Judge John Hodgman - Don't Call the Next Witness
Episode Date: September 6, 2018Kirya brings the case against her mother, Tanja. Tanja hates talking on the phone. She doesn’t even have a phone anymore. But, Kirya is worried about Tanja’s safety and also wants to be able to ca...ll her. Who's right? Who's wrong? Thank you to Jack Mathews for naming this week's case! To suggest a title for a future episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. This week, don't call the next witness.
Kyria brings the case against her mother, Tanya. Tanya hates talking on the phone.
She doesn't even have a phone anymore. But Kyria is worried about Tanya's safety and also wants to be able to call her.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and
presents an obscure cultural reference you understand because you are from here that this
is a state full of people who don't want to see or talk to other people now you've been down there
in brookline for a while where everyone enjoys a good jaw but your sister has moved back to a place
where if she never sees another person, that's a good thing.
And she's working specifically in a work environment where it is encouraged that no one ever speak.
That said, I'm going to make you make them speak right now, Bailiff.
Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Kyria, Tanya, 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 only speaks with others
through a playground talking tube,
one of those things with a bell on the end
made out of metal where you can talk
to your six-year-old across a playground?
Absolutely. I do.
Judge Hodgman?
You may be seated.
Not just my six-year-old, any six-year-old who comes by.
Whoever happens past.
That's my new podcast.
So, Kiri and Tanya, you are down there in Brooklyn, New York, where I will soon be returning.
Excuse me, you're not in Brooklyn. You're in Manhattan at Argo Studios. Is that not correct?
That is correct.
Right.
I am in the studios of WERU with our guest producer, Joel Mann. Hello, Joel.
Hello, Judge. Jesse Thorne is at Maximum Fun headquarters in Los Angeles. We have
tied all of this technology and wires and string together in order to speak to you and resolve
your dispute between mother and a daughter. But before we do, for an immediate summary judgment
in one of yours favors, can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
Tanya, you are the mom.
Why don't you guess first?
I don't know.
Okay.
I have to guess?
You do have to guess.
It can be anything.
What was the last book you read?
I'm blanking.
Do you watch television?
Yes.
What was your first pet's name?
What street did you grow up on? Oh, no. Do you watch television? Yes. What was your first pet's name?
What street did you grow up on?
Do you need help?
Blink twice.
I'm not going to ask you what was the last podcast you listened to because I know it's going to be the McElroy brothers are floppies.
So that laugh just betrayed the truth of what I just said.
I love them.
I love them all.
I love all those brothers and floppies.
Why don't you guess?
Oh, I know. Why don't you guess the book of short stories, Notes from the Fog by Ben Marcus,
who actually wrote a novel called The Age of Wire and String and is a friend of mine. And he's wrote a really good book of short stories called Notes from the Fog that is just out now.
Is that your guess? That's my guess. Notes from the Fog.
That's an incredible guess available from knopf publishers at this very
moment now kiria do you have a guess yes well i was gonna guess lionel richie but that's not what
that was so that was my prepared guess so um interesting i'm gonna go with um i just finished
vacation land um another fine book but i don't think it was that because i don't remember that with I Just Finished Vacationland.
Another fine book.
But I don't think it was that because I don't remember that.
So Painful Beaches.
Continue to talk it through.
Who wants to be a millionaire style?
I'm going to guess Painful Beaches
by John Hodgman.
Painful Beaches,
which is the subtitle of the book
Vacationland by John Hodgman.
Oh, right.
Joel Mann, is that her final answer?
That is her final answer, Jeff.
All guesses are wrong.
But thanks for the plugs.
You know, of the two of you, Curio was closer because I was indeed quoting myself.
Specifically, I was quoting my verdict from Judge John Hodgman episode number 282, which we recorded live here in Portland, Maine
in the fall of 2016 at the Port City Music Hall
when I adjudicated between two sisters,
Afton and Hannah Cyrus.
Afton was mad that her sister Hannah
would not get a smartphone so that they could text together.
And also because she lived in Maine,
was fairly unreachable
by cell phone to begin with and uh afton wanted me to order hannah who is a librarian here
by the way joel at the blue hill library yes i know okay sorry i'm small town up here in any case
afton wanted hannah to get a smartphone so she could call her and text her all the time because
she loves her sister and hannah was like, no, thank you.
And did not want to ever text and basically want to be left alone.
And while I did not order her to get a smartphone that was text capable, I did order her to replace her old flip phone so that she could at least be reachable and to get a landline.
And I mentioned this case, obviously, because it's a direct precedent to your case, Kiria and Tanya, because Tanya, your daughter Kiria would like you to answer the phone.
