Judge John Hodgman - It's Justice Not Cricket
Episode Date: March 13, 2024What is the spirit of cricket? What IS cricket? Nate and Aatif disagree about a controversial move in the game. Who's right? Who's wrong? And who can explain how cricket works to this court? With Expe...rt Witness Andy Zaltzman! You can find Aatif on BBC's Test Match Special, and Nate over at EmergingCricket.com!We are on TikTok and YouTube! Follow us on both @judgejohnhodgmanpod! Follow us on Instagram @judgejohnhodgman.Thanks to reddit user u/shed1 for naming this week’s case: IT'S JUSTICE NOT CRICKET! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, it's just, it's not cricket.
Nate brings the case against his friend, Atif.
Nate and Atif are both obsessed with the sport of cricket,
but they disagree over a controversial cricket maneuver
called man-cotting the batter.
Nate says it's perfectly acceptable.
Atif says it may technically be allowed,
but all the same, it's just not cricket.
Who's right, who's wrong, only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
and presents an obscure cultural reference.
Personally, I'm always delighted
to see my grandfather being remembered.
I'd love to see the Hodgman or Hodgman-ing stay
and keep alive his
memories and legacy as a great podcaster, deeply respected and admired by everyone I've met and
those who knew him and experienced life with him. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Atif and Nate, 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. Yes, I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's
ruling, despite the fact that his favorite sport is gin? I do. Indeed. Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Nate, not if you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of your favors. Can either
of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered this fake courtroom?
Atif, let's start with you.
Grandfather clocks?
Grandfather clocks.
I'm going to write it down.
I'm just going to say that this quote has something to do with the case at hand.
So I'll just put in grandfather clocks.
I'm going to give you a chance to revise that because I'm a sporting gentleman. Something to do with the case at hand. So I'll just put in grandfather clocks. I'm going to give you a chance to revise that because I'm a sporting
gentleman.
Something to do with the case at hand.
Yeah.
Nate,
do you have a guess?
That's a tough one.
It has something to do with this case.
I'd love to see the Hodgman or Hodgmaning stay.
Now I'm going to be honest with you when I'm saying Hodgman and
Hodgmaning,
that's not the,
in the original quote I'm covering up.
This is not a quote about a podcaster. You understand what I'm saying? Named Hodgman.
Yeah. I'm going to say King Ralph.
Always a good guess. I wrote that on like half of the fill in the blanks on the SATs.
Yeah, absolutely.
As a cricketophile, an American Anglophile as you are, Nate, I'll write that down.
That's appropriate.
But it's definitely wrong.
Atif, did you want to take another guess or do you feel like you would just want to go ahead with this thing?
WG Grace.
Wow, you stumped me.
That's an obscure cultural reference for me.
Who's WG whatever?
Wow, you stumped me.
That's an obscure cultural reference for me.
Who's W.E.G. whatever?
W.E.G. Grace is like a legendary English cricketer from the early 20th century, I think.
A legendary English cricketer from the 20th century, the ancient history.
Indeed.
You're on the right.
What's a good cricketing term for track?
You're in your crease.
Is that a thing?
Kind of. Yeah. Okay, good enough. That's what I'm going to say. But you're wrong. All guesses are wrong. Why would I be talking about
WG Grace when the whole topic of this thing and the Wikipedia article I had to read for homework
is about the famous Indian cricketer Vinu Mankad, right? That's what this is all about.
The quote was from Bash Mankad, who was referring to his grandfather, the famous Indian cricketer Vinu Mankad, right? That's what this is all about. The quote was from Bosh Mankad,
who was referring to his grandfather, the famous Indian cricketer Vinu Mankad. He gave a quote to
the Indian Express in January of 2023 in response to the suggestion by the Australian Cricketers
Association to dissociate the name Mankading from the move in question here. The move in question, I understand,
refers to running out the batter on the non-striking end, which Vinu Mankad did in 1947
to the great alarm and disgust of many Australians with whom India was playing that game of cricket
at the time. I believe, I don't know what any of those words mean. I think we're going to find out.
But in this case, I did change the name to Hodgman and Hodgmaning for my signature move,
which is also frowned upon when guesting on other podcasts, which is plugging my stuff
too early in the podcast.
Like not waiting till the end and saying things like vacation land is now available in paperback
please check out dicktown on hulu hodgman.substack.com whatever it might be i usually put
it in awkwardly at the beginning that's called hodgmaning now but we're here to talk about
mancotting and we're here to talk to nate and atif who seeks justice in this court
i do that would be nate you hate nate hay I write for EmergingCricket.com about cricket, about American cricket in particular.
And yes, I seek justice.
And what part of England is that accent from?
I'm actually from the Washington, D.C. area, and I currently live in North Carolina.
You are an American cricket enthusiast.
That's correct.
Why shouldn't I throw you out of this court right now, weirdo?
You probably should.
That's very weird. That's correct. Why shouldn't I throw you out of this court right now, weirdo? You probably should. That's very weird.
That's very specific.
Adorably so, I dare say, Nate.
You love cricket.
We'll get to why you love cricket so much in a minute.
But your dispute is with your friend Atif.
And what is your dispute?
Well, basically, there's this mode of dismissal that is perfectly within the rules.
Cricket is...
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
English, please, so to speak.
Well, the mode of dismissal, if I know what you're talking about, right. But people listening to this
podcast would be like, oh, motive dismissal. That's like Hodgman shutting down that weird
North Carolingian cricket guy just then you're talking about something in cricket. Yes. Let me
emerge from my nerdy hole here for a second.
If you would, sir.
Let me compare it a little bit to baseball.
Basically, what's happening is the equivalent of a runner getting picked off of first base.
The non-striker, there are two, basically two bases, which are kind of both home plate.
And you have to be safe at both of those to score.
Or you have two batters batting in the middle.
And what happens is the batter who's batting from the end the bowler is bowling from,
or the batter who is running from the end that the bowler is bowling from,
the bowler being the pitcher, leaves a little bit too early.
He gets a head start.
And the bowler, who's about to deliver the ball,
gets him out by hitting the stumps behind the batter, behind the non-striker.
And it is confusing, I will admit.
Oh, no, no. I followed every, I absolutely followed every word of what you just said.
Great, great.
