Judge John Hodgman - Decease and Desist

Episode Date: March 16, 2016

We premiere a new segment this week, Status Conference, plus a dad goes on trial. Marc brings the case against his wife Polly. They had a beloved dog who passed away several years ago. Marc would lik...e to assemble and prepare a display of the skeleton in memory of their pet. Polly thinks this is weird and gross. Who's right? Who's wrong?

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. This week, decease and desist. Mark brings the case against his wife, Polly. They had a beloved dog who passed away a few years ago. Mark would like to assemble and prepare a display of the skeleton in memory of their pet. Polly thinks this is weird and gross. Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man
Starting point is 00:00:26 can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom. The sense of death is most in apprehension, and the poor beetle that we tread upon in corporal sufferance finds a pang as great as when a giant dies. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, 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 whatever? I do. I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he's on record as more of a cat person?
Starting point is 00:01:01 I do. I do. Very well. Judge Hodgman? You may be seated. I'm more of a cat person? I do. I do. Very well. Judge Hodgman? You may be seated. I'm more of a cat skeleton person myself. I'm more of a ferret skeleton person myself, which may give a hint of a hint of a hint of a clue toward the cultural reference that I paraphrased as I entered this courtroom. For an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors can either you mark or you polly name the piece of culture that i quoted polly you are the defendant in this case mark
Starting point is 00:01:31 has brought you into this court against your will so you have a choice you may make the first guess as to the piece of culture i was quoting or you may make mark guess first which shall it be oh mark can guess first, you may guess first. Oh, it kind of sounded like something out of Shakespeare, but I couldn't guess what that would be. Your guess is something out of Shakespeare. Sure. But you would have to guess a specific work of Shakespeare. Well, clearly it'd be a tragedy. Let's just go with Hamlet. Okay. Hamlet is
Starting point is 00:02:09 Mark's guess. Polly, do you have a guess? You may guess another work of Shakespeare if you wish, or anyone. Well, Shakespeare would be my only guess, but since most of my Shakespearean references boil down to musicals made from Shakespeare,
Starting point is 00:02:25 how about Julius Caesar? All guesses are wrong for once. I've had too much of a run of people guessing the cultural references. It's been really bothersome. But luckily for me, you're both wrong. You're both right. It is Shakespeare.
Starting point is 00:02:44 It is specifically Shakespeare's play Measure for Measure. And even more specifically, a quote from Measure for Measure posted on a page at the skullsunlimited.com website dedicated to the dermestid beetle. These are the beetles, of course, that Skulls Unlimited, my number one, first and only, online stop for articulated ferret skeletons and other articulated and unarticulated skeletons and bones. How we missed that is beyond me. Yeah, well, you should take a look.
Starting point is 00:03:22 That's where I got my ferret skeleton. These guys know that they have everything you would want. beyond me. Yeah. Well, you should take a look. That's where I got my ferret skeleton. They, these guys know that they have, they have everything you would want. You have, they have a real human skulls and skeletons, all kinds of animals articulated and so forth. Claws and teeth,
Starting point is 00:03:35 bird eggs, replica human skulls, fossil hominids, real animal skulls, souvenirs, and novelty gifts. And they have a whole section of the page on derma stud beetles. Cause these are the beetles
Starting point is 00:03:45 that they deploy on dead animals to eat away the non-bone part. Not only do they have a page on their beetles, they include the beetles as part of their crew. They're the who works here part of the website.
Starting point is 00:04:03 It includes these beetles and they're adorable. And they have a, they have a, they have a Q and a for the Beatles in which they asked the Beatles what they're, if they could meet anyone living or dead, who would it be? And the Beatles supposedly respond.
Starting point is 00:04:17 We plan to meet everyone eventually. I'm starting to feel a bias here. Oh, well, I mean, but you're Mark brings a good point. Mark, you want to reassemble the skeleton of your deceased beloved dog, Kudzu. That is correct.
Starting point is 00:04:36 And Polly, you wish him to not do this. That is correct. That is correct. Since this case involves preservation of corpses, skeletons, and historical medical oddities, we have asked a very special expert witness to join us today. Dr. Robert Hicks is in the courtroom. Are you here, sir? I am. And will you state for the record your job? Your Honor, I am director of the Mütter Museum and Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. We are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, professional
Starting point is 00:05:20 fraternal organization in the country. Our museum is probably the best known, best visited museum of pathological anatomy in the United States. Pathological anatomy. Those are the words I was searching for when I was, when I was talking about this dead dog. For those of you who don't know, the Mütter Museum is one of my favorite places in the world and indeed one of my favorite cities in the world, Philadelphia.
Starting point is 00:05:46 But this has a collection. How would you describe the collection, Dr. Hicks? Our collection includes anatomical specimens, mostly human but not entirely. In fact, we do have an articulated skeleton of a dog in our collection. We also have medical tools. Our library has texts concerning the historical medicine going back a thousand years. We have a little bit of everything, wax models, anything and everything connected with anatomy. But what you're specifically known for,
Starting point is 00:06:17 first of all, it's a beautiful... What era was the collection sort of pulled together initially? It was pulled together in the early 19th century, but the Mütter Museum opened in 1863. And it has this turn of the last century feel to it, these beautiful glass display cases. And as you enter in, it's a collection of bones and sometimes deformed bones from horribly deformed people. and sometimes deformed bones from horribly deformed people. You have an incredible collection of trepanned skulls, which is to say skulls that have had a whole board into them while the patient was alive as an early medical practice
Starting point is 00:06:56 to relieve intracranial pressure. Am I explaining trepanation correctly? You're right on with that. We have skulls with all kinds of holes in them caused by different things, most of them causing death. But that's a good example of one that involved treating a living person and keeping them alive. I mean, this is not necessarily, let me put it this way. Some of the items in your collection, I mean, you use the term medical oddities. You have a life cast of Chang'anang Bunker, the Siamese twins for whom the term Siamese twins were named.
