
that are easy to watch.
But that's very true.
But, you know, people are watching Suits, not the Brady Bunch.
The Brady Bunch is not back.
I'm just making the argument and I don't know how to test it.
But it seems germane to this discussion with regard to how well it is endured.
Do the kids know Brady Bunch now?
I bet you fewer do than did 10 years ago, for sure.
I don't believe the younger generation
is streaming the Brady Bunch.
So, Robert, let's get, let's, we,
if you were to say what it is
that makes the Brady Bunch classic,
is it its endurance?
Or do you disagree with Carl about its quality?
Both.
But what, everything that Carl said
about the Brady Bunch,
setting up those tropes
about the parents and the children and the middle children is what makes it a classic. It is the
show, I think, the family sitcom, the model family sitcom. It is the family sitcom that I think
everybody hawkins back to when they talk about family sitcoms. Carl, Robert raises a point here.
You say that like,
you know,
Cindy is a,
Cindy is a trope,
but didn't Cindy create the trope?
I think,
well,
I think Sherwood Schwartz created that trope.
Way to erase Cindy and the actor.
Again,
you hate these actors so much.
I don't think it's a classic example of the family sitcom.
What is?
My Three Sons?
I never watched that either.
It's before my time,
Your Honor.
Name a more iconic
octet
than the Brady Bunch.
I'll wait.
That's not possible.
What would be a more
classic family sitcom
than the Brady Bunch?
The Simpsons.
Oh, the Simpsons is definitely a classic family sitcom. I think the Simpsons oh the simpsons definitely a classic family sitcom
i think the simpsons only exists because of the brady bunch though
i think it's fair to say that the simpsons only exists because of the honeymooners
like as a definitional sitcom uh of which it is you, to which it is a sort of homage. But I don't think The Simpsons
only even even with all those brilliant Gen X pop culture minors who created The Simpsons
and defined The Simpsons. I don't think you can trace its roots directly to the Brady Bunch.
If you draw a through line through Dana Gould, famous comedian and Simpsons writer, you might even argue that Planet of the Apes has more influence upon The Simpsons than The Brady Bunch.
There is, I guess, a somewhat reasonable argument to be made that The Simpsons is a sort of comedy riff on The Brady Bunch.
Like, what if The Brady Bunch had jokes in it or was funny at all?
I don't see any ever long lasting impression upon TV from The Brady Bunch had jokes in it or was funny at all? I don't see any ever long lasting impression
upon TV from the Brady Bunch.
I mean, what quality shows came out that mimicked that?
I can't think of any.
Eight is enough.
Family matters.
Again, these are not classics.
Yeah, Full House.
How dare you?
Full House.
Full House.
Yes.
That's a very comparable show.
Yeah.
But not a classic.
Absolutely not. Because classic has to mean.... Yeah. But not a classic. Absolutely not.
Because classic has to mean...
High in quality, enduring quality.
And all in the family would be the gold standard.
For that era, I would say yes.
Maybe Mary Tyler Moore, maybe MASH.
It has to have a seriousness, if not a certain self-seriousness to it.
It can't just be a fun show that people like.
No, it can be fun.
It can't be a fun show that people like
even sort of sarcastically
as Generation X loved the Brady Bunch so much.
If they're, I mean,
if you're enjoying it as a parody,
that doesn't make it a classic.
That kind of undermines the claim that it's a classic
if people are enjoying it for,
because it's such a parody.
Hmm, interesting.
Like the legendary classic film, Airport 72.
Earl, I do feel like I haven't yet gotten from you
a comparable sitcom from that era,
or just before or just after,
that is classic by your own definition.
Family sitcom.