I understood it from the first part and then the rest of it was all superfluous to me because I
already understood what was happening.
Well, it's good that I led with that then. But essentially, it's considered unsporting by a lot
of people in traditional cricketing nations, particularly England and Australia, and by many others. As the game becomes shorter, as the shorter format of the
game becomes more popular, the goal of the game is to score as many runs as you can per ball.
And so therefore, people will leave a little bit early to try to get closer to the other end a
little bit quicker. And I think it's perfectly fair that a bowler picks off that guy when he tries to do that. All right. I think I
understand. I think I understand. I'm going to clarify this by talking to Atif for a second.
Atif, you are friends with Nate? I am indeed. I'm always looking for people who are spreading
the gospel of cricket around the world, as Nate does so well in North America. So that's, yeah, it was an instant friendship.
And you are not in North Carolina, the cricket epicenter of the world.
You are actually in another country, correct?
I am.
I'm in the north of London.
Well, I live in the north of London in England.
And yeah, very much the sort of the beginning place, the birthplace of this sport that
sort of captivated the hearts of billions of people around the world. And you are a cricket
commentator? That's right. I work on a program called Test Match Special, which is the oldest
cricket broadcasting service in the world. It's been around for almost 100 years almost.
in the world. It's been around for almost 100 years almost. And yeah, I've been a part of that for the last six years. It's a dream job. You get to travel the world essentially and sit in the
best seat in the house, watch a game of cricket, sit next to a legend and get paid for the privilege.
It's awesome. And watching a game of cricket takes four or nine days. It can take up to five days, depending on the format of the game.
But it can also be as little as, you know, a couple of hours, depending on the format you're watching.
That's all I know about cricket pretty much is that it's a lazy game.
It takes a long time.
Whoa.
And you get chilly because you play it with sweaters, I guess.
Well, you're out there for a long time.
If you're there for five days, you're going to see a variety of climates.
I love a leisurely pace.
Don't get me wrong.
I'm complimenting cricket.
I'm not criticizing.
I love about cricket that they took one of baseball's best qualities, which is that it's boring, and then expanded it by tenfold.
I have a feeling that cricket came before baseball, though, Jesse.
I hate to break it to you.
I believe they developed in parallel.
All right. Fair enough.
I'm not the cricket expert.
These two are.
So, Atif, I'm going to ask you.
So, this is what I understand about this maneuver that Nate was trying to explain.
I'm the bowler.
I'm going to pitch the ball, bowl the bowl, whatever it is, at the batter on the bowler. I'm, I'm going to throw the, I'm going to throw, pitch the ball, bowl,
the bowl, whatever it is at the batter on the other end. Right. Yes. And there's also a batter
like off to my right waiting to run as soon as I pitch it. And if he or she or they get too far
from where they're supposed to be, I could, theoretically, this is the point of contention,
instead of bowling the ball,
just throw it at the wicket behind me
and get that batter out, correct?
Theoretically, yes.
Right, that's what happens.
I mean, it did happen in 1947.
Yes.
Among other times.
Vino Moncad did this.
He did.
And it was very controversial
to the point that the maneuver itself is known in cricket as Moncading or Mankad did this. He did. And it was very controversial to the point that the maneuver itself is known in cricket as
Mankading or Mankading or however it's pronounced around the world as a term, not as the guy.
Now, it's problematic to a degree because it is considered to be an unfair move.
I wouldn't say unfair, but it's certainly not within what is referred to and has become quite a negative catchphrase in cricket, the spirit of the game.
Now, when we say spirit of the game, it sounds like a very sort of poncy old school, like really, you know, it takes cricket back to that sort of exclusionary stage where it was just for sort of rich old white guys who could play cricket and everybody else was just there to watch.
And obviously that's not what cricket is anymore. It's a game that's played all over the world and played very, very well, much better than England sometimes in other
parts of the world. The crux of my argument today isn't going to be that this rule is illegal.
This move is illegal because by the letter of the laws of the game, it is legal. The crux of my
argument is that it doesn't serve the game. It doesn't add to the value of cricket.
Now, I understand the sort of the base reason behind why it exists. It's not the same in my
mind as stealing a base in baseball. It's a very different thing. Cricket is a game that's not just
played at an elite level by elite, highly paid multimillionaires around the world as it is,
but it's also played at a very casual level by hundreds of thousands of millions of people,
in fact, every weekend. In England, we have more than 40,000 cricket clubs in action every weekend,
Saturday and Sunday, playing in the local parks. If this rule became more widespread and more
mainstream, because despite the fact that it's happened and there's been so much discussion
about it, it's only actually happened a handful of times in the history of cricket, which is not
a lot considering there's been thousands and thousands and thousands of cricket matches,
right? If this becomes more mainstream, I think it could become very problematic.
I feel like the rule in its current form, it just tilts the balance too far away from what makes
a sporting contest. So just to boil it down, you are moncotting skeptical, if not anti.
And Nate, you're like, it's cool.
Do it whenever.
Yes.
Yes.
And no.
Yes.
Yes.
Let's say the answer at this stage of the conversation.
That is the answer.
You are the one who ostensibly is in favor of this maneuver.
Yes.
And not if you are you are against it.
And my ruling today is going to change the world of cricket forever.
I think you're the only person in the world who hasn't weighed in yet. So I feel like it's important that you do.
And how did this come up in between the two of you? When was the first time actually had a tweet that went viral, and he got a lot of support from
a lot of people that you wouldn't really necessarily want to have support from,
which was kind of funny. But at the same time... What was the nature of the tweet, Atif?
Well, so essentially, there was an instance in the Under-19s Women's World Cup, where a Pakistani player used this maneuver against a player from
the Rwandan team, a Rwandan team that was playing for the very first time on this platform. The
Pakistan team were very much in control of this match. It didn't feel like a necessary maneuver.
It's, again, within their rights to do so, but they did it. And it just didn't sit very well
with me. So I wrote something along the lines of I didn't enjoy that bit of cricket.
And I think within cricketing terms, it's almost become like a colonial.
Is that what you wrote?
I didn't enjoy that bit of cricket.
Something along those lines, you know, which is not.
Well, I mean, it can be in cricketing.
It was in that instance.
That's very strong wording for cricket, I believe.