Starting point is 00:07:30 They're joined at the waist, more or less, right? That's right. And much of your collection collects these medical oddities or preservation of medical oddities that is not always for the squeamish, but all children love it. That was my first experience there was me wandering through looking at this gigantic human colon that had been preserved. That is truly a mega colon. If I've ever seen one and feeling a little bit like I get to get out of there.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Meanwhile, my friend's four-year-old daughter was going like, this is the greatest place on earth is an amazing place. And as you know, as you may know, sir, I've long championed a film set in your museum called Night at the Mutter Museum, where all of the exhibits come to life, just like in the fun Ben Stiller movie. And my dream casting would be Ricky Gervais as the voice of the megacolon. But I'm still working on it. There's a rights issue. But I'm very happy for you to be here. Have I mischaracterized your museum in any way that you feel uncomfortable with? Oh, no, not at all. And I championed the
Starting point is 00:08:36 film project and would like to help with the casting. So as soon as I get the rights, then we'll have a conversation. I'll get our lawyers together. In the meantime, we'll go over to Little Pete's and we'll hash it out over Scrapple and Scrapple. In the meantime, that classic combination, Scrapple and Scrapple. Mark has this dead dog that he wants to reassemble as a skeleton. Right, Mark? That is correct. And you don't just have this skeleton lying around like it's over there. It's been cleaned off by beetles at Skulls Unlimited. You have this dead dog underneath your house? Well, in the backyard. You have buried your beloved pet. Tell me about Kudzu before we go on. Well, we've had Kudzu since, well, we got her in 2001. She is a half-boxer, half-Boston Terrier.
Starting point is 00:09:34 And we got her when she was a puppy. She came from North Carolina, and we were living in Illinois at the time. And so we called her Kudzu because it seemed like a local vegetation that we brought up to Illinois. Why not name your dog after an invasive weed that everyone hates? Exactly. It became less funny when we moved down to South Carolina. Yeah. It's like my dog, Nutria.
Starting point is 00:10:01 And my 35 cats, the cane toads. So where do you live in South Carolina now? Yes. And now Kudzu, we're going to, we're going to talk very frankly about Kudzu because, and the fact that she is no longer alive and you wish to manipulate her bones in,
Starting point is 00:10:22 in ways that perhaps people might find gruesome. And I think Polly thinks so. But lest you think we are simply cruel and unfeeling, let us say Kudzu, I am sure, was a good dog. She was. You remember her very fondly. He never liked her. That's not true.
Starting point is 00:10:43 Oh! Wait! I like her as much as I like any dog. Objection! he never liked her. That's not true. Oh, wait, I like her as much as I like any dog. Objection. We just went from first gear to realness. Pow, pow. Just dropped it right into realness.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Hit that clutch. Sorry. No, don't apologize. Polly, tell me, how much did your husband hate this dog? She was my dog.
Starting point is 00:11:11 Here's the problem. I'm really the dog person in the house. He's probably more of a cat person. He's more the dog bones person? Yes. Our previous dog, we've always kind of had boxers and in some form and our previous boxer he used to he was obsessed with her with his head he thought it was the coolest skull and he would talk about the skull so then we got you know years later we now have kudzu the lie so this is what
Starting point is 00:11:38 was the name of the previous boxer what was the name of the previous boxer the previous nebuchadnezzar nebuchadnezzar is that how you would call for the dog or did you have a nickname for the dog call him nez nez so you would like you would like come down for a snack in the middle of the night and you'd find your husband sort of fondling nebuchadnezzar's skull going someday. Almost. If he were touching the dog, he would be feeling up the head like it was this weird little thing that he was obsessed with. Your Honor, I believe she is mischaracterizing how often I obsessed with the head over his skull. Overruled. Polly, please continue.
Starting point is 00:12:20 So, yes. So he's had this weird skull obsession with the boxer breed. So then now we have Kudzu. Well, we no longer do, but we do in the yard. We have Kudzu. And when we moved down here to the south, you can take your dog when you have to have it put down. your options are to take your dog with you and you can bury it in the backyard. This was new to us since up north you had to pay a fee and, you know, they got rid of the dog in whatever way they saw fit and you could take the ashes. Right. Or what they claim to be your dog's ashes. Exactly. But so when we moved down here, first of all, he's been charmed by the idea of this since I brought the dog home from the vet and we had to bury her in the backyard for the kids. You know, it was,
Starting point is 00:13:11 for us, it was, you know, that first pet loss. All three of our children were very traumatized. We had tears by the graveside. Everyone was there to bury Cudson. And he pretty much from day one got on this kick about thinking it'd be awesome to dig the dog up. Now, I wouldn't say day one. And I also, it sounds like I was, you know, gleefully standing by the graveside while they were all weeping. And that's not true. It really does sound that way. Well, they were all weak. It really does.
Starting point is 00:13:43 It really does sound that way. And I would you say this was more of a sober pursuit of your lifelong professional interest in dog science as you are a dog scientist? I think that that is that's that's a more fair characterization. Sure. What is your what is your profession, Mark? I am a great illustrator. Oh, OK. Fine.
Starting point is 00:14:04 Good. Resurrection man. Gotcha. Sure. Fine. Good. Resurrection man. Gotcha. Sure. Sure. And, uh, and Polly, do you have, do you, what is your career? What do you, how do you spend your days? Uh, I teach middle school art.
Starting point is 00:14:14 Well done. And how old are your children? The ones we own. Oh, I hope you own them all. Do you have a few rentals at the moment? I have my classes. No, I meant your actual children, your offspring. 10, 12, and 14.
Starting point is 00:14:34 10, 12, and 14. Oh, and so when did Kudzu pass? It will be two years in June, the 1st of June. Two years in June, and she passed. Obviously, you had her put down because you were tired of her? No. What was the reason? Congestive heart failure. Oh, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:14:51 That must have been very painful for your kids, especially, you know, the oldest was, how old was the oldest now? 14. So 12. They were the same age. 14 we 12 she was that they were the same age um we like most normal people got a puppy when our child was three months old right so that's so that you could have an infant for the rest of your life or at least for a few more years i admit that's all on me that was 100 me you don't regret the decision to to adopt kudzu oh absolutely not right i would do it again we've done it again right we have another puppy you have another you have another puppy all right so you say it was not day one after the funeral that you began
Starting point is 00:15:39 thinking about digging up your dog and putting her bones back together. I don't know when it was. I mean, I'm sure the idea came to me on one of the several times I went out there to cut weeds off of the grave, or perhaps when I went out there to replace the pavers that we had covering her burial spot because somebody had stolen them. What do you mean? For some weird reason. Where do you live? Well, the lot was vacant when we buried the dog. You buried your dog in a vacant lot that you owned?