Family. Yeah. Well, I mean, all in the family. well i mean all in the family it's
right there in the title i suppose yeah is that a maybe that's come yeah yeah maybe it is you had
you had the beat head and the gloria living home that's a family sitcom that would qualify
his nickname was meathead he was not called the meathead
the meathead is the monster meathead is the doctor but they're adult children what
about a classic sitcom with children children and i'm talking about a comedy right i'm not
necessarily talking about social commentary i'm just wondering if there's something that takes
the place of brady bunch if we eliminate it from the pantheon You can think on it a little bit. Maybe family ties before it jumped
the shark by adding the little brother. There's always a Cousin Oliver when they try to extend
a show to beyond its natural life and they bring in a new little kid. That's Brady Bunch's
contribution to the art. That's his only contribution to culture is that they introduced
the term the Cousin Oliver curse.
It's his contribution to sitcoms.
For those of you who don't know Cousin Oliver, you know, there were six Brady Bunch children until they started to age out and they all turned into teenagers.
And they were, they were trying to figure out how to keep this, keep the show going.
I guess because it was popular and successful, despite what Carl says. I guess they wanted to continue it.
And they tried to inject some new life into it by bringing a new little kid.
A little blonde, toe-headed kid with glasses.
A little delightfully nerdy kid named Cousin Oliver, played by Robbie Rist.
Cousin Oliver also played Dr. Z on Galactica 1980.
Robbie Rist now is a musician and occasionally an actor, best known for his role in helping to produce and write the music for an act in Sharknado, a classic, a classic film.
It says here, Robert, that if I were to rule in your favor, you want Carl to quote Fonzie, unquote. What does it mean to Fonzie, quote, unquote?
Okay, so basically when you have dug in and refused to admit you're wrong
and later are forced to admit you're wrong,
it's called a Fonzie
because in the classic episode of Happy Days,
Fonzie was unable to tell Richie
he was wrong about something.
And when he had to do it, he went,
I was, I was, I was. So when you reluctantly admit you're wrong about something after digging in for
a while, let's say a few months, you have to Fonzie. So you want Carl to say I was wrong
So you want Carl to say, I was wrong the way Henry Winkler did in that very famous episode of Happy Days, a show that I know and think of a lot, but maybe a younger generation doesn't anymore.
Carl, is Happy Days a classic sitcom, yes or no?
I believe it was for a short period of time before it jumped the shark, but it jumped the shark long before Fonzie jumped the shark. It jumped the shark long before it jumped long before fonzie jumped the shark it jumped the shark several years before that that's right because jumping the shark
is a is a phrase is a trope that you see on the tv tropes i believe that's where it first started
gaining currency on the internet but perhaps i'm wrong there but there is an episode in later days
of happy days when they were starting to replace the cast left and right as people were leaving
and so forth but later on they tried to gin up some excitement by having Fonz, the Fonz water ski over a
great white shark.
It had to have been in the wake of the Jaws phenomenon, I suppose.
And that was when people on the internet started saying that show got too silly at that point.
It jumped the shark.
You're saying it jumped the shark before Fonzie actually jumped the shark.
Yes, Your Honor.
When did Happy Days turn sour for you, Carl?
At the very latest when Richie left the show.
And the kids were all at college.
And they started focusing on Joanie and Chachi.
And perhaps a little earlier when it became more of a total Fonzie-centric show.
I thought Fonzie was much cooler when he was wearing his members-only jacket than when he was wearing his leather jacket.
What a hipster you are.
Only the most contemptible television snobs even know what you're talking about right now.
Oh, it says here that your ideal ruling is for Robert to Fonzie.
You want him to admit he's wrong.
What would you have him say?
you want him to admit he's wrong what would you have him say i want him i want an on the air on the podcast full-throated arthur fonzarelli wrong that's what i want and and for him to buy
me a beer the difference of course is that when richie got fonzi to say that he was wrong
fonzi knew he was wrong and i don't know that I'm going to be able to order either of you to
say you're wrong. I mean, the question I have is like, how can I convince one of you that you're
wrong? You're never going to back down. You're attorneys. Now, we're both attorneys. We both
knew that we waived all rights to appeal by appearing before your fake honor. It's kind of
like an arbitration proceeding. We have no recourse. So we're stuck and bound by your decision, your honor.