Not only have you given up the possibility of getting a smartphone, you've given up your phone altogether.
Is that not right, Tanya?
This is true.
You have no cell phone at all.
No cell phone, no landline, nothing.
Must be incredibly liberating.
Yeah.
I'm able to email everybody.
Okay.
So you still have some technology.
Oh, yeah.
I was just going to ask what cave you live in.
The cave of Berkeley.
Berkeley, California?
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
I'm sure there's some Luddite hermits out there that you could get into a drum circle with.
And what do you do out there in Berkeley, California?
Oh, I work at a bakery.
Oh, nice.
I don't mean to buzz market, but I genuinely want to know what bakery you work at.
I work at Nabilum Bakery and Pizzeria in the Elmwood.
We reversed our longstanding rule.
We buzz market everything now.
Everyone needs a little help.
As a native of the Bay Area living in Los Angeles,
just hearing the name of a bakery in Berkeley
is enough to make me dream about bread.
I can't wait to get you up here to Maine, Jesse,
so you can try the tinder hearth bread made here in Maine,
which is part of New England, a region in the United States.
What a life you're leading off the grid in wonderful Berkeley, California.
Kyria, you do not live in California, though.
You are where?
I live in Brooklyn.
You live in Brooklyn.
And you want to talk to your mom.
Yeah.
She doesn't want to talk to you.
Why not?
I don't know.
It hurts my feelings.
Oh, dear.
Yeah, I've lived away from California for seven years.
And then when we both lived in California, there was a couple years when we were both in the Bay Area, but there was several years when she lived farther north in Mendocino, California.
And she had a phone then, but not a cell phone.
Anyways, she's always been hard to reach on the phone.
So she had a phone when she lived in Mendocino.
When did the phone get thrown away, Tanya?
I was between jobs a couple years back,
and I just started figuring out ways I could save money in every area.
And when the cell phone my brother had given me,
the battery started to die,
I thought, well, let's just let the whole thing go
and save some money.
So it was an economic consideration.
Yeah, but also then I wouldn't have to talk on a phone anymore.
Right.
What is your problem with phones?
I mean, I'll be honest with you.
I agree with you.
Talking on the phone is terrible.
Oh, God.
This is awful, by the way.
What's happening now?
I'm trying to turn this whole podcast into a Slack channel, buzz market number
two. But meanwhile, we still have to do this. We still have to talk face to face or voice to voice
from time to time. What's your problem with phones? I need a visual when I'm talking to
somebody. I need to watch their face. So I have a real problem on the telephone. And also my whole family, you know, my siblings and my mother,
we don't call, we email.
We're funnier in print, you know,
when we have a minute to collect our thoughts.
And we have really long pauses on the phone.
It's not good.
And so when you can't see Kyria,
she might as well not exist to you.
It's like an object permanence problem that babies have.
No, it's just stressful to interpret language without a visual.
Well, I appreciate you're doing this remote podcast with me.
Yes.
Please be advised that my face is beaming with gratitude and happiness that you're here.
And it is also probably the handsomest face in the world. Good to know.
Just take that on faith. So you guys do communicate, but not by phone.
And what is the method that you use to communicate? Get ready for buzz market number three.
I prefer email. Kyria prefers Facebook messaging.
Kyria. I want immediate communication.
Like I want something that I can get a response and we can have an exchange.
But Curia, you understand that Facebook, going way back to the first year of Judge John Hodgman,
someone talking about Facebook was the reason I made the no buzz marketing rule on this
because I didn't want to buzz market Facebook.
And now Facebook has destroyed our
democracy. And you would bring it up again. Okay. By the way, thanks, everyone. If you want to
contribute titles to the Judge John Hodgman Show, go to our Facebook group. It's a lot of fun.
All right. So you're trying to replicate the moment-to-moment feeling of a conversation by
using a messenger texting type platform on Facebook. Is that right?
Yes. And before she got rid of her cell phone, I compromised and we used WhatsApp. And then I could
send another buzz market, but less awful. I know, you're getting money from everyone now.
But I could send voice memos. Because my issue is I'm almost the opposite kind of brain
as my mom, I guess. I prefer to talk it out. It's harder for me to write out my thoughts. It takes
me longer. I second guess all the words. When I'm talking, I feel freer. I feel I can connect my
ideas better. So when we had a messaging app where I could send voice memos, then I could at least
send that to her and she could respond however she wanted. But then she got rid of a cell phone, and there's no app like that for a
desktop computer. So she drove me to Facebook, I guess, I would argue.
But Kyria and Tanya, I mean, there are obvious face-to-face communication techniques. I mean,
we might as well say them all now. Skype, FaceTime,
LookSee, that's one I just made up. Videofana, that's another one I made up.