Starting point is 00:16:17 Well, we owned the lot. Right, okay. And then you covered her grave with markers that were stolen? Can I ask you a question? Was the lot in late 19th century Egypt? Have there been a lot of guys in matching khaki short pants and jacket shirts and pith helmets wandering around your neighborhood lately? They did not find what they were looking for, unfortunately.
Starting point is 00:16:44 They did not find what they were looking for, unfortunately. So, Kudzu, we'll get to your reasoning in a moment, but I want to speculate as to the quality of this specimen. Kudzu has been under the ground for two years. Dr. Hicks, do you have any suggestion as to what condition Kudzu's body might be in at this point? Any educated guess? I do. I also have a question to ask Mark in a moment, and maybe a solution to this problem. But the answer to your question about the soil, I heard North Carolina, and if it's like Virginia, it's sort of red clay, high acid stuff. I need to know, Mark, have you ever done this before? Have you ever articulated the skeleton of an animal that you've recovered from the ground?
Starting point is 00:17:30 I have not. Ah, then here's what you need to know. Assuming that you could excavate a skeleton and it's viable in some way, this is a little bit like being handled as parts of the space shuttle and being told, put them together again and there are no instructions. And skilled anatomists who do this have a bit of a difficult time, and they also have to alter the skeletal material in order to rearticulate it. But let's talk about the ground for a moment. Given the time your dog's been under there, there is, at the moment, no particularly profound reason to believe you've
Starting point is 00:18:06 got a skeleton just waiting to be picked up. You could have, at this moment, a ball of goo wrapped in fur. You may not have a skeleton. Even if you have the skeletal pieces, they're still liable to be connected with bits and pieces of flesh in various stages of decomposition. Yeah, and a ball of goo wrapped in fur might be something they might display at the Mütter Museum, but that's not something you want in your house. And it'd have to be stable goo for us, Your Honor. It has to be stable. Okay. But if you pick up skeletal pieces, and even assuming you could get most of them from the ground at this point.
Starting point is 00:18:53 Having not done this before, you're liable to create at best a skeletal hut for a Stone Age Barbie. And that's what your kids will see. Your kids will lose all respect for you and they'll feel demeaned as a result of having their beloved pet reduced to this sculpture. So I did say I did have a suggestion about this. I have seen it done where a colleague of mine had a beloved cat die. The cat was buried for one year in Pennsylvania soil, and it was retrieved, and a friend defleshed the bones, dried them, and assembled them in a bell jar as an ossuary. So they're not re-articulated. They're simply arranged under a bell jar, and the skull is there. And I do share your passion a little bit, Mark, for fondling skulls.
Starting point is 00:19:37 And I have four cats. They're still all alive, and they seem to love it as much as I do when I stroke their crania and admire all their perfections and imperfections. What have I unleashed? What unholy alliance have I allowed to happen on my podcast? But, Your Honor, you did say you were a cat person. I thought it was safe to mention that. Yeah, that's true.
Starting point is 00:19:57 I know what you're talking about. I've felt a cat skull before. I've been there. I know. My younger brother has one of those hairless cats. It's basically all skull. Yeah. Those sphinxes. Dr. Hicks, I feel that we interrupted you and your time is valuable. Was there a further point you wish to make? Well, since Hamlet has already been thrown up as a false source for your quotation, remember the grave digger scene in Hamlet,
Starting point is 00:20:23 where Hamlet says, how long to the grave digger does it take for the body to be reduced to bones? Alas, poor Dr. Hicks, I have no idea what you're talking about. And the grave digger says eight or nine years. And that's British soil. So North Carolina soil is going to be a lot rougher on the dog. And you're going to have a huge mess in your hands if you try to do this. But I said I had a suggestion. Please. The ossuary that my friend created. If you are able to leave those bones or leave those remains untouched for maybe another three to five years, then take a look. You're likely to get more bone if the bone hasn't decayed, even in that acidic
Starting point is 00:21:02 soil. You're still going to have to clear away the fur because frankly, fur and hair just doesn't go away. And then maybe think about the ossuary because it wouldn't be so difficult to say, dry the bones. And if you have to, if you have to, if there's still flesh remaining, you could put them in a pot. Although I suspect Polly doesn't want you doing this in the kitchen and boil the remains off and then you get your bones. But the ostuary is a kind of respectful idea. I liked it when I saw it with my colleague's cat. You might consider that, but I would say leave that dog alone for several more years before giving this a try. Dr. Hicks, can you describe the ostuary that your colleague created, presuming that we don't know what the word ostuary means?
Starting point is 00:21:46 I think he means a pile of cat bones with a skull on top underneath a glass dome. That is true, Your Honor. That is literally what I mean. But I would make this argument to Mark and Polly that an ostuary is a noble tradition. The very first city in our Western heritage, Western civilization, is Jericho in the ancient Near East. And what did archaeologists find? They found human skulls embedded in walls. And these skulls were coated with plaster to give them their lifetime appearance. So the idea of decorating with your friends and neighbors and family goes back a long time.
Starting point is 00:22:20 So there's a noble tradition of this. And you can go to Italy, you can go to places in Czechoslovakia where there are big tours of these underground ossuaries where bones have been placed. Underground Paris has the catacombs. So these are tourist attractions. I'm not suggesting you charge money to look at this ossuary. No, no, no. That's your business. Although it's worked out very well for you, sir. You don't want to foster any competition. I got it. That's true. We don't need the competition.
Starting point is 00:22:50 And likely you would get the same 150,000 plus visitors a year that we get. But it's a thought. But I would suggest for the time being, don't try this. So I'm going to ask Mark and Polly a question really quickly here mark you've heard what dr hicks has said has anything he said given you pause in your desire to dig up your dog's body and mount its bones i would be lying if i said it didn't give me pause um I think that... Can we use a different phrase besides give me pause? Overruled. In other words, let me put it to you this way. Do you want to do it more, less, or the same amount now that you've heard from an expert?