Well, the thing is, like people, it's become this sort of colonial battleground almost.
Right.
So we're sort of Indians and Pakistanis and, you know, people from the ex-Commonwealth
would look at, you know, somebody from England as someone coming from privilege and having
the right to say something like this and looking down on somebody from trying to, you know,
export the right.
And it becomes this whole argument about colonialism, where for me, it was just simply, I'm just
thinking about the kids who play on a Saturday, right?
So I just didn't like the idea of something like this that will be contentious creeping
into that game at large.
So I said that.
And then again, it was turned into a whole, what does this English guy know?
You know, he's, I mean, it turned into all that people were calling me a race traitor.
People were calling me all sorts of things simply for having a small opinion on this thing.
Because because you you have some Pakistani ancestry of yourself.
I have complete Pakistani ancestry. Both my parents were born in Lahore in Pakistan.
And I adore Pakistan, a big part of my identity. But I do consider myself British.
And I and I really, you know, English cricket is sort of where I've, you know, where I work, right?
I work around the English cricket team, the men's and women's teams.
So, Nate, Atif made this comment about the unsporting nature of the Pakistani team with regard to the Rwandan team.
I was getting attacked on all sides and you were like, you know, and obviously this is involving class, this is involving race, nationality, world sport.
And you're like, well, I'm in North Carolina.
It's time for me to weigh in.
Honestly, honestly, I led when I when I messaged him about it, I led with some sympathy because
he had been tweeted into into everybody's eyes by Piers Morgan, who agreed with him
very, very, very, very enthusiastically.
And I thought that was, knowing Atif, I thought that was hilarious.
So, of course, I reached out to him and was like, hey, I kind of feel for you right now.
And then we had a discussion about it ourselves.
But yeah, I wanted to, as a North Carolinian, I feel like it's my birthright to weigh in on things.
America will be heard for once.
We will be heard.
Finally.
On cricket.
And how did you guys originally meet, Atif?
Oh, yeah, we met on what used to be called a Twitter space.
I think it's called an X space now,
but we were chatting about cricket
into the late hours of the English night.
I think it must have been sort of late evening
in North Carolina as well.
So we were just chatting.
And then we were, I got invited to
play in this competition, to play in a competition, remarkably enough, in New York. And that's where
Nate and I met for the first time. And like, it was like meeting a long lost old friend and it
was great immediately. Never knowing that you would soon become bitter enemies on the opposite
side of the critics, cricket's great divide that would finally be settled on an American podcast. I think, Jesse Thorne, that I need to I need some expertise that I do
not have. Do we have perchance an expert witness who can clarify some questions that I have at
this juncture? We do indeed. One of our favorite pals, host of the long-running podcast, The Bugle, and professional cricket
commentator, Andy Zaltzman. Andy, welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you for having me. Hello, everyone.
Andy, you have been, thank you so much for being here. It's great to have you on the podcast.
And I just need, as a longtime listener to The Bugle, I just am so excited that you're here.
And if you Judge John Hodgman listeners are not listening to The Bugle, you should be listening to it immediately.
I'm Hodgman-ing.
I'm getting the plugs in early, Andy, because, you know.
So you've been listening along.
Let me ask you a question, a simple question, first of all.
What is cricket?
Well, that sounds like a simple question, but in fact is cricket well that's a uh sounds like a simple question
but in fact it's a very complicated question because what it is is asking what is a human
being because cricket is okay cricket is without any question the greatest thing ever invented
by human beings okay so so you need to start from that as your basic basic fact it's it's a yeah it's a sport
that explores every layer of the human condition achievement failure teamwork individuality hope
despair often within the space of about three minutes in your five day five day game it's it's
a game it's sheer length we talked about you know the five-day format yeah test
cricket gives you five days off from absolutely everything else you're doing from from your family
from news from tax demands legal summons medical appointments no other sport gives you that
baseball might give you three hours 162 times in a regular season, but not five days in a row.
So fundamentally, it's a journey into what it means to be alive on this planet in the last, I don't know, since cricket was invented.
I think cricket was invented basically when the dinosaurs tried to block the asteroid and it wasn't too successful.
But that was pretty much the origin of it, I think.
They were protecting the wicket of the planet Earth.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
So the wicket is three sticks with two little sticks on top of it.
Yes.
There are two of them.
Yeah.
They're on either ends of a cricket grounds or something.
Yeah.
So they're 22 yards apart.
Right.
But obviously, I think that was originally a farming.
It's a length called a chain,
which is obviously a tenth of a furlong,
which is even more obviously an eighth of a mile.
We all know that. We all know that.
You don't need to be a rocket scientist to know that.
In fact, if you're a rocket scientist
and you're using chains and furlongs,
you probably should resign instantly
before something terrible happens.
So the two sets of stumps are, yeah, 22 yards.
We still use yards in cricket because why not?
And yeah, so that's the basics.
And on one end, there's a batter or a bats person.
On the other end, there's a bowler and the bowler.
And there's similarities to baseball in the sense that someone is throwing a ball at someone else
and they're trying to deflect the ball.
And if the ball knocks over the stumps or the wicket or whatever then that's good for the bowlers team
yes that's but that's that's broadly it so that's uh i guess the big difference with baseball where
there's there's no wickets to aim at but the the man cutting we're talking about is the wickets at
the bowlers end um the non-striking end. Because the batter is not batting, but striking.
Well, there's two batters, one of which
is batting and one of which is non-striking
batting.
Why not say non-batting?
Well, because they are batting. Because batting
is, although it might seem like batting
is just having a ball
bowled at you and then trying to hit it,
actually batting is more of a state of mind
than that. So once you're out on the pitch, you are batting,
even if no one's actually bowled at you.
Even if you're not striking.
John, a lot of people would presume that batting would involve a bat.
But that's true roughly half the time.
Well, you still hold your bat.
You don't just throw it off the pitch.
You've still got it, and you're communing it you're you're feeling the sensory nature of its wood going through your
pores into your very soul much like my big gavel back here which i'm going to hold now if this were
a cricket bat and i were and i were batting and i was in the striking position what's the thing
called the ball bowl it's a bowl yeah right and that gets bowled to me and i and i
hit it then i started running well you don't have to run it's not like not like in baseball you can
choose to run in cricket also you can hit uh in a 360 degree arc you can hit the ball anywhere
whereas in baseball you have to get it in the um in the well within the... Fair territory. Yeah, fair territory.