Heytoots.
Heytooth?
Heytoots.
Heytoots?
Yeah, Heytoots and Heytooth. Let's just get Jennifer Marmer to just lock down all those domains right now so that we can start all of our apps that are going to solve all of
Tanya and Kirya's problems. But have you tried those video conferencing possibilities, Kyria?
Maybe I asked my mom to try one of the ones you didn't mention that I could throw out on the
pile if you want, or I can leave it out. Yeah, let's do it. Google Voice. Google Voice. Yeah,
which also has Hangouts, which has the visual version. And I think it was Facebook was just a technology that she knew how to use easily because I wasn't there to sort of help her figure it out.
Right.
Because she's a mom.
Yeah.
A savvy mom.
But, you know, tech is weird.
So you sent in some evidence of how you do communicate, which is using this messaging platform that shall no longer be named.
And this particular conversation came through on April 2017.
So Tanya says, Mom says, you make every one of these dresses look amazing.
How the heck are you going to choose?
Ha ha, says daughter.
I feel like I'm narrowing it down.
Which one of these is your favorite?
Mom.
So I looked again, and I think my very favorite is the one with the sheer long sleeves,
completely backless. Daughter, backless has been a good look for me so far. Thank you guys for
sending this in. This is great. I love this. Then there's a pause. And then, Kyria, you say,
want to try a Facebook call again today? And mom says, uh, four hours later.
Just got back from a run.
Got a shower, wash hair, start laundry.
Curia, maybe later or no?
Uh, I guess I'm feeling kind of quiet today.
Okay, mama.
So sad.
Later.
Oh, I had a thought in the shower you should call me ma is that your
grandmother yeah yeah right and then you say kyria i'll consider it and then you say i'll admit i
still like to call my mama to get moral support when i call other people i like to be able to
offer moral support not sure i have that today maybe this is why you never want to talk on the phone with me. This is the saddest thing I've ever heard. Tanya, how do you feel Kyria's feeling when
you're blowing her off because you got to wash her hair and she wants moral support by the phone?
You know, I was thinking today that I've been letting Kyria down in the area of conversations
and more than just the phone. When she was little, she'd always start to get energized
and philosophical in the evening.
And I was going downhill.
Brain wasn't working.
Last thing I wanted to do was talk.
And yeah, and it was just me and her.
Poor thing.
So you're finding against yourself.
Are we done?
Not only have you found against yourself in this case,
but also through
all of motherhood going back to childhood yes you've been leaving kyria hanging because you
felt tired and didn't feel like talking but kyria not feeling like talking is a very very
common feeling especially among parents and really among anyone wouldn't you say uh joel do you often feel like talking
like right now yeah no right see joel doesn't like to talk
sometimes talking on the phone is a drag can't you feel how your mom feels a little bit there
okay yes and i have many other friends that happen to be introverts and here's the thing
that i want to say is that I think my mother is completely
underselling herself as a conversationalist. I am a very chatty person, but I think I learned
good talking and listening skills actually from my mom. And when the two of us are together and
we get going, we're just really chatty. And usually when we're in person, I'll admit, but
sometimes over the phone. And I want to do that with her.
There's a certain way that we talk that I can't get from anyone else.
So when I ask her to talk, it's because I want that, like, special mom-daughter chatty spark that I get from her.
Let's take a quick recess and hear about this week's Judge John Hodgman sponsor.
We'll be back in just a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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?
Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft. And did you know that most of the dishes at that very same restaurant are made with made-in pots and pans?
Really?
What's an example?
The braised short ribs, they're made-in, made-in.
The Rohan duck, made-in, made-in.
Riders of Rohan, duck!
What about the Heritage Pork Shop?
You got it.
Made-in, made in.
Made in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants with high-end cookware for years.
They make the stuff that chefs need.
Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron, the best of stainless clad.
It gets super hot.
It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame.
One of the most useful pans you can own. And like we said, good enough for real professional chefs, the best professional chefs.
Oh, so I have to go all the way down to the restaurant district in restaurant town?
Just buy it online. This is professional grade cookware that is available online directly to you, the consumer, at a very reasonable price.
Yeah. If you want to take your cooking to the next level, remember what so many great dishes
on menus all around the world have in common. They're made in Made In. Save up to 25% this
Memorial Day from the 18th until the 27th. Visit madeincookware.com. That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel.
Did you know that learning, the experience of learning, causes a sound to happen?
Let's hear the sound.
Yep, that's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel.
We're talking about quick 10-minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that
can help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks.
Let's hear that sound.
Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations,
and delivered with conversation-based teaching. So you're ready to practice what you've learned
in the real world, and you get to hear the sound. It's not just like a game that pretends to teach
you a language. It's also not a rigid, weird, hyper-academic chore. It is an actually productive app that actually teaches you while you are actually
having a nice time. And you get to hear this sound. 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.
Welcome back. Court is back in session. Let's get back to the courtroom for more justice.
Curia, when you say that you're looking for moral support, tell me more about that.
Or you know what? Don't tell me.
Tell your mom.
You guys are in the same room together there in New York, right?
Yes, we are.
All right.
This is it.
I have facilitated face-to-face communication with your mom.
You should take this opportunity.
That's true.
You really have.
She came all the way from the Bay Area to New York for this conversation.
So good job.
Thank you, Judge.
So say to your mom what it is that you get out of a voice-to-voice communication that you don't get out of messaging.
My mom's a really good listener.
Or mom, you're a really good listener.
There we go.
Very good.
Nice adjustment, Kyria.
I like that.
Thank you.
Even when you're not talking, you make really good not talking sounds like and and you are very comforting
in the way that you listen and then you can do good sort of listening back or reporting back
what you heard and there's a way that you make me feel supported and like i'm not crazy when i talk to you now see tanya isn't that worth getting a
landline for maybe if the phone didn't ring i could handle it
you're saying you would get one if she never called
you just have to do what all the young people do and message me to let me know she's calling.
I'm sorry if I seem a little harsh on you, Tanya.
I think that it is because I am jealous because you have embraced a profoundly rebellious way of life by throwing your phone away.
Today, that is rather unconventional and it does seem quite liberating.
Yeah. rather unconventional and it does seem quite liberating. How does it feel, you know, walking out of your house knowing that no one can reach you
or send you a text or get at you in any way until you choose to sit at your desk?
It's good.
And also I, like Carrie was talking about safety as I get older here, but some things came up recently and I was able to do
everything on foot and email and got through without needing a phone to call for help.
What was it that came up recently that was a safety concern?
I hurt myself at work.
Oh no. Badly?
Briefly, it was pretty bad. Just the knee. I slipped and fell. Yeah.
Oh no.
And so you were able to hobble your way to a clinic or something?
Yeah.
I walked to the emergency the next morning, and I'd already had a dentist appointment
scheduled, so I had to ride my bike to that.
May I interject?
Yeah, please.
Like she said, she hurt herself really badly.
And luckily, it didn't swell up right away.
But when I showed up, because I was I happen to be in California, and I showed up a day or so
after it happened. And suddenly I walked in on her being swollen and having to put her leg up.
And if it had been worse, she might have been, I don't know, left on the street, and I would have
no idea. And I mean, I guess a landline only solves it if it happens at home. So part of me really does want to have a cell phone because it's 2018. But yeah, that's a serious thing. And then it's California and it's on fire all the time. And you know, what if there's suddenly a wildfire and, you know, things happen quickly. I'm seriously worried about it but she does not live in one of the famous caves of berkeley she lives in a population dense area with a lot of let's face it a lot of bicycles and also you know a lot of
people around if she hurt herself at work she can rely on the kindness of strangers because
everyone else has two or three cell phones to get her if there was something that required an
ambulance someone would have called an ambulance for her i guess that's true it's just you know i
didn't get a call
that was like,
hey, I fell, by the way.
Be prepared when you see me.
I will be injured.
She doesn't care about you.
She doesn't want to talk about you.
Why are you having difficulty
accepting this?
I know.
That's how I feel.
Tanya, how do you feel
when you hear that Kyria
just feels blown off?
Not good.
I'm going to tell you, T tanya i don't believe you i feel like you need to say not good but i think you're actually pretty comfortable with
the fact that you took care of yourself and didn't worry your daughter
uh yeah yeah i'm pretty obnoxiously independent yes yes. It sounds like it. Yeah. But, I mean, I say that with admiration.
Do you see what I mean?
Yeah.
Like, I think that, you know, as an increasingly elderly parent myself, I would not want to feel like I had to call my children every time I had a bad knee or whatever.
A boo-boo. How do you deal with other things like
customer service reps or calling
the... Do you have electricity?
Do you bother with that?
Yes. I live in a house.
My big brother is above me
and my sister-in-law
in front of me.
So they can make phone calls if
necessary.
Though I did change my computer support to if something goes wrong,
they're just a few blocks away.
I don't need to call them.
I can walk over and ask for help.
You have radically downsized your life.
Yes, I will walk five miles rather than make a phone call.
Oh, my God.
Wow, you really dislike it.
And you also really like sponging off your brother and sister for phone assistance as needed.
You know what you're like?
You're like Henry David Thoreau.