Starting point is 00:23:40 Well, I'm not opposed to the ossuary concept. That's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about you're waiting three years, digging up the body, boiling off the remaining flesh, or maybe hiring some dermisted beetles or something. Really having to boil the body of your dog in order to get its bones before you can even get to the ossuary part. Do you want to do this more less or the same amount? And you are, I'll remind you you're under oath. The same amount, the same amount.
Starting point is 00:24:10 All right, Polly. Yes. You have heard the testimony from our expert witness. You have heard his description of the long historical tradition of the ossuary in human culture, as well as his loving description of his friend's cat's bones piled up underneath a jar. Does that change your opinion
Starting point is 00:24:34 about the possibility of displaying respectfully Kudzu's remains in your home? No. No. I'm actually enthralled by the idea of people. I just don't want my pet. You'll take a human skulls in your house any old day. I would take that over my beloved pet. Not to mention we have other animals in this house. I envision the current 85 pound boxer knocking that thing over and you know suddenly walking around with a bone in his mouth you're you're you're describing like the the most
Starting point is 00:25:11 grotesque marmaduke cartoon ever he kind of is like if david lynch adapted marmaduke it'd be funnier than an actual Marmaduke cartoon. 85 pounds. I didn't realize that the boxer was, and I'm, I'm a cat person, not a, not a dog person.
Starting point is 00:25:32 How, how, how heavy was Kudzu? How, when she died? She was a half boxer. So she was like maybe 30 pounds at most. A lot smaller,
Starting point is 00:25:41 Aron. Gotcha. A lot of goo in the ground. Sorry. Thank you. I appreciate that. Sorry, not sorry, I A lot of goo in the ground. Sorry. Thank you. Sorry, not sorry, I think is what you meant to say. In fact, I think every utterance in your professional career, Dr. Hicks, could be followed by hashtag sorry, not sorry. Polly, the scene that you set of one dog gnawing on the bones of another dog is certainly slapstick.
Starting point is 00:26:13 I don't doubt that Mark, however, would provide security for Kudzu's bones were they to be displayed. So setting aside weird scenarios like that, is there something personally disturbing to you about displaying Kudzu's bones? No, but here's the deal. All kidding aside, of our three children, our middle child that we lovingly referred to as Id for the first many years of his life really does react strongly to things and emotionally react strongly to things. And as much as Mark thinks it would be really cool, and Jack, the middle child, thinks everything
Starting point is 00:26:53 Mark says is cool and amazing and awesome. That will definitely hold three years from now. He will. Yeah, he's open. But Jack's going to say, oh, Dad said it. That's great. I totally want to do it. There's the part of me that sees Jack waking up in the middle of the night with night terrors
Starting point is 00:27:10 because he does over other things that he says, oh yeah, I want to do that. And the next thing you know, he's up having a nightmare about it. So what sort of thing is he having a nightmare about that he is initially enthused about? He wants to watch horror films. How old is he again? Twelve. What kind of horror films? What was most recently? The horrible spider thing.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Judge Hodgman, with all due respect, I think she's talking about Spider-Man 3. No. No, it was actually I'm embarrassed to say Eight-Legged Freaks with David Arquette. Yeah, you I'm embarrassed to say, eight-legged freaks with David Arquette. Yeah, you should be embarrassed to say that. But so he wants to watch these things.
Starting point is 00:27:52 He went to go see The Visit. Wasn't really a scary horror film, suspenseful, whatnot. He thought he wanted to see it. He really enjoyed it. But then still, he's up in the middle of the night weeks later because he has an incredibly vivid imagination. So you're saying that three years from now, when Jack and your husband dig up what remains of Kudzu, suddenly what seemed like a fun, cool idea of digging up a corpse becomes actually digging up a corpse and he'll be scarred. Yeah. You're putting it on him.
Starting point is 00:28:24 I understand. Dr. Hicks, I believe that you have to get going. Is that correct? Yes. I think the agenda calls for another autopsy tonight. Or something more benign. I see. Well, before you leave the courtroom, do you have anything else you'd like to say, or do you have a verdict to suggest? I think the only thing I have to say by way of a verdict to suggest is don't touch the dog. Revisit the decision in about three years. The child with the nightmares may grow out of this and may clamor to touch the remains of Kudzu. I think
Starting point is 00:29:06 giving this arrest for a while and revisiting the decision is possibly the best thing for the integrity of the family unit in this case. And the integrity of the remains themselves. Yes, the integrity of the remains themselves. It really does take some significant time to accomplish some decomposition. And you can't absolutely predict what you're going to find when you dig down, and it may not be all that you hoped it would be, even five years from now. But, Your Honor, I do appreciate being called in to testify in this case. I have great respect for the court, and I am very much in appreciation. Anytime you have a question about dead things, you call me. I certainly will. And I don't know why I've waited so long. You honor us with your presence.
Starting point is 00:29:50 Thank you for your work at the Mutter Museum. Your website is? Our website is, well, just Google Mutter Museum, and you'll find us. And we have a great website that you'll find through that, Memento Muter, just like Memento Mori. And I know that your highly educated listeners know what that is, so I don't have to define it. And that's a great website that allows you to see a lot of things you cannot see normally here, because they're behind the scenes and allows you to see them in 3D. We'll let you get back to the important business of stacking skulls on top of one another in your beautiful museum. And now I will turn and we'll say goodbye to you now. Thank you, Your Honor. It has been a
Starting point is 00:30:31 pleasure and good luck to the litigants of this case. Always a pleasure, Dr. Hicks. Thank you, Jesse. Bill, Jesse, will you see him out? Yes, sir, Judge Hodgman. And you know what? While we're at it, why don't we head over to the chambers for a minute? We've got a Max Fund drive to discuss, then we'll get back to this case. Members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join. And you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by our pals over at Made In. Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio, the famous chef, right?
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Starting point is 00:33:50 Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners right now. Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman. Rules and restrictions apply. Mark and Polly, just you and me and your skulls now and Bailiff Jesse, we're going to get to some justice here. Mark, I feel through all of this, you've certainly displayed your avid
Starting point is 00:34:28 and I think genuine desire to dig up a dog's body and fondle its skull and hold it up in the air in triumph. Finally, I got it! But I'm not sure that I've really heard from your mouth
Starting point is 00:34:44 from your own flesh lips covering your bone teeth, why. What is driving you to do this? This is your chance. Okay. So doing this project would probably satisfy a series of lifelong ambitions for me. I've long had a fascination with archaeology and with, of course, skulls and skeletons and things like that. And I would be approaching this a little bit as sort of a personal learning experience and also as a form of artistic expression. Reassembling this animal would be sort of this intellectual and artistic challenge that I would like to take on.