Carl, you say that by definition, once you explain that words have
meaning, by definition, Adam had to
change his mind. Where do we find words?
Where do we find the meanings for words typically? Dictionaries.
Dictionaries. Dictionaries.
Interesting.
I believe I submitted evidence of the definition of classic with my, well, I was marshalling, marshalling, marshalling my evidence last week.
How dare you?
Wow.
Yeah.
You sent me a link to merriam-webster.com dictionary classic.
And this was your ninth grade personal writing essay opening
the dictionary definition of class the dictionary defines classic as
this was your big evidence that you were going to show to me right that was one piece then tell me
let's walk through the other pieces of homework you tried to give me. The other links that you sent me.
Link number one, cute picture of Tiger.
That was the dog on the first season who disappeared from the Brady Bunch.
Mysteriously was never mentioned again.
Tiger the dog.
You sent me the obituary of Sherwood Schwartz, the creator of the show.
And then you send me this link to the dictionary.
Carl, have you ever in your career in general litigation stood up in a courtroom and said,
Your Honor, the dictionary definition of blank is blank.
Is that ever something you've tried in court before?
Dictionaries are often cited.
Yes.
Dictionaries are often cited.
Sure.
Why? Trying to break down a meaning of a statute you have
to look at the construction of the statute the meaning of the words sometimes plain english
meaning sometimes black's law dictionary meaning then you get interpretations we love the marion
webster dictionary even though they say a hot dog is a sandwich well they're clearly wrong your
honor they're they're wrong But because you introduced it,
I have to follow it,
don't I?
I have to at least
give your evidence
some weight.
Some weight.
Right?
Classic.
Adjective.
Definition one,
A,
serving as a standard
of excellence,
of recognized value.
What do you think
about that, Robert?
I think of recognized value as pretty much what the Brady Bunch is.
Why?
Because it made money for Sherwood Schwartz and his ungrateful nephew?
No, because it entertained generations of people, and later, mostly children.
Definition 1B, traditional, enduring.
I don't see anything enduring in this show at all i mean we
already discussed this that no one known the younger generation is uh streaming this show
definition 1c characterized by simple tailored lines and fashion year after year
clearly the johnny bravo thing alone is clear lines of fashion this is my question
carl to you and robert can i convince you robert
that the brady bunch is not a classic show i think carl has made some some pretty strong
arguments to be honest i've been i've been raking him over the coals i've been jumping
him over the shark quite a bit for sure but uh but i mean you're not convinced, or are you just stubborn, Robert?
Well, I'm not convinced by Carl's argument.
Whether or not your honor could do it, I wouldn't say you can't.
You know, I'm not completely recalcitrant.
But none of those arguments, I mean, you know, I think that we've established.
I don't mean to make common cause with people who dislike the Brady Bunch necessarily, but I mean, I think Carl makes an argument that it is,
that it's pretty pedestrian, right? Right. That is his argument. But my point is that beyond that, it's its influence. It's the way it's gone on through generations, the fact that it can be parodied so readily
and everyone knows exactly what it is
that's being parodied.
What we need to do is get SNL to do a parody
of the Brady Bunch this Saturday.
Then we'll know.
Well, let's just wait.
I'll call them and invite them to do that
and they'll say yes.
You folks, you guys just stay in the studio
until Sunday, okay?
Then we'll know.
All right. That's fine.
Carl, is there any way that I could convince you that this is a classic?
It'll be hard, Your Honor, but I will abide by Your Honor's decision.
Robert, why is this important to you?
Why is it important to you that Carl say he's wrong?
Because of the, well, because of the way it arose, right?
I sent this out there fully expecting everybody to say,
yeah, Brady Bunch was a classic.
I didn't expect everyone to push back and go,
how dare you honor Bobby Brady?
Like he's unworthy.
Is that what, is that what Carl said?