Joel Mann, did you know that Thoreau is pronounced Thoreau?
No, I did not know that, Judge.
I learned that on the radio last summer in Maine.
Jesse Thorne, did you know that?
No.
Public radio told me that.
Thoreau famously in Walden lived by himself in a cabin to embrace the natural life and renounced earthly things, except when he got hungry.
And then he walked a block to Emerson's house and got a pie.
That's right.
That's how you live.
There's another piece of evidence that I just want to visit quickly.
Okay. This is from a later
conversation in october of 2017 tanya your daughter writes are you around want to try a phone call
at 6 31 p.m and it's not until 8 p.m that you respond hi i was down at the vivarium getting
gretel a wooden hide so she won't drive me nuts scraping scraping scraping
scraping scraping scraping in her pottery hide but god damn it she is too big for their giant
hide i'll have to go back to see if one i can return it even though i removed label and staples
and two they can special order an even more giant one sigh tanya two questions one you just
ghosted on your daughter you didn't even answer her request
for a phone call because you went into this monologue two uh what are you talking about
who is gretel and what is a hide and what is the scraping i i was having trouble with my turtle
your turtle yes my okay this is getting stranger and stranger. Gretel is your turtle. Yeah,
she's almost 30 years old.
No, 40. Oh my goodness.
Really? Yeah, she's almost 40. We've
had her for 30. I've had her for 30. She's actually
a Russian desert tortoise. Yeah.
A Russian desert
tortoise named Gretel. Is
the vivarium in question the
East Bay Vivarium? Yes. The
Bay Area's largest reptile store.
True.
Man, that store is so awesome.
I used to go there when I was a kid.
That's got to be buzz market number six.
I love it.
This is some premium East Bay buzz marketing that our listeners are getting.
If somebody brings up the store Kimono My House, which sells like Ultraman toys and has sold Ultraman toys for like 35 years,
then we will have completed the tour of
best small businesses of the San Francisco Bay Area.
First of all, Jesse,
I did not know that you were herpetologically inclined,
that you might go down to the vivarium.
Tell that to my childhood frog,
Boudreaux's Boudreaux's Froggy.
That's a great name.
I forgot about Boudreaux'soudros Boudros Froggy. That's a great name. I forgot about Boudros Boudros Froggy.
Do you prefer a wooden hide
or a pottery hide?
I'll take any hide I can get.
Any hide in a storm.
What is a hide, Tanya?
A little cave.
Wait a minute.
You're telling me
that you've got a turtle in a cave
and you're living in a metaphoric cave? Uh-oh. I did not think this through. Do you have a whole prehistoric lifestyle?
Does it count in my favor that I kick Gretel out of the house and she lives outdoors now?
So you used to have a tortoise that lived in your house? Yes, for 30 years. For 30 years.
Yes.
Do you wear clothing or hides?
If I may ask, Tanya, what is your age?
57.
And do you have any other children?
No.
Besides your daughter and your tortoise?
Right.
One daughter, one tortoise.
You are unmarried currently.
Right.
Completely on your own.
And like 10 years ago, you're like, I got to make some changes in my life.
I'm getting rid of this cell phone.
I'm kicking this tortoise out of my house.
And the next chapter of my life begins.
There's a part of me that feels like if we ask her if she has a fish, she'll be like, oh, you mean the Celio camp?
Historic.
Living in Berkeley, California with a tortoise and no phone.
I mean, your mom's a rock star, Curious.
She's fantastic.
Well, she certainly enjoys a Berkeley kind of eccentricity.
I think she's among friends.
What do you do in Brooklyn, and do you have a weird reptile?
Well, that was my weird reptile.
We got her when I was five, and she was older than me.
Yeah, so I'm in my mid-30s, and she's almost 40,
because she's my big sister.
But no, I don't have a reptile now.
I live in Brooklyn with my partner and my dog.
I'm in theater.
I'm a playwright and an actor.
Oh, great.
Yeah.
Do you ever think about moving back?
Because it may be the only way you ever talk to your mother again.
Oh, God.
Well, yeah.
I mean, I just repressed a sort of groan when you asked me about moving back.
Because both my partner and I are from the Bay Area and both of our parents live out there. And that is the thing that would probably
bring us back. I mean, I love my life in Brooklyn and I love the theater world in New York. And so
the Bay Area, while there is some theater, it's not the same. I love to visit. I don't want to
live there. But I don't know what the future will
bring tanya is all of this removal of contact a passive-aggressive trick to get your daughter
to move back to you or would you rather she stay away or go further away uh i love how she's
thriving in new york and uh but she comes back at least once a year for the holidays.
I can read that language.
Stay away.