Starting point is 00:35:49 Plus also skeletons are neat. Yeah. Look, I appreciate the sincerity of your answer because I was afraid you're going to be like, this will be educational for our kids, which is not why you're doing this. You're doing this because you just want to. You're driven to dig up these bones. You're a digger. Just like John Hammond in Jurassic Park. He's like me.
Starting point is 00:36:10 He's a digger. Polly, which is more important? Your husband's personal curiosity and desire to artistically challenge himself to explore this thing that he's obviously very curious about or the memory of kudzu. Honestly, of course, it's going to be kudzu. I think what he just fed you was a line of bull. you was a line of bull. He went to an art school where he did all this art where they had to talk about it and, you know, give all this BS explanation of why things were happening. And I think that's what he just fed you. He went to school forever. Did he take any archaeology classes? I did. What did you take? It was my first year of college.
Starting point is 00:37:07 So, I mean, really. Okay. So, Polly, if in your opinion, this court has been fed a line of bull roar. Yeah. What do you think his real agenda is? Because he likes to do weird things. You married him. I know. I question that decision often stand by mark stand
Starting point is 00:37:28 by what other weird things can you provide as evidence that would suggest that this is just another weird thing as opposed to a very specific weird thing that he has because this court often finds in favor of people who need to do one weird thing but if but if you think he's just being provocative and just trying to wind you up and wind up this court because that's how he gets his jowls that would be evidence that i would like to hear but you have to provide it you have to provide me evidence of him doing weird things for no other reason than to drive you crazy. His motivation is always to shock. He likes the shock value.
Starting point is 00:38:11 He goes out with people that are friends. They went to a, it was supposed to be some zombie walk, you know, beer fest thing. Just say for the sake of argument, I don't know what a zombie walk beer fest thing is. I'm trying to create an image. Well, okay. I mean, you've definitely have an image, but go on. So he went out with these people who we know are in one of them is incredibly conservative. We are not a conservative house. You can probably tell by the conversations we've had so far. But an incredibly, incredibly conservative person. And he wears his kilt and paints his nails black. It was Halloween. It's not that weird.
Starting point is 00:38:55 It is when you're going out with people that would never, as a gentleman, would never dress like that. And you know that. So you do things like that. Was the point of the event that adults should be wearing costumes? No. Was anyone else in a costume that you were with? Well, the people I was with were no fun. No.
Starting point is 00:39:18 What was your costume? Kilt with black nails? It wasn't so much a costume. I was just kind of random. I'm dressing up weird. Are you suggesting that your husband is proposing this just to make you upset? I believe myself and my mother. He likes to freak my mother out as well.
Starting point is 00:39:44 Well, that is a lot of fun okay that that is not true overruled sir i am talking i'm talking to your wife i have the microphone so another question in your honest opinion, and this calls for speculation. Do you think that he really wants to go through the work that was described by Dr. Hicks, especially now that we all know digging up a dead dog and getting its bones clean is actually a lot of gross work? More than just pulling bones out of the ground. a lot of gross work more than just pulling bones out of the ground do you think he really wants to do this or is it enough that he has gotten you upset on a podcast no i think he still would want to do it i think i know the way his brain works and i know that he's going yeah i'm not going to do this for a few years because you know he doesn't like when the dog pukes he's not going to do this for a few years because, you know, he doesn't like when the dog pukes. He's not going to want to clean up dog goo.
Starting point is 00:40:47 So I think holding off is definitely going to be on his list now. But I don't think it's deterred him from ever wanting to do it. If I rule in your favor, Mark, will you take the advice of Dr. Hicks and wait two or three more years before you undertake this project? Most likely. Oh, most likely. I'm not saying I wouldn't, you know, do an exploratory small excavation just to see where we are. You don't trust the expert?
Starting point is 00:41:21 When has Mark ever trusted the expert? I mean, right? Do I read him correctly? The minute someone says, I know better than you is the moment that he says, no, you don't. What is the name of the new dog? Bailey is the baby pug that we have. But then we have Guinness, the big boxer. We're two thirds of the way to an Irish car bomb.
Starting point is 00:41:47 I think I've heard everything I need to order to make my decision. I'm going to go dig into the earth now and lie there for two years, decomposing with my thoughts. In a moment, I will resurface with my decision. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Mark, your wife was put on the spot and couldn't come up with any examples of you acting weird for the sake of acting weird in public. But I bet you've got some good examples. Well, I feel that she manipulated the end of that conversation.
Starting point is 00:42:27 OK, what were you wearing that day that you were wearing the costume that wasn't really a costume? Break it down for me. I actually would probably normally dress like that. What was on your head? What was on your chest? What was on your legs? What was on your feet? On my feet, I could tell you I probably had some maybe Doc Martens or something like that.
Starting point is 00:42:46 Okay, so far you haven't said toe shoes pretty good no but it's not 1988 okay my turn so um i don't know what i was wearing on my uh as a shirt that day it was either a t-shirt or it was a uh like a black uh like button-down you know, short sleeve shirt. And then I had this black utility kilt that I was wearing. Yeah. Okay. There you go. Now it's Polly's turn. You've forfeited your turn as soon as you said the magic phrase utility kilt. Oh, sorry. Polly, how do you feel about your chances in the case?
Starting point is 00:43:22 Well, I do hope that, that the honorable judge is a sane and rational person and thinks my husband's a wackadoo. So I think I may have a good chance here. I'm hoping. Dig up the gravesite of a beloved family pet and find not a skeleton that's ready to be presented publicly, I guess, but other stuff. Well, it really depends on how much goo I find. Yeah, I was trying not to say goo anymore because it's gross, but OK. That's what I'm here for. Yeah, I'm not particularly interested in dealing with too much of that.
Starting point is 00:44:14 So if I were to find a lot, I would just bury her back up and call it a day. Okay, we're done. We're done. We'll be back in just a second with Judge Hodgman's decision. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom. Did I... Did I hear from my chambers below the earth that it wasn't just a kilt you were wearing, Mark? It was a utility kilt?