How dare you honor Bobby Brady?
Essentially.
Yes.
Different words, but yes.
Basically, he said, like, why is this guy worthy of my time leading your test?
How dare he mock your third-of-a-mile jog?
Yes, exactly.
Thank you.
Robert, is this something Carl does a lot?
You come up with something and Carl shoots you down?
Yes.
Yes.
More often than you shoot Carl down?
Probably.
And what would be another example, if you have one, of Carl being contrary?
Okay, so we were talking about this before.
I'm a huge Beatles fan.
And Ringo Starr's qualities as a drummer comes up all the time.
And Carl will say how he thinks Ringo basically is a terrible drummer.
Wow.
And only, you know, was lucky to play along with the Beatles.
And then I'll point out to the number of drummers
who over the years have said that Ringo is an excellent drummer
and was integral to the sound of what I think is the most popular recording act in the history of
recording acts. Big claim, the Beatles. Yes, it is right on a limb there.
Robert's going out there. He's going to say say it beals popular judge hodgman uh an iconic
argument but not a classic one i think i've heard everything i need to in order to make my decision
i'm going to go into my my sunken den with that really cool walled wall carpeting that mike
brady designed for himself as an architect,
I'll be backing him on with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Carl, how are you feeling about your chances?
I think I'm feeling pretty good.
Why is that?
Feeling pretty good.
Because there's been a lot of,
the judge has made a lot of references to iconic, the word iconic.
And he has also talked about the show being rather pedestrian.
And I suspect that he will respect English language and find that a pedestrian show is not a classic.
I like the idea that you're using like a mind control technique on the judge, where if you figure, if you repeat the word iconic enough
and then get him to say it, it's like when someone is trying to sell you a car and they keep nodding
and it's supposed to make you nod and then you agree to buy the car.
I don't think I have those powers of persuasion, unfortunately.
I think we need a prop. You need to bring in a too small glove or something.
Robert, how are you feeling?
Not as good as I felt coming into this, to be honest.
You know, when I was talking about this with people at home and friends and family,
they all pretty much convinced that I was right.
And I think I might have to be ordered to Fonzie here, I'm starting to think.
But I will accept the ruling.
Well, we'll see what the judge has to say when he comes back in just a moment. 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.
Were 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.
of the podcast there?
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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.
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A podcast from MaximumFun.org. If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
The MaxFunDrive now receding into the rearview mirror, but our gratitude is not.
Our gratitude is everlasting.
Thank you, MaxFun members, for making this show possible.
You all absolutely rule.
The reason that we have food and modes of conveyance and we can support our children and so on and so forth.
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It was max.
It was fun.
And it was even drive.
Yeah.
And it was all wonderful.
And I'll just echo Jesse and my own self, as I've said over and over again,
I don't know what I would do without,
without the show and without you all.
And thank you for making it possible.
John,
you have solid sound coming up around the corner.
Solid sound is happening. I mentioned it the other week and I'm going to say it to you again. Solid Sound is the
biannual, that is every other year, Festival of Music and Culture and Arts and everything else,
held at the beautiful former Electric Parts Factory that has been turned into one of the
most incredible large-scale installation art museums in the world.
Mass MoCA, the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art,
out there in North Adams, Massachusetts, the pride of the Housatonic River.
And who hosts Solid Sound?
Well, the band Wilco.
They play two big concerts and have all of their incredible guests come and play music and do other things. And then they even invite me to curate the comedy stage.
And we've got quite a stage for you with Jean Grey, Dave Hill, Sydney, Washington, Brittany
Carney, and more solid sound is a really, really special thing that I'm so grateful that I get to
do every other year. Um, and it's a lot of fun. And if you Google solid and sound, those are two
different words. You will get there and you can get tickets and you can join us. I believe that
there's single day tickets available now, if that's something that makes it easier for you to access.