Continue to thrive elsewhere.
But you may finish your thought.
Sometimes I daydream about moving to New York, but I'm a sissy about the seasons.
You'd have to get that tortoise registered as a comfort animal to fly.
Oh, my God.
Unless you and the tortoise are going to hitchhike across the country,
which would be a really true Tanya kick-ass move.
But seriously, Tanya.
Yeah.
You hear your daughter reaching out to you,
and you're brushing her off on Facebook.
And she's saying very openly to you in these messages, I miss my mama.
I miss talking to my mom.
And as a parent of a child who in two seconds, two years, but it'll feel like two seconds about to go to college. Like this really tugs at me.
Like I would be so thrilled if my child wanted to have a conversation with me
because she kind of doesn't right now.
Yeah.
You know, doesn't that make you feel like maybe, you know,
open up one channel of communication just so that your daughter can hear your
voice from time to time?
Yes.
Don't say what I want to hear. Say what's true. I mean, the answer could be no. The answer could
be like, no, it's more important to me. This is the way I feel comfortable communicating. I love
my daughter and we see each other a couple of times a year, but I just don't like
hanging on the phone.
And I am also a real human being.
And just because I'm mom, that doesn't mean my preferences mean nothing.
That would be something you could say.
I'm just trying to find out what the truth of your feelings are here.
When you hear your daughter saying, I want to talk to my mom and she's saying it to you
on this thing.
And you're kind of like, gretel is being bad again
like rather than diverting the conversation away from can we have a phone call to the tortoise is
being a real jerk like just say no i don't want to have a phone call because right i could be clear so say that to her now and finish that
sentence my only child i don't want to talk to you on the phone because uh sometimes i'm not
good for anyone especially you caria on the phone or otherwise that is not true.
How could it not be true if she said it?
Yeah, I kind of think the kind of parent who would declare to their child
that they're not good for them
is like ipso facto
not good for them.
That's my worry.
I knew this was going to be therapy.
Parents are supposed to think they have something
to offer their children, aren't they?
Well, we're not always available.
But they're at least net neutral.
Why do you think that you're not good for Curia, especially on the phone?
Oh, just sometimes.
Like, for instance, when I'm stressed out with the turtle and running around town.
Right.
Do you feel when you're on the phone,
does it kind of feel like you're under pressure
to respond or engage in a way
that you're just not ready to do so?
Like maybe when you're being interrogated
by a podcast host who you've never met in your life
about the deepest part of your relationship
with your daughter,
maybe that feels a little bit like pressure.
Maybe a little. Maybe you prefer to write a considered letter later and tape it to the back of Gretel and send her on the way. Are you wondering if the East Bay Vivarium has
a hide big enough for you right now? Scrape, scrape, scrape, scrape.
Tanya, look, I appreciate you're allowing me to put you on the spot and i i think i've heard
what you have to say okay so kiria if i were to order in your favor what would you have me order
my first thought was it would be simpler and like less uh technology less you know figuring it out
she got a landline but i think she would enjoy a cell phone more because it has
other features on it that aren't just the phone, such as taking pictures. And she loves Sudoku,
stuff like that. And she does like to take pictures. When she last had a cell phone,
she did have a good Instagram page. So I think that she should have a cell phone and that she
would enjoy it for many things, including me calling her and also calling 911 if needed.
Tanya, do you buy this upsell that Kiria is trying to give you?
Like, it's really just a device for playing Sudoku and tracking your tortoise's steps and health.
And it also happens to have a direct line from me so I can reach you when I need to.
from me so I can reach you when I need to.
I'm a little tempted, especially because, you know, I could get a phone and not give my number to anyone except Carrie.
That's true.
You could.
Yeah.
And if I were to order in your favor, Tanya, don't jump to finding against yourself.
If I were to order in your favor, what would you have me order?
Things stay the same?
You only have phone conversations with your tortoise?
Order in your favor, what would you have me order?
Things stay the same?
You only have phone conversations with your tortoise?
That I could bumble along without a phone.
Before I go into my pottery hide, which I call my chambers, to make my verdict,
I'll ask you both the same question that I asked the Cyrus sisters before I went in to make my verdict on their case.
Kyria, are you talking to your mom enough? No, I'm not.
Tanya, and please answer honestly. At the current moment, are you in contact with your daughter
enough? I think so.
I appreciate your honesty.
I'm going to go scrape my hide.
I'll be back in a moment with my decision.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Kyria, your case seems like it would be a sympathetic one,
a young woman who wants to spend more time talking to her mother on the phone. Are you at all concerned that my mother might hear this episode?
Yes, I'm very concerned for all the millennials that are trying to avoid their mothers. Yes.