So 90 degrees.
So there's a great,
wider range of ways to hit the ball in cricket
than there are in baseball.
You can try and hit it hard.
You can try and hit it delicately.
You can just defend it
if you don't think
you can score runs from it.
So the idea is to hit the ball
into a gap and then run
to the other end.
That's one.
Can I just say something right now if I were ever to be recruited to a test of cricket,
I would never choose to run. In life, I never choose.
Well, there's some quite prominent players who have taken a pretty similar approach to that.
Andy, you and Atif know each other?
We do. We work together on the same BBC commentary team. I do the statistics.
So what is your take on... Well, let me ask you this question.
Very technical with regard to cricket.
What is Law 38?
Law 38.
Okay.
So being run out as – you compared it with being thrown out in baseball.
Baseball, yeah.
So if you're running between the two sets of stumps,
there's a line in front of them.
And to complete your run, you have to cross the line,
put something down on the ground,
whether it's your bat or your foot
or any other part of your body.
If you fancy it, you can dive in arse first if you want
or just roll your snout along the ground,
whatever suits you.
I'd probably call a cab.
That's the rule that's related to the man-cad is running out.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I think the reason people get frustrated with man-cads
is the contest in cricket is between the bowler and the batter,
and the bowler bowls the ball, the batter has to do something with it.
The man-cad, the ball has not yet come into play,
which is why it is unsatisfying so the batter at the non-strikers end is trying to shorten the amount they have to run by doing a process called backing
up where they leave their ground as the bowler bowls but if they leave it too early they're out
of their ground and can be run out by this means known as the mancad and is this mode of dismissal covered under rule 38 is
it legal in the game uh it's very legal um yeah i don't think anyone is disputing that it's legal
there's some argument over convention now if you follow british politics at all uh judge well i i
listen to the bugle well you'll know that uh a lot of a lot of things we do in
this country we don't like to write down we have an unwritten constitution we have parliamentary
conventions that's no no one has ever has ever written down we find that the easiest way there's
no proof there's no proof you ever had a constitution but we can just basically make it up
as we go along and there's a convention in cricket that you warn the batter uh at least once
before uh you then run them out through uh through the mancad however there's no stipulation in the
law you you have to do that it's a legitimate form of dismissal but i think the reason people
don't like it is because it's not really what the game is about that contest between a bowler
bowling the ball and then the batter hitting it and the fielding side trying to catch it or then run the player out.
So that's why it's a frustrating form of dismissal, I think.
And do you share that frustration?
What do you feel about it?
I do share that frustration.
And ideally, it's the kind of thing that shouldn't happen because the non-striking batter shouldn't leave their crease, whether they change the law so that you can't leave your crease.
To clarify to the listeners who may be as confused as I am.
Yeah, no, that's what cricket's all about, John.
Leaving the crease is a little bit like leading a base.
Like you're leaving your safe spot.
You're not where you're supposed to be.
You're getting ready to run.
You're anticipating what's going to happen.
And if you get into a zone, then if this were a sporting world if this were atif's world the bowler might say hey dude or you
know get back over there i'm warning you now yes but if you don't i'm gonna i'm gonna go back and
hit this wicked over here and run you out okay so fundamental i think maybe a tweak of the laws
to just say the non-striking batter cannot leave their ground until the ball is released.
Did you see the match that Datif referred to when he got, frankly, eaten alive on social media?
I didn't see that one, actually.
But it's something that crops up in cricket, I think, with increasing regularity, as you said, because of the short forms of the game.
Well, because Nate wants it to happen all the time.
Nate is like, let's do this Tar Heel State style.
Andy, different sports have different relationships with rule changes.
Yes.
I think NBA basketball and NFL football are much more likely to change their rules than Major League Baseball.
Why hasn't that happened?
Well, that's a good question.
Many sports are reluctant to change.
These laws have existed for when in cricket's case in various forms.
Strange to imagine a British institution being hidebound and reluctant.
Hidebound by either the laws we have bothered to write down or the ones that we haven't.
We love being hidebound.
It's some kind of S&M thing, I think, deep in our national psyche.
But cricket's laws change pretty slowly.
Now, I have to say, but during my extensive research of about 35 minutes this morning,
in fact, I believe that the
rules were changed.
And one of you cricket experts will confirm or deny this, that in fact, this maneuver,
this mode of dismissal, the mancatting or mancotting was officially made part of law
38 as a legal maneuver as of 2022.
Is that I see you nodding, Nate.
Is that correct or no?
It was clarified a little bit more
as a legal maneuver, yes.
I'm just pointing out to Andy
that in fact, you know,
there has been a rule change
and to Andy, I presume your frustration
and perhaps eternal quest for vengeance.
The rule has been adjusted
to allow for and incorporate this mode of dismissal.
Yeah, well, I mean, it is, you know, it's legitimate.
I mean, the law, it doesn't have that element that I think would really help with these things
of just saying the non-striker cannot leave until the ball has been released by the bowler.
I think that would just clarify things and basically would remove the Mankad from the game.
And we could remember Vinu Mankad
as one of India's finest cricketers
in the early years of Indian international cricket,
rather than his legacy being this irritating
and seldom used form of dismissal.
So there was a tweak,
but I'm not sure it was necessarily a tweak
that will end these
disputes and debates in a world that needs peace judge you take atif's side andy you're also his
friend and colleague you're obviously uh corrupt and biased coming from an american is that a
compliment or an insult welcome aboard is what I'm saying.
But you are.
But at the same time, you are undeniably charming, illuminating and wonderful.
So it all balances out as long as you're entertaining.
Even a criminal can be president.
No comment.
But let me ask you this final question as an authority a world authority on cricket
universal authority i'd say indeed given that i i am but a lowly new englander
uh the only bowling i know from is candlepin why. I'm not someone born and bred in the birthplace of cricket, which is to say somewhere between Durham and Raleigh, North Carolina.
if not the mandate, to change the rules and laws of world cricket forever on this podcast to finally make an adjustment one way or the other to eliminate or enshrine this mode of
dismissal that we call, rightly or wrongly, man-catting?