And our comedy stage runs all afternoon on Saturday and it is indoors, which is good for
comedy. That is to say, people like to be on stage inside when they're doing comedy because
laughter doesn't dissipate into the heavens. And it's good for you because you won't get
rained on or too much sun.
I mentioned also that friend of the show, Paul F. Tompkins, is going to Maine.
I don't know if that show is sold out yet.
You can find out by going to paulftompkins.com slash live and seeing where else he's performing with his Varietopia variety show, which is a really good show.
And I think you should go and maybe I'll see you there.
And also, finally, speaking of Maine, I just want to give a shout out to the Colonial Theater of Belfast, Maine.
It's a beautiful, old, historic movie theater in Belfast, Maine, of course, that was threatened with closure and disrepair and collapse.
But it was saved by the town, and they're putting on some really great movies there.
Belfast is a terrific town if you're able to get up there.
Maybe after you're seeing Paul F. Tompkins, continue up the coast and go see a movie at the Colonial.
They've got a big old papier-mâché elephant on top that they stole from Perry's Nuthouse.
It's a whole story.
Check it out.
The Colonial Theater in Belfast, Maine.
Maybe we'll do a show there sometime.
Jesse, what do you have going on?
This week on Bullseye, my NPR and BaxFun pop culture interview Podcast. We have the great Alison Brie,
a wonderful conversation with Alison Brie,
wherein we find out that her middle school locker
is featured in the film Halloween.
Really?
Yeah, it's true.
She's from South Pasadena.
So South Pasadena is like a nice suburb USA
in every film ever made, including Halloween.
I was very lucky to appear in an episode of Community and met all the cast.
And Alison Brie is truly one of the most delightful of the delightfuls.
Boy, and an incredible actor.
Yeah. Let's get back to the courtroom and Judge John Hodgman.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents
the verdict. So first of all, I've been given both of you the business, but I want you to know that
I think you are both wonderful, even though I've been yelling at you a lot. Maybe I've been
encouraged by the fact that you're both attorneys and it's my job to yell at you. As a judge, I
never really had a chance to run a courtroom this way.
But on the other hand, I'm troubled a little bit by my saying, you know, I've been really giving you a hard time, but I like you because that's what bullies say.
You know what?
That's what bullies say.
That's like that's like when when Jesse Thorne asked Carl, like, how does Robert feel about you stomping all over his opinions?
He expects it.
He loves it.
It's fun.
I don't know if it's fun.
Maybe think about that.
Now, I've been thinking about this, because, Carl, you do make a pretty compelling argument.
Can something be a classic if it is merely just sort of there and present in our
lives for so long as brady bunch was i think that that's a reasonable question yeah you know because
like we've heard a lot of elevator music in our time it's just there that doesn't mean that it's
classic we've heard a lot of Coldplay songs. They're around for sure. And I don't even know
why I'm making fun of Coldplay. I couldn't name a Coldplay song. I just know that it's a trope,
a cliche, if you will, that Coldplay is pretty pedestrian. Maybe it's even a classic trope.
It has given me pause, but I keep coming back to influence.
Brady Bunch had a profound influence on a couple of generations, despite its initial
uncelebrated run.
In syndication and in reruns, it left a real footprint on the brains of Gen X and to a
lesser degree, some older millennials and to a maybe greater
degree, a little bit younger boomers, whatever that one is. I don't know. Like everyone knew
what the Brady Bunch was in the English speaking world in North America, for sure.
The fact that it was so widely parodied, the fact that it was so widely quotable,
widely parodied. The fact that it was so widely quotable. The fact that, well, I mean, it gave birth to some pretty important careers. I mean, before there were the parody films in the 90s,
there was the real live Brady Bunch, which was an off-Broadway show
created by Joey and Jill Soloway with Becky Thayer and Andy Richter
and Jane Lynch in it, among others,
where all they did
were essentially, you know,
line-by-line recreations of episodes.
Carl would deny us Andy Richter.
Carl would deny us Jane Lynch.
Carl would believe that these careers
should never have begun
because they were imitating
a bad show.