How do you feel about your chances in the case?
Well, you know, I never want to count my chickens before they hatch, especially with the judge.
I do think that he had a point when he started talking about, you know, respecting her autonomy and badassery.
But I think I have a really strong case.
So, yeah.
Tanya, it's rare that a parent comes
out of a case so on the defensive
as you were.
How do you feel about your chances?
Not expecting to win.
Are you hoping for compromise?
I'd like compromises.
Like maybe you two just have to come on the
Judge John Hodgman podcast once a month?
Excellent.
Sounds great.
We'll see what the judge has to say about all this when we come back in just a second.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney,
is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests
as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching
experience, one you have no choice but to embrace, because yes, listening is mandatory.
have no choice but to embrace because yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
So thanks to the incredible production skills of Jennifer Marmer in L.A. and Joel Mann here in Maine
and Paul Ruist over there at Argo Studios, you, the listeners, have not discerned the incredible
technological troubles we had in getting this conversation
going. There have been at least three or five different phone call routes and other kinds of
ways to try to patch all these people in. And one of the strange things about all the technological
advancement that we've enjoyed that have drawn our world so close together is that the one
technology that seems to be getting worse is voice-to-voice
communication. I remember talking on a landline phone. It was crystal clear as can be. And now
every phone call is profoundly annoying, both because it sounds bad and it's hard to get a
clear signal, but also because we have other options now.
We have the option of texting, which creates anxiety in everyone's lives.
We have the option of email, which is a little bit more relaxed.
We have the option of taking a moment to consider what we're going to say or whether we should not say anything at all.
not say anything at all. And consequently, every time the phone rings in my house and we have a landline, we presume that either a telemarketer is calling or a close family member has died.
And I'm not sure which is worse, but it is a terrible feeling to get a phone call a lot of
the time. And I very much sympathize with Tanya's choice. As you could tell, I'm not merely
sympathized, but in many ways I'm jealous
of the rather radical maneuver of getting rid of a phone, both land and mobile altogether,
and taking all of those options off the table. That said, I also sympathize with curious concern,
however, that being completely cut off from voice-to-voice communication
is kind of dangerous. One of the reasons we have a landline is that I don't reliably believe that
I could get through to emergency services on my cell phone if and when I need them. It costs very
little money to maintain a landline, and I know that I will be able to get emergency services to come and save a life as necessary. And Kiria also wants to talk to her mom.
And that's really hard to rule against, a child's desire to communicate with her own mother,
voice to voice, if not face to face.
Surely you would imagine, given precedent, that if the situation were reversed, voice to voice, if not face to face.
Surely you would imagine, given precedent,
that if the situation were reversed and mom wanted to talk to daughter
and daughter didn't want to talk to mom by phone
and mom also was raising a 40-year-old tortoise,
of course this podcast would rule on the side of weird mom.
But in this case,
Tanya has come to the court with a lot of honesty.
So have you, Kyria. You've talked openly about your feelings for your mom and how you want to
talk to her, and that touches the court's heart. But Tanya did not merely say she didn't feel she
was always good for Kyria on a phone call. But she even went back so far as to say
maybe she was terrible at conversation
going back years when she was tired.
You know, Kyria, your mom, Tanya, is a young person.
57 years old is young.
Right, Joel?
Absolutely.
Right.
How old are you again, Joel?
45.
In this incarnation. But this is your ninth reincarnation?
Yes.
Right, that's what I thought. And she lives in a highly population-dense place where there are a lot of people to look after. She's living with her brother and sister.
it is hard for a child to hear. Their parent doesn't want to talk to them on the phone.
There is something compelling about the honesty that comes at a certain point in life when you're starting a new chapter, as I feel clearly Tanya has been doing. It's like, I'm 57 years old,
my child is raised. She left behind this tortoise that I got to care for, Gretel, who's a pain in the butt,
scraping, scraping, scraping, scraping. I'm working at a bakery and I know things about myself. And one of the things I know about myself now is I don't like to talk on the phone and therefore I
don't want to do it. And I'm sorry if it hurts my daughter, but I don't feel like doing it.
And I will be open to her in other ways, ways that I think I can be better for her.
That's what I took away from what Tanya was saying, all of her testimony.
And I have to say, it is a compelling, hard thing to say to your child,
I don't think I'm great for you on the phone.
It's a hard thing to do, and I feel that the court needs to honor this
and needs to find in favor of Weird Mom and Tortoise,
at least in the sense that Kyria needs to appreciate
that her mom is going through something and choosing a new way of life,
and that is her right to do so.
She's not just mom.