I think you have that authority.
Yeah, I mean, you'd have to run that past the Marlborough Cricket Club, the MCC based
at Lourdes in London, who are the custodians of the laws of the game.
But I think if you ask nicely...
You'd be very surprised to learn
that I'm texting with them right now
and they say it's fine.
I'm sure they'll go with that.
And also, let's not forget,
international cricket began in the United States,
a game between the USA and Canada in 1844.
So if you find yourself watching baseball thinking,
well, this is too short,
why is it only going on for a few hours?
Why is there not enough going on in it?
Cricket is very much saying to America,
here's what you could have had.
Andy Saltzman, I'm going to reverse Hodgman you
by giving the plug at the end of the segment.
People can go listen to your podcast, The Bugle.
And what else do you have going on?
Where else can people find you?
Where else should people find you?
Well, if you're in the UK in March,
we're doing various live Bugle shows
dot around the place.
Details at thebuglepodcast.com.
I'm also hosting the News Quiz on BBC Radio 4,
which you can find through the BBC Sounds app.
And then I'll be doing a stand-up tour late in the year.
Details, TBC.
And that would be the buglepodcast.com.
We're going to hear more about,
I see Nate got very excited to talk about
the first American cricket game.
Unfortunately, we're going to have to take a break
and say goodbye to you, Andy.
But we'll be back in a moment.
Jesse, you want to take us out?
We'll have more of the Judge John Hodgman podcast,
including more with Atif and Nate when we come back in in a moment. Jesse, you want to take us out? We'll have more of the Judge John Hodgman podcast, including more with Atif and Nate when we come back in just a moment.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast
and our conflict between Atif and Nate.
So how, Nate, how did you come to cricket?
We've heard a lot about cricket from two people in England.
You were not there.
You were in North Carolina.
What is going on?
Why are you here?
Why should you and I get to change the rules of this game?
Well, I was introduced to the sport by some Indian friends who showed me in 2015 some plays that had happened.
Actually, a sequence of events that happened in the
world cup at the time it was very famous sequence featuring uh pakistan versus australia with some
very aggressive bowling and at the end of cricket can get so aggressive at the end of this this
bowler was bouncing the ball up at the batter um yeah right at his head and at the end of every
time he would at the end of his time he would have at the end of his
run-up because the bowler to get up the pace runs up to the, to the crease, he would be, he would
finish 15 or so feet away from the batter clapping in his face like this. And I thought that intensity
right there between the batter and the bowler, I've never seen Nolan Ryan finish his pitch.
And then, you know, just a few inches away from Tony Gwynn's face clapping in his face.
Um, but that would be great.
Would that be legal in baseball, Jesse Thorne,
for the pitcher to get up and clap in the batter's face?
John, it wouldn't be in the spirit of the game.
Okay, fair enough.
And so you really first encountered cricket in 2015,
so really a lifetime of generational cricket knowledge, lore, and love in 2015. So really a life, a lifetime of generational cricket knowledge,
lore, and love in you. I mean, we're talking almost, almost a decade at this point.
Almost a decade. I've always loved sports. I grew up with baseball. I played baseball in college
and I was just very happy to find something new that was, that was really grabbing my attention.
And I just dove right in and I learned how to play. And what do you put what position do you play? Are you an all rounder or a one rounder?
I joke that I'm a fielding all rounder, which means that I field a lot and bowl and bat
seldomly because I'm not particularly great at at either of those. But I'm a good fielder.
I'm better at batting than bowling. But I would consider myself a batter who bats number seven.
What is the scene like in North Carolina?
What's the cricket scene like?
We actually have one of the greatest communities in the country.
If you ask me, I think it's the best community in the country.
We have something in the USA called Major League Cricket,
which just launched this year.
Major League Cricket.
What a nerve.
What a nerve. What a nerve.
It's huge.
Well, I know, but it's not major in the context of the world.
That depends.
In cricket, the leagues, the professional leagues are so short
that you can get the very best players in the world to play in multiple leagues,
and that's what they've done here.
They actually have many of the best players in the whole.
It's actually a really big deal right now, Major cricket in the cricketing world is pretty huge yeah so
octave is that true is is major league cricket a big deal in the cricketing
world most definitely I mean just as Nate says I mean the cricket calendar is
a little bit different so you have your sort of international games of cricket
but in baseball for example you'll have one player who plays for a team year
round right but in cricket in t cricket, these leagues that exist, they allow you to play for
like four or five different teams over the course of a year. So as Nate says, some of the very best
players in the world and the most popular players in the world came over to play in America and
spoke really highly of their time in America, playing in Texas, playing in North Carolina.
Like it was really well received, really well produced, really well attended.
It was great fun.
The only sort of downside is the way it clashes with some other leagues in the world because
there's a finite amount of days in a year and there's just not enough days in the year
to watch cricket.
And Judge Hodgman, just to clarify, D20 cricket is cricket where the outcomes are determined
by the role of a 27-year-old.
Yeah, that's what I imagined.
It would have to be.
It would have to be.
Yeah, get your dice bag, cricketers.
Atif, if you were going to take an airplane across the Atlantic Ocean to see some hot feces cricket played anywhere in the United States, where is the top cricket being played right now?
Probably in North Carolina, I think, just because they've got a beautiful, in Morrisville,
they've got that
beautiful stadium
and, you know,
it was so picturesque
to watch during the Major League.
But it's not just specific to that.
I think Texas is quite
a hotbed for it as well.
I think it's where
the headquarters
of the Major League Cricket
are happening as well.
This summer,
the hot ticket
is going to be New York,
right?
Where Eisenhower Park
in New York,
which is going to host
a World Cup match
between India and Pakistan.
So that's kind of,
that's probably going to be
the most watched cricket match of all time.
And it's happening on your shores.
You should go.
I'm going to now.
Nate, what proportion of this American cricket
is played by people who live abroad?
What proportion is played by people who live abroad? What proportion is played by
first-generation immigrants who grew up playing the game elsewhere? And what proportion is played
by people who were born in the United States like you and perhaps even grew up playing baseball or
something like that? We have a large South Asian diaspora in the USA right now.
And they are the ones, them and the Caribbean diaspora, are the ones who mostly play cricket in the USA.