If anything, I think
that the Brady Bunch
for good or ill, and there are
arguments both ways, right?
Not
merely left a cultural footprint
on the brains of Gen X, but
the hating on the Brady Bunch
became the whole sort of part of the whole genesis of meta comedy of that 90s period
of smarty pants, mostly white comedians who are obsessed with popular culture, remixing
that into Mystery Science Theater 3000, for example.
You know, that kind of riffing, parodic homage,
that kind of looking at pedestrian, you know, popular culture
and appreciating it and making fun of it,
but in a kind of loving and a subversive way.
That's a whole style of comedy that I think
went hand in hand with the sheer omnipresence
of the Brady Bunch.
Now, you make a good point in that
it does not have any spinoffs.
I think that's true too.
Like, it certainly did not move the cultural conversation
in the way that All in the Family did or The Jeffersons or Maud or Good Times.
That whole family of highly socially conscious Norman Lear shows.
You're right.
And if anything, like when we talk about the self-referential comedy of the 90s, which is when maybe the making fun of the Brady Bunch reached its apex, it's reflecting the fact that the did in the 70s, the cartoon show they did about
the Bradys on the Saturday mornings, the two parody films, the multiple reunion attempts to
reboot and failed attempts, to your point, Carl, I suppose, the failed attempts to reunite the cast
and do updated versions of the Brady Bunch. It was always only about itself,
which you might think makes an argument that it is merely iconic and not classic. And I understand
that. But for me, as I've thought about it over the course of this very lively conversation,
the fact of the matter is it only sort of reemphasizes to me that it is,
and I know this is a Latin term, but not a legal one,
sui generis, in and of itself.
For all, there were not many attempts to copy it.
One could argue that the Partridge family
was something of an attempt.
Certainly, eight is enough,
but not taking away from the merits of those two shows,
they just weren't the Brady Bunch.
Not even Full House as kind of the best comp, I think, from the 80s and 90s to the Brady Bunch in terms of sort of like a generally not thought-provoking fun family sitcom.
No show would attempt to imitate the Brady Bunch that way because they just knew the
Brady Bunch was it.
It's its own thing.
It's its own thing.
And I think that I think that that speaks to the fact that the Brady Bunch, it's the
the it's weird.
Of its timeness and not of its timeness. It's a 1950s button-down family show
in kind of groovy Johnny Bravo 70s drag.
It is absolutely not socially alert at all.
And the fashions and the style
are much more contemporary.
But the attitudes, with the exception of it being a blended
family.
But even then it's like they were a blended family for one episode and then
they might as well,
they never addressed that issue again.
It never became a dynamic at all.
It was just a family with six kids and then a weird cousin.
Like all of that doesn't make it bad.
All of that makes it interesting. And I think that
there's a reason why people, it's not just that Nick and Knight and, and, and syndication were
shoving it down the throat. It worked in syndication. It worked at Nick and Knight.
It worked on people's imaginations in ways that say too close for comfort did not.
No offense, Ted Knight.
You know, it worked on people's imaginations in some way.
And I think that it is the Brady Bunch is essentially undeniable.
So it makes sense that the Brady Bunch was on Nick at night, which described itself as
the first classic television network.
And it also makes sense
that while it does not conform
to the definition of classic in the
Merriam-Webster Dictionary 1A,
it may not meet
your standard of excellence or recognized
value, Carl. It absolutely
is traditional,
and I believe enduring.
Even if it is slipping to a certain degree from
cultural currency.
Now, I think, you know, if you had, if you had had this conversation 10 or 15 years ago,
that wouldn't even be an issue.
Of course, everyone knows what the Brady Bunch is and therefore it is enduring at that time.
And therefore, by definition of 1B, it is classic.
At that time.
And therefore, by definition of 1B, it is classic.
Carl, you're wrong.
And you're wrong to presume that Robert automatically expects and enjoys your abuse.
So keep an eye out on that last thing.