She is a human being in her own right who has her own weird
eccentricities that she should be allowed to explore, just as she has tolerated your eccentricities
and your desire to go work in the theater or whatever you've done in your life. It's clear
that your mom loves you. She loves the way you wear dresses. She's engaged with you. She tends
to be a little bit deflective whenever you ask for a phone call. But unfortunately, this is not her thing.
So I am really in Tanya's favor.
But I'm going to say this.
There is another way.
There is a story in American culture about two people, not mother and daughter,
but two very close people who really belonged together,
but were estranged. And one of them did not want to talk to the other one.
And the other one wanted to leave a channel of communication open for emergencies and also just
for a change of heart. And so that person FedExed a cell phone to the other person,
saying, whenever you need me, call me.
The person who received that cell phone was Tony Stark, Iron Man,
in Avengers Civil War.
The person who sent it, Steve Rogers, Captain America.
Since Tanya got rid of this phone for financial reasons to begin with,
and since it's more important to Kyria that she have some sort of line of contact to her mom in case her mom has an emergency or if Kyria has an emergency and just needs her mom, there is no way this court would ever stop Kyria from Captain American-ing her mom and sending her a phone that she has paid for.
Americaning her mom and sending her a phone that she has paid for.
Be it a fancy cell phone that she's going to use as a honey trap to get her mom back into using phones again.
Or a simple burner that Tanya will agree to answer should Kyria call it in need.
And that Tanya can use to reach her daughter when she realizes, hey, you know what?
I'm feeling pretty good for my daughter right now.
One line of communication that you are going to pay for, Kyria, and you're going to send it via FedEx.
There's another buzz market.
I don't know why I chose FedEx.
Why not UPS?
Who knows?
Whichever one you use, enter promo code Judge John Hodgman for $5 off and send along that phone.
You can choose what phone it is.
It depends upon whatever you can afford, Kirya.
I know you work in the theater in New York.
But I think it's reasonable for you to send that line of communication out there for your mom to use if she needs it.
And your mom has to agree to pick it up should you call if you really need that dose of mama?
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Tanya, was this how you expected things to go?
Not at all.
How do you feel?
Quite verklempt.
How do you feel, Kirya? Well, I like being Captain America. I'll take it. Here's the real question. Is your first instinct that you are going to be
headed down to the convenience store to buy the cheapest prepaid phone available, perhaps one with
just one giant green button that says daughter and a
second giant green button that says fire department? Or do you think that you're going to be going full
smartphone? I mean, I like, I really think the honey trap idea actually might work. But then
the question is, can I afford that? So this is going to take some number crunching. Well, either way, thank you so much to both of you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Another Judge John Hodgman case in the books. In just a moment,
swift justice. But first, we want to thank Jack Matthews for naming this week's episode,
Don't Call the Next Witness. If you'd like to name a future episode,
episode, Don't Call the Next Witness. If you'd like to name a future episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter, at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman. Hashtag your Judge
John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO. And check out the Maximum Fund subreddit to discuss this week's
episode. This week's episode recorded by Paul Ruwest at Argo Studios in New York City and by
Joel Mann at WERU Radio in Orland, Maine. Our producer here in Los Angeles, Jennifer Marmer.
Now, swift justice, where we answer your small disputes with quick judgment. Jenna says,
when referring to an address, my husband leaves off the words road, street, or avenue, and so forth.
Thus, 18 Main or 5284 East Oak.
I find it annoying and incomplete.
Who's right?
Well, I was going to say that Jenna is right and her husband is wrong because that's typical.
And it's especially unspecific and if you live in
brooklyn as i do you know that there is a big difference between say second street in carroll
gardens and second place in carroll gardens they're on the other side of smith street for one
and also second place is for losers do you know that jesse i had heard you live on first place
you get a cadillac Eldorado.
Second place, you get a set of steak knives.
Wow.
If you live on third place, just get fired.
At least they're being honest with you.
But weirdly, when I went to Google to prove my point, and I put in 5284 East Oak, waiting
to see what Google came up with for all the possibilities, I expected to see a lot of
East Oak roads and East Oak lanes and aves and
plazas, but only a single address showed up in Google with that number 5284 East Oak Ridge Road,
which is a condominium in Glenville, Nebraska. So now I know where you live, Jenna's husband,
and I can bring this justice straight to you. When giving directions, you're supposed to be
helping someone, not showing off your cool shorthand for street names,
how you know them so well
you don't even need to finish saying them.
Do not withhold information that might be helpful
to the person you care about
or the computer that is guiding them,
unless you're trying to trap all your friends
and listeners in Glenville, Nebraska.
Give the full address.
That's it for this week's episode.
Submit your cases at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
Remember, no case is too big or too small.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.