But mostly, almost exclusively, it's, you know, children of immigrants.
I'd love to better understand the cultural context of this. So in the baseball analogy that's playing
out in my head, the spirit of the game argument is a very lively one in baseball right now,
largely because of a sort of combination of intercultural and intergenerational conflicts
where a lot of younger players in particular, but especially younger players
from the Latin American countries where baseball is very popular, like Venezuela and the Caribbean
countries where baseball is very popular, like say Cuba or the Dominican Republic,
often play, let's say, a more expressive form of the game that for many years in baseball was looked down upon.
There's a lot of, I think there's a lot of mime involved.
There's a lot of...
Like they're always running into walls?
There's a lot of what I would broadly characterize as enjoying yourself.
Oh, I see. Having fun.
Yeah. But enjoying yourself in a way that could otherwise be interpreted as showing up your opponent is certainly how certain older people might interpret it.
being a native-born American white dude,
and Atif, you being a native-born Briton of Pakistani ancestry.
So what is the colonial and cultural context
in which this is going down?
Well, unlike baseball, where, like you said,
it's very much related to kind of
where the players come from.
And as we've seen in baseball, there is an argument to kind of tone it down a little,
just because we have those fall leagues in South America that end often in large brawls that we see in viral posts.
Unlike that, in cricket, it's not so much cultural difference.
It's difference in format, I believe.
It's not so much cultural difference. It's difference in format, I believe.
So you have the traditional cricket format,
which we've talked much about the long, the multi-day games.
Now, there hasn't been a Moncad in the multi-day games since 1979.
So with the game getting shorter to appeal to more people,
they have a shorter game called T20.
And with that game, instead of the
strategy is a little bit different. The the onus is on the batting side to score faster. And because
of that, the anybody who's who's seen leaving their crease early at the non strikers and is a
threat to adding to that score faster because you have a limited number of balls to score your runs.
Let the record show if you're not watching on YouTube,
Nate is running back and forth between wickets
while he's giving this model.
It's very impressive.
He's just racking up runs, racking up runs.
Atif, how do you feel about this American coming in saying
this is the way cricket should be?
I kind of agree with a lot of what Nate is saying.
Unbelievable.
I think it all makes sense.
Most, almost all of it makes sense.
My only contention really is that this incident
that has this massive,
that can potentially have this massive impact
on a game of cricket,
it's disproportionate to the level of skill
and to the, you know,
the punishment doesn't fit the crime for me.
So right now, if you're out mancatted,
you could be out.
Now, you could be the star player of your team.
It could be a really crucial moment in the game.
And all of a sudden, the game's lopsided
and the whole momentum
has gone a completely different direction.
You might get a completely different result.
And the end result is not satisfactory
for either team, really.
Yeah, but if you get run out this way
using this maneuver,
it's because you're outside of your crease.
I don't know what I'm saying, but it is still a choice that that non-striking batter is making.
It is a risk they are taking, correct?
Absolutely.
You're bang on there, as is Nate.
Hang on.
Hang on.
Hang on.
Hang on.
Jesse, did you hear that?
I'm bang on.
Yeah, I agree.
I'm so excited.
I've never been bang on before in my life.
I agree that batters shouldn't do it,
but I feel like the punishment of people being bowled out,
being given out and having to, you know,
be removed from the field of play for that is far too harsh.
I like to go with what Andy suggested, sorry,
which was you tweak the rules that if the batter is pulling up,
it just doesn't count or there's like a different penalty, like a run penalty.
Nate is shaking his head vigorously now at the suggestion of a tweak.
Why, Nate?
He's also wagging his finger, Judge Hodgman.
That's true.
That's a loud, permissible wag.
Well, here's the thing.
I agree that nobody really wants to see a game decided based on somebody's leaving the
crease early and getting out.
However, do you want to see a game decided by penalty runs?
Do you really want to see a game decided by penalty runs?
Because that could happen.
If your solution is you can't leave the crease, and if you do, we're going to award penalty
runs.
Penalty runs, first of all, does not exist anywhere outside of England, I don't believe.
I can't believe it.
I can't imagine an American sport having penalty runs, penalty points awarded. You're saying I
don't even know what penalty runs are, but you're just saying the the alternative is chaos. The
alternative is taking runs away from the batting team. The alternative is worse than the thing
that it would be. That's what I and not just that. Jesse mentioned that baseball very seldom changes rules. Before they changed their rules a couple of years ago, they tested these rules for years in the Atlantic League, which is an independent minor league. And these were rules that affected every single ball. With this, how are you going to test this when it's only happened 14 times. And that is why Nate is so passionate that he's wagging his finger in the camera,
a move that we American sports fans know as matumboing.
Atif, what is Nate missing here?
I think possibly, right?
And I don't mean to sound patronizing
or in any way minimizing experience.
I really wish you would actually, but that's fine.
I don't mean to like downplay his experience in cricket
because he's got a wonderful mind for cricket.
I love talking to him about cricket, all things cricket, in all detail.
You're a native-born Englander.
It is your birthright to patronize.
Yeah.
I think when you grow up with something, right?
And there's a couple of things in my life that I love more than cricket, and I probably couldn't say them out loud in front of a group of people. But I, you know, I, when I grew up with it,
I grew up with, you know, just that reverence for the game, you know, that respect for the game.
Like I remember every time I, even now I've been working in the field for a long time in a
professional capacity. Every time I set foot on the ground of play, you know, it's a special feeling to me.
I've done it hundreds of times. Do you think there's a threat that if Ron's runoff non-striking
batter, whatever it is, man-catting, however you want to call it, that if it starts getting practice
in North Carolina, the hotbed of cricket, that it's become more and more popular and more and
more used and it's going to degrade the game? Yes or no? Well, it's already becoming more popular and it's happening.
And North Carolina is a movement.
Because people are being little stinkers, right?
They're being little stinkers.
I think, you know, it's look, it's within the laws of the game, but it should never
be the focus.
In a game where a bowler takes five wickets and a batsman scores 100 runs or someone takes
the most spectacular catch, that should be the new story.
Nate, what is the spirit of the game for you?
And why does man catting fit into it?
The spirit of the game isn't really for me to decide.
But what I will say is this is a game for athletes.