Starting point is 00:44:50 Sure. Oh, those are some fine kilts. But that's not a costume. I don't know what you were going for with that. That's just, that's a utility kilt. That's all. I was actually just dressing fairly normally for myself. Here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:45:07 Mark, your point of view is this, and if I am to take your word, which I am not sure I am anymore, after that utility kilt came to light. Your argument is that you should be able to dig up Kudzu's body, treat it, get the bones out, and manipulate them any way you see fit, because it seems like an intellectual and artistic challenge to you. Yes. And, Polly, you argue, no thank you, because I don't want even clean bones in my house, articulated or otherwise, that is to say, as an ossuary, which is to say, in a pile, because your other dogs may gnaw at the bones and at very least it might be upsetting to your children and not to your taste. Correct. Neither one of you has made an argument. No one is speaking
Starting point is 00:46:16 for Kudzu. This really strikes me as a weird omission that Polly, you would not say. This was a beloved creature and i feel that she must rest in peace and that we have gone through the trauma of losing a family member and we don't want to literally dig it all up again and mark i am surprised you did not say or at least try to peddle the line that that somehow this was going to honor Kudzu
Starting point is 00:46:45 even more than being buried in the lot. Well, I wouldn't lie to you. It falls to me. I speak for Kudzu. And by the way, Polly, and Mark, I know you loved your dog.
Starting point is 00:47:00 But what's clear to me is that Mark has engineered a confrontation on a podcast with the premise of an alarming and rather morbid art project, mainly to get a reaction out of his wife. Mission accomplished. And thank you, Mark, because I enjoyed it too. I only hope that your mother-in-law heard it and she's upset too, because now you've accomplished everything that I think you really set out to do by suggesting you become a dog grave robber. And the reason that I come down so harshly on you in this moment is that you benefited from the wisdom of a professional, a dead things professional. Wisdom that was far greater than the wisdom I expected him to have. This guy came loaded for bear with very specific warnings and encouragements for how to do what you are prompting safely and artistically
Starting point is 00:48:17 and with the greatest integrity towards indeed the animal who was your companion for some time. And you were like, yeah, maybe I'll do that. You were driven by some perverse drive, not a desire, to legitimately engage in what is, for the Dr. Hicks's of the world and the Mutter Museums of the world and the Mütter Museums of the world and the SkullsUnlimited.com's of the world, a true, if somewhat morbid, art form. And so I can only conclude, since you are already dismissive of a guy who clearly knows what he's talking about, Mark, that your interest is, I'm not going to say necessarily insincere, but dilettante-ish.
Starting point is 00:49:09 And it makes me less inclined. If you simply said, I must do this, I need to feel that skull, finally. Even then I might feel like I want to rule in your favor because you have an urge, but I would only do so if I felt that you were actually engaging with sound professional advice that had been offered to you. what you're talking about is disturbing the remains of someone, of a thing that is not a human, but was still a part of your family. And if you're going to do that, you have to do it with a tremendous amount of respect for the creature that Kudzu was, for the rotting corpse that she is now,
Starting point is 00:50:08 and the challenges that that presents to people who take this seriously, and respect for the wishes of your family to not engage and stare into the abyss that you feel the need to stare into. As you can tell, my inclination is to rule in Polly's favor and let Kudzu rest. But I don't think that this issue will truly come to rest
Starting point is 00:50:33 until you gaze into that abyss and see what you are really dealing with. dealing with. And so, I order you, four years from this date, I want you to unearth your family pet. And I want you to really take the measure
Starting point is 00:51:00 of her condition, which is dead. And really take the measure of the moment that you have dug up a dog in your backyard against the wishes of your wife and whatever your children may think. And really consider whether or not you want to haul what is left of Kudzu out into the light in order to follow through on this elaborate prank on your wife and your mother and to get that
Starting point is 00:51:37 skull. And I want you to consider all of these things, and then I want you to make the right decision and rebury Kudzu without disturbing her remains and put this behind you. And in the meantime, I suggest you hire yourself to SkullsUnlimited.com and get yourself some unarticulated skeletons that have already been cleaned and try putting them together because if you want a challenge man that's it but with the caveat that i think that you must stare reverently and with full presence into the maw of death that has taken over Kudzu and will overtake us all. I hereby rule that you let Kudzu rest, you honor your wife's wishes,
Starting point is 00:52:37 and you seek your weird jollies somewhere else. Put some bones in your utilikilt, my friend. This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules that is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman else. Put some bones in your utilikilt, my friend. This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Polly, how do you feel? I'm pretty pleased with the verdict. I can see my husband's face and I can tell you he's a little upset. He's going to claim that I wrongfully won, but I'm pretty happy.
Starting point is 00:53:08 How about you, Mark? How do you feel? I was railroaded. I think that Polly, who is a better liar than I am a truth teller, managed to convince the judge that my motivation is to freak her and her mother out, which absolutely isn't true. Well, I don't know. I don't know if your wife is a liar, sir, although that's quite the accusation to throw around in a court of fake internet law.
Starting point is 00:53:38 But I can tell you this. You are a terrible truth teller, for it is you, sir, who chose to tell me that you own and regularly wear a utilikilt. A fact that sickens me more even, sir, than the discussions of what will happen to my beloved dogs after they pass on to the next world. And for that reason, I wish to hear no more from you. Shut your pie hole, sir, and let it remain forever.
Starting point is 00:54:10 Shut. Cross your legs when you're sitting. Mark Polly. Thank you for joining us on the judge. John Hodgman podcast. Thank you. Thank you very much. You guys go check out the motor museum skulls unlimited. I. I encourage you, Mark, to engage in this hobby responsibly.
Starting point is 00:54:32 And see how you feel. Polly, have a great spring. Thanks. Thank you, Judge John. thanks thank you jess john 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 allison 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.
Starting point is 00:55:29 If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I-R. Hmm. 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. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
Starting point is 00:55:47 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.
Starting point is 00:56:11 Judge Hodgman, a thrilling conclusion to a terrifying case. Yeah. I can't even tell you how many elements of that case upset me. Yeah, we might need to put a little bit of a warning out ahead of that one. Frank discussion of... Utila kilts. Utila kilts.