But for the meantime, I need you to Fonzie me right now on the Brady Bunch.
I was...
Robert, do you accept that, Fonzie?
I do, Your Honor.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Marsha, Marsha, Marsha!
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Robert, having received a Fonzie, how do you feel?
I feel great.
I mean, I feel like it's the biggest case of one
in whatever number of years I've been doing this.
I may have to retire.
Carl, how do you feel having Fonzied?
I don't know.
I just, I feel like I got in front of a judge
who was a Brady Bunch fan, knew every episode,
but I'll live with it.
It's okay.
Rob's happy.
And that does matter,
of course. And we had fun. Well, thank you both for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you. Thank you.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books. We'll have swift justice in just a second. First,
our thanks to Redditor UsefulBiscotti9548 for naming this week's episode Court Marshall Marshall Marshall.
Join the conversation on the Maximum Fund subreddit at MaximumFund.Reddit.com.
You can chat about this episode and submit your own ideas for names for future cases.
Evidence and photos from the show are on our Instagram.
That is at Judge John Hodgman.
We are also on TikTok and YouTube at Judge John Hodgman Pod.
Yeah, there's video of Judge John Hodgman now.
So make sure and go and watch it.
It's really fun.
It's a lot of fun.
I agree with you.
What you said is correct.
I'm sending a special message only to video viewers.
You'll never know what it is unless you watch the video.
And by the way, I want to say a special thank you to Andy underscore camp over there on Apple
podcast for the five star rating. They say about the show, quote, I've been a listener and a Max
fund member for a decade. Thank you very much. Andy underscore camp. There's not a bad show on
the network, but this one is the best of shucks. Well, I mean, they're all terrific.
Jesse and John are a great pair.
That I will agree with.
Thank you, Andy underscore camp for listening.
Thank you for being a member.
And thank you for making this show possible with your membership.
And if you're listening to us on Apple Podcasts and you like the show and you've got some time,
why don't you go over there and give us a rating and a review?
It really does help new listeners find the show
or just tell your friends about it.
Judge John Hodgman was created
by Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman.
This episode engineered by Rich Maycar
at Button Sound in New York City.
Our social media manager is Natty Lopez.
Our video editor is Daniel Speer.
Our audio editor is A.J. McKeon.
Our producer, the great Jennifer Marmer. Now,
Swift Justice, where we answer small disputes with quick judgment. This one's from Josh.
My partner, Chuck, likes to use the term air budding to mean dog napping. I think it would
be better understood to mean teaching a dog to play basketball. Boy, talk about cultural references. I have made that joke
about there's nowhere in the rule book a dog can't play basketball too many times, even for someone
my age. But I confess I have never seen that movie. Is the dog kidnapped in Air Bud? I believe
the dog is kidnapped in Air Bud, but the real bad news kidnapping situation
is in the movie Bingo,
which is sort of a poor man's Air Bud
that features some dog peril
that is truly alarming.
I believe someone wants to make the dogs
into hot dogs in Bingo.
Oh, no.
Yeah, it's bananas.
Please don't bingo those dogs
into non-sandwich hot dogs.
And by the way,
Air Budding means teaching a dog to play basketball. That's the whole plot. That's
the main part of the movie, right? He plays basketball. Air budding doesn't even mean
teaching a dog to play basketball. Air budding is playing basketball when you're a dog.
I, you know what? I defer to my bailiff, Jesse Thorne. That's right. Air budding
is playing basketball when you're a dog.
So take that, one of you.
And by the way, speaking of animals, do you have a dispute involving animals?
Do you want your cat to carry items from room to room and they refuse?
I'll find in your favor, of course.
Or do you want to get into bird watching, but your hiking buddy doesn't want to hear
about warblers or anything regarding animals and pets?
We're long overdue for a big old pet docket.
So submit your animal cases to this kangaroo court at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
In fact, submit any case at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
No case too big or small.
We judge them all.
That's MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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