This is a game for nerds.
Cricket.
It's always being pitched this way.
It's always being pitched.
This is a good game.
Bold.
It's being bold this way.
Please.
It's being bold.
It's being bold this way. Yeah, it's being delivered to us this way and and in my opinion this isn't like we're arguing about a a runner a batter who just got out and walked across the
pitchers bound and made the batter made the pitcher mad this is a mode of dismissal dismissal
this is one of the ways you can get out in cricket. This is written in the rules. And I think for from a nerd point of view, from like a nerd D&D point of view and from a
athlete point of view, when is it ever discouraged to to exploit a loophole in the rules? It happens
all the time in cricket. I mean, Nate mentioned earlier that one of the things that attracted him to the game was its sheer aggression.
The running at the batter and the clapping in his face and everything else.
But that's not deception, right?
That's not being a little stinker.
Is cricket less stinky than baseball?
I would say so.
I mean, I've had the pleasure of watching a game of baseball with Nate, actually.
We went to Yankee Stadium and, you know, I had a great time, very much enjoyed watching the baseball. But all it did for me was, other
than the fact that it was a very enjoyable game, it's a world apart from cricket. It's a completely
different thing. It's helpful sometimes when you're making a general comparison to say
things like, oh, stopping short or whatever it is, right? But at the same time, it's a different
game with different rules, different dynamics,
different vibe, right?
If I can use that word.
Nate is trying to baseballify cricket.
Yes or no, Atif?
Totally.
Totally.
That's right.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You know, Nate, if I were to rule in your favor you want me to rule and and essentially reassert the
existing rule that running off the non-striking batter is fine and actually people should be doing
it more often yes that people that the best way to stop it from happening is simply be responsible
at your own at the boat a non-striker. Yeah. You see it as a disincentive structure for a non-striking batter to leave the crease
in a fast paced game.
Atif, two quick questions before I get to your final ruling.
One, what do you think about this fast paced game, this T20 that Nate was talking about?
Is this good for cricket or no?
Brilliant for cricket.
It's opened up cricket to a whole new world.
I mean, just a couple of days ago,
I was watching Japan versus the Cook Islands
play a game of cricket.
I didn't even know the Cook Islands was a country.
It's cheaper to put on.
It's more exciting for advertisers.
It's more inclusive.
It's brilliant.
It allows people to enjoy the sport
who can't take five days off
from responding to court
summonses.
Correct.
And even though that shorter form game might actually encourage more man catting?
Yeah, this is the thing, man, because it's become the financial and the sort of the attention
center of cricket now, T20 cricket, because that's where all the money is.
That's where all the big players are drawn.
Less wear and tear on your body, more achievement, more exposure, whatever it is you
want to say, right? It has now become the big boy format and the big girl format in cricket.
So you need to hold that to the highest possible standard of play. And for me,
man catting, it's becoming more frequent. I know it's only happened 14 times in history, but it's becoming more frequent.
Should we call it man catting or should we get rid of that name?
Well, see, if you go by the gentleman's family.
Right. So I know his grandson is quite, you know, like he takes great pride in that phrase.
Right. He's into it.
But there's other members of his family who are not into it, who think that we don't like this.
Call it runs run out at the non-strikers end and talk about the guy's actual career as an all-round cricketer.
So if I were to rule in your favor then, Atif, what would I be ruling?
No man-catting allowed?
No run-off non-strikers end allowed ever?
No, not necessarily.
You could have man-catting, but it wouldn't be a mainstream thing.
It would be an outlier that wouldn't pick up.
How would I enforce that? Don't do it? Like tell people, please don't?
You tweak the rules, you know, as we're frequently doing in cricket, you tweak the rules, right?
To make it that you have to either make a warning mandatory or the consequence is not
the batter getting out. It's something else. The rule you would like me to instill is that
mandatory one warning. Yes.
And then if the non-striking batter or the batter on the non-striking end leaves the crease again, fair game to run them off.
Fair game to run them off.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Nate, how are you feeling about your chances?
I think I've presented my case pretty well.
I think I have a pretty good chance here.
I think there's a lot unknown if you change the rule.
And if you do the rule with the warning first,
you can give that warning at any time.
The fans might not even know it's happened.
And then you'll have the same outcome with the same dissatisfaction.
Atif, how do you feel
about your chances pretty good feel pretty good uh i think you know despite the fact that i've
been a little bit uneven about the way i've presented my argument and no doubt about it
nate has presented is much cleaner and more tidier than me i think yeah there's an uphill task here
because um if had i been arguing for you against the rule fundamentally, I would understand, you know,
but to talk about, you know, the significance of it and the impact it has on it, I feel
pretty good about having explained the emotive side of the romance of cricket, the appeal
of cricket and where I want to see cricket go in the future.
I don't want to go backwards to Mr. Mankad's days.
I wanted to go forward into a Eisenhower Park era. Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to go backwards to Mr. Mankad's days. I want it to go forward into a
Eisenhower Park era. Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about all this when we come
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And let's get back to the case.
Please rise as Judge Sean Hodgman re reenters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
It's complicated that this great player is now associated with this legal maneuver that
is nonetheless through because of unwritten rules of proper etiquette is really looked
down upon by a lot of people, including you, Atif,
as being unsporting and not in the spirit of the game.
First, let's just honor the player and separate it from the maneuver.
I'm happy for his family to be glad of that association.
But as we're talking going forward, we're just going to call it runs.
And there is something complicated.
You know, obviously obviously what's fascinating about
cricket is that it is, you know, as you pointed out, Nate, it is athletic in ways that are
surprising for a sport that is still played while wearing sweaters. And it is also highly nerdy.
I didn't even know that they used a 20-sided die in it. Thank you, Jesse, for that.
It's also so sort of associated, for obvious reasons, with British and, frankly, colonialism.
And yet it is truly a global sport that is adopted and loved around the world.
And, you know, part of the complication of calling this term
after the name of Vinu Mankad is that, you know,
he was a non-white player in Australia who, you know,
did this maneuver that the Australians thought wasn't cool.
So there has been a long association based on my 35 minutes of research
about the complication of like, like maligning
this particular, you know, maneuver with the name of this very famous Indian player.