Starting point is 00:56:32 I mean, it's just the trauma, the trauma that I've experienced at the hem of the Utila kilt is enough. I don't know if I can go on. But I want to say, I want to give Dr. Hicks of the Mütter Museum many, many thanks.
Starting point is 00:56:47 And maybe his own podcast, because that guy had some things to say. Yeah, that guy's amazing. He's been on Bullseye twice. And last time we were in Philadelphia, and he just brought all these weird things to electrocute me with. And he just brought all these weird things to electrocute me with. Basically, if I could give an executive summary of the segment, it was Dr. Robert Hicks electrocutes public radio host Jesse Thorne. Anyway, this week's case, named by Corey Atterbury. Thank you, Corey.
Starting point is 00:57:19 Thanks, Corey. For your contributions. All right, Judge Hodgman, I've got some exciting news for you. I love news. We have a brand new segment on the program. What? Just in time for the Max Fund Drive. What a happy coincidence that is.
Starting point is 00:57:36 It's called Status Conference. This is a real legal thing, this being a real fake court. Thank you. Wherein we check in on the current state of various already settled cases. Fantastic. We have so many amazing, interesting, weird dads and fun people out there who we've talked to over the years. And we're going to check in with them again and see whether they're still following my rulings or not, or if I got to go out there and cause and set things right. Oh, you know, you don't have to go out there and set things right. I'll do it for you. That's what bailiffs are for. I'll crack heads. Thank you. Cracking heads and shutting pie holes
Starting point is 00:58:13 while John Hodgman takes a rest in chambers. I like it. I like this job. Well, let's go, let's get right into it. It just so happens that I have this magic bag full of cases. And I'll reach in and see what I can find. Oh, it looks like it is Pig and his daughters Kim and Jen from the case Father Gnaws Beast. Do you remember this one, John? I absolutely do. So the context is, for our audience, Jen and Kim filed suit against their dad, whose name is Rick, but is known as Pig. Sure. And Rick loves meat.
Starting point is 00:58:52 And Kim, one of the daughters, is a vegetarian. And I seem to recall that pizza figured heavily into this particular case. When dining out as a family and ordering multiple dishes or pizza to share, Rick insisted that the pizza should always have lots of meat, like a meat lover's pizza for the table, even though his daughters are vegetarian. And Kim and Jen wanted more vegetarian-friendly items when they were having these family-style dinners. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Your ruling, John. Yes, thank you, because I do not remember. Yeah. You said that pigs should consider eating less meat, not giving up meat, but eating less meat and especially eating more ethical meat. And that any shared food should be at least 50% vegetarian friendly because, and I think this was
Starting point is 00:59:40 the emotional crux of this case. I try to find it every time. Having the opportunity to spend some time with his grown children should be reward enough for him. He shouldn't also have to win a meat race. You don't have to add pepperoni to family love. Exactly. So let's bring Kim, Jen, and Pig onto the program. Hi, gang. Hello. Kim, you say, hi, it's Kim, so I know which one is Kim.
Starting point is 01:00:08 Hi, this is Kim. And Jen? And this is Jen. And Pig, I know the sound of your voice. Okay, there he is, the Pig himself. It's interesting because when I gave this ruling, Pig, I was going through a near vegetarian phase myself. And since then, I have basically given up all vegetables and only beef jerky.
Starting point is 01:00:33 Oh, I'm glad you got over your vegetarian. Well, no, I mean, I love a varied diet, but I often think of you whenever I open up a bag of beef jerky. Because if I remember correctly, your life is you don't eat anything all day long, and then at night, you go full paleo and pound a salami or something, right? Yeah, basically. I'm actually eating more vegetables since you gave your ruling. So you've been abiding by my ruling then? Yes.
Starting point is 01:01:07 I even added a new vegetable to my repertoire, bok choy. Bok choy. Bok choy is a nice vegetable. It is a very good vegetable. The mysterious watery vegetable of the East. It's a pretty hardcore vegetable, too. It's actually green. Well, sure.
Starting point is 01:01:25 Is it a superfood? Kim or Jen, why don't we talk about your father's new love of bok choy? I sensed a little skepticism when he said he had been eating more vegetables. What's your take on it? Either one of you. Well, I've certainly, I think that he has always eaten bok choy, so I don't know about the new part of it. He's trying to trick us. And I also think that, I don't think I've actually seen him cook bok choy ever.
Starting point is 01:01:54 I think it's just considered one of the non-nasty vegetables. I appreciate that we're all fixated on bok choy for a moment, but on a macro level, for a moment, but on a macro level, since my ruling, have you observed any change of behavior in your father with regard to his love of meat? So I would say, this is Jen, I would say he has grudgingly abided by your ruling in ordering food. There's always a lot of bitter complaining, but he doesn't. Well, he's a dad. He's a dad. But we're hoping for a clarification and follow-up ruling on a new wrinkle of this that's arisen that maybe Kim can explain.
Starting point is 01:02:35 All right, go ahead, Kim. My legal department has suggested a motion for clarification. Who shall make this motion? I can explain. Let me just say, one thing about eating more vegetables, it's a lot easier to make a motion, if you know what I mean. So I'll let one of the vegetarians speak. stated it very well that we are mostly wondering about when we dine out with what, as she called, the two people that we can strong arm into also following this judgment that aren't in our family that include my long-term boyfriend and her wife. Both of them, you know, when they eat with either
Starting point is 01:03:17 of us are very, you know, her wife was vegetarian for six years, Jen, right? And my boyfriend actually has told me many times that he prefers eating vegetarian most of the time. But when you all get together with the pig... Are you sure you didn't strong-arm him? No, we're strong in harming him into following the ruling. Because what happens when... So you're...
Starting point is 01:03:38 See, even others are vegetarian-friendly, but when you all get together with the pig, what happens? So when we all get together, say that we're out to dinner with Jen and her wife, so it's five of us. The pig will say that since Kate, Jen's wife, was not a part of the original podcast ruling, that she does not count towards the half. We should only have to order two vegetarian dishes, and then three can be meat. What a scheme. Yeah, so he's finding some loopholes.
Starting point is 01:04:09 It seems logical to me. This is like a contested convention situation. We need a trusted broker. I tell you, it doesn't seem logical to me because it just seems confusing to me. What's the logic pig here? to me. What's the logic pig here? That because did you think that my ruling was that if you are out with your
Starting point is 01:04:28 daughters only, then half the meal should be vegetarian? And if you add other parties, no matter what they prefer, as long as they have eaten a piece of bacon in the year, they are de facto carnivores? And they flip the stats? No.
Starting point is 01:04:44 Well, I thought your ruling were only for our nuclear family. No, incorrect. Family dinners include significant others. Nice try, the pig. Can I make a buzz marketing recommendation, the pig? Sure. Jack Link's small batch jerky number 11 has changed my life. Now, let me just say right now, I do not want them to sponsor this podcast because by no means are these ethically raised animals.
Starting point is 01:05:17 And the small batch is undoubtedly a lie. They are made in as big a batch as anything else. But I've tried them all. There's a lot of artisanal jerky going around Brooklyn these days. And I've been through a lot of gas stations on the road as well. And of all the fine artisanal jerkies,
Starting point is 01:05:38 I still have to say, Jack Link's imitation of an artisanal jerky, the small batch, number 11, don't go with number 17, the peppered, or number something else, the teriyaki. They're garbage. The original flavor has changed my life. How so? I just like it, and I eat it a lot.
Starting point is 01:05:56 And I feel, and I feel, and I have bad breath. That's how it's changed my life. I wanted to share that with you before we said goodbye. That will be some consolation for me saying to you, you're still wrong. Jen, I understand you had a story that you wanted to share that with you before we said goodbye. That will be some consolation for me saying to you, you're still wrong. Jen, I understand you had a story that you wanted to relate. Yeah, we thought your audience might enjoy hearing a story about the pig and meat that came up recently. Our family traveled to Las Vegas together, and the pig, when he travels, gets really nervous that there won't be enough meat available to satisfy him. Even when we're going to Las Vegas, where you can literally get any food at any time.
Starting point is 01:06:30 Does he know he lives in the United States of America? All right, go on. So when he was at the airport, he bought three Greek meat pies to bring with him for emergency meat for the trip. He bought airport Greek meat? He bought airport Greek meat? He bought airport Greek meat in the form of pies that he brought with him to Vegas, but he discovered we didn't have a fridge in our hotel room. So, undeterred, he decided to put them in the coolest place in the room, which was the bathroom floor.
Starting point is 01:07:03 And he proceeded to snack on these meat pies as needed throughout the three-day weekend. Let me, pig. I still haven't thrown up since 1985. April 15th. You hear that sound, Judge? That was the pig dropping the microphone. The fact that you haven't thrown up since 1985 cannot be a justification for any behavior. You must have an incredible toxin buildup.
Starting point is 01:07:35 I don't even believe that toxins is a real thing. But, man, you've got to have some toxins. You've got to do some purging, my friend. Do you sweat? Pigs don't sweat right okay pig setting setting aside for the moment if not forever i hope the topic of your bathroom floor greek meat snacking did you discover in las vegas that there was enough meat to go around for you not absolutely i'll I went to a buffet one day, but by midnight, I was a little hungry, and I got the last
Starting point is 01:08:11 piece of New York pizza in New York, New York. It was a little gnarly. Well, then I guess you were right to sneak food into your bathroom. I also snuck a magic hamburger into the magic show because the prices were too high there. You snuck a what? A magic ham? Hamburger.
Starting point is 01:08:34 A magic hamburger. You snuck a hamburger into a magic show. Yes. Someday we're going to have the Weird Dad Awards on Judge John Hodgman, and you know you'll be the Leonardo DiCaprio of that. She's highly honored. Right now I'm picturing, you know the scarf trick where they're pulling the scarf out of their sleeves
Starting point is 01:08:55 and it just keeps coming and coming? Yeah. I'm picturing that for the pig, but with linked sausages. I'll try that next time I'm in the bagger. Did you sneak that in the same backpack that you stored your turkey leg in? Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:09:12 Well, this is getting terrifying. So, Pig, Kim, Jen, thank you so much for checking in with us. Thank you so much. Don't cheat the law. And we'll get back to you when we get the Weird Dad Awards up and running. Okay. We think of your show all the time. We're going to have a very interesting gift bag for you.
Starting point is 01:09:32 Hey, Jesse, send the pig a pound of frozen peas on me. Check. Can do, mon frere. You can go to MaximumFun.org to check out all of the amazing thank you gifts and support Maximum Fun and especially support the production of this show. Support not just us, but the studios, the production time that we use, folks like Julia and our editor, Mark McConville, and Ibarian Exparello, who helps with setting up the calls. All of these folks work really hard. They all earn a wage that is paid for by people like you who listen and support this show and all of Maximum Fund's shows by going to MaximumFund.org slash donate.
Starting point is 01:10:20 Yeah, I'm here at the Angry Lamb Studios in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn with Josh Feinstein because my computer died. And, you know, this guy doesn't work for free. I hope not. Or do you? No, he doesn't. Damn. everyone who works on this show. And the way that we're able to pay everyone who works on this show is, uh, because the folks who listen to it support it, they pay for it. So go to maximum fund.org slash donate. It's easy.
Starting point is 01:10:51 It's quick. The main thing is, as my friend, judge John Hodgman says, don't, don't do it. Do, do, do it.
Starting point is 01:10:58 I did say that. I wish I, I wish I remembered things I said, I guess that's why I have a podcast. So there are recordings of my things that, what are the things that come out of my mouth? Oh, right, words. We'll see you at MaxFun Meetup Day
Starting point is 01:11:13 on Tuesday the 22nd, MaximumFun.org slash meetups if you want to find where the meetup near you is on our live streaming Pledge Drive finale show that Friday evening. And of course, on social media with the hashtag MaxFunDrive and at MaximumFun.org slash donate. We love you all.
Starting point is 01:11:33 Even those of you wearing Utilikeltz right now. It's a very utilitarian choice. Look, and you're probably catching some cool breezes. So that's, you're having a good time. Yeah, you're not sweating it, literally. I am very, very grateful to be able to make this podcast for all of you and grateful to those of you who are able to donate. So I just want to say thank you in advance, in the present, and in the future. Maximumfund.org slash donate.
Starting point is 01:11:56 Goodbye. Maximumfund.org Comedy and culture. Artist owned. Listener supported.

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