Obviously, you ran into this too, Atif, when you made your critique of the Pakistani team
and, you know, Pakistani fans of the game were mad at you for for critiquing the team
that shares your ancestry.
You know, so it's there's a lot going on.
Not least of which is the fact that into this multicultural post-colonial stew, a young
man from Washington, D.C. has come to North Carolina to reinvent cricket for Long Island
or whatever it is your mission to do there, Nate. And part of you,
you're looking at this kind of from a money ball point of view, right? Like this is, this is a game
that you come to as an enthusiast, but without the same cultural gravity and connection that
someone like Atif has or, or, or Andy, and you you're like, well, it's in the rules. Why not
do it? In fact, I've got a fun idea. I think it'll even be better in this new fast-paced version of
the game if you do have it, because it will actually create a disincentive that will increase
game quality and you won't have those horrible penalty runs. See, I listened. But on the other
hand, there is this element of like this new guy coming
in to reinvent a game and the spirit of a game that you don't understand because in the United
States, we're all little stinkers. In sports, it's part of the game. Stinking it up. I really,
really, really want to call up whatever the governing body is for cricket and say, look,
whatever the governing body is for cricket and say, look, Atif is right.
This is a controversial move.
It's always been an unwritten rule to give a warning to the non-striker batter or the batter in the non-striking position, whatever it's called.
In fact, Vinu Mankad did give a warning the first time and then, you know, didn't.
And that was what was so controversial but nate's right it's
unenforceable even if what's the governing body that we're talking about mcc even if they're even
they're like hey we got a call from a podcaster in america he's right we should change this
someone over there probably knows a lot about crick would be like it's unenforced it's
unenforceable how would you know how would How would you know that the warning had been given?
When would the warning be given? I think that it's hard. It's hard because it does feel like
the game is changing. Cricket is being played in America at a highly competitive level and the game
is getting shorter. It's changing. This is what happens with games.
And it's probable, I have to say,
that as more little stinkers like Nate get into this game,
they're going to look at this legal maneuver and be like,
why wouldn't I use it?
That's cricket.
And you would say it's not the spirit of cricket.
It's like, you know, Nate doesn't care.
I mean, Nate, you care. Of course you do.
And more and more players,
if they are coming to this shorter-form game and they see an advantage in it,
that's how it's going to be played.
And I get it. I don't think that that's so hot.
But other than eliminating that possibility altogether,
I don't see how your one warning rule is going to change it.
Sometimes change is unavoidable.
The method by which cricket was spread to the world, right, is not a wonderful history.
And because time moves forward, people can enjoy this game that was
brought to them by imperial colonialism and a very, very harsh history. You know, like that's
what moving forward is to a degree. Evolution, claiming of the game by the people who play it
and playing it differently and making it their own. Who am I, a podcaster, to run off that non-striking batter?
It's in the rules.
Law 38.
What I think is worth preserving is this conversation, dare I say,
fight that you and Nate are going to get into it year after year.
Because cricket is a nerdy sport,
just like baseball, for nerds to fight over.
Why would I eliminate an opportunity for you two
to get on the wireless or the phone or whatever,
however you communicate, to telegraph across the Atlantic
and get all snippy about it with each other?
Have a little chat, if you will.
I don't love sports.
I love technicalities.
I love these gray areas
where all of these issues of sportspersonship,
the spirit of the game, the rules of the game.
Can you knock this thing off?
What is the history of this?
Why is it called ManCat?
All of these things.
And what does it mean that it's called
Man named after this player? All of these things. And what does it mean that it's called man, you know, named after this player and that
sort of thing?
These this messiness, I think, is part of what makes sports exciting, even for me.
And yes, I do think that there is a threat, unfortunately, that especially now that listeners
of Judge John Hodgman are going to become cricket players and cricket fanatics.
And I guarantee you, because of this conversation, they're all going to become cricket players and cricket fanatics.
And I guarantee you, because of this conversation, they're all going to be chanting,
man, cad, man, cad, man, cad.
They're going to want to see it.
I'm part of the problem.
But then look at me.
Of course I am.
Unfortunately, I cannot intervene.
I don't think the solution of the one warning will suffice.
I don't think banning it is within my remit.
And I do think that it's fun how messy it is and how complicated it is and how harsh it is.
This is the most I've been interested in a sport in years.
And it wouldn't happen if you guys didn't have this dispute.
I will say there should be more dogs in cricket,
but otherwise I rule in Nate's favor.
Gotta keep it status quo.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all.
Police rise as Judge John Hodgman
exits the courtroom.
Atif, how are you feeling?
I, you know, I mean,
I think it's,
I respectfully disagree,
but I accept, you know,
it's something that is quite contentious.
Nate, how are you feeling?
I feel great, of course, because the rule with the ruling was in my favor.
But even if it hadn't been the monologue that I just heard, I would have been happy with either decision just based on how beautifully that was put.
Nate Atif, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you for having us.
Pleasure.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
We'll have swift justice in just a second.
First, our thanks to Redditor Shed1
for naming this week's episode,
It's Just Is Not Cricket.
Yeah, because you say it's just not cricket.
That means it's just not fair.
Yeah.
It's just not done.
Just is not. I liked that one. I picked it. Join not fair. Yeah. It's not done. Just is not.
I liked that one.
I picked it.
Join the conversation at the Maximum Fun subreddit.
That's MaximumFun.reddit.com.
We'll be asking for title suggestions at MaximumFun.reddit.com.
So join us there and suggest them or just look at other people's suggestions because they're fun.
Evidence and photos from the show are both on the episode page at MaximumFun.org and on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
So follow us there. And if you want to see our beautiful faces, a reminder, go subscribe to the Judge John Hodgman podcast on YouTube. Full episodes are being posted there as well as special shorts that you won't
hear or see anywhere, anywhere else besides on Instagram. I think we're posting those on
Instagram too. Go to YouTube slash Judge John Hodgman pod and smash that like, subscribe and
the notifications button. That's what they tell you to do. Hey, before we get out of here, I just want to apologize to a listener, a new listener named Amy. Amy wrote a five-star review
of Judge John Hodgman on Apple Podcasts saying, quote, I didn't really know what to expect from
this, but what I got was dry humor, wordplay, and a big slice of actual justice, which is a very
nice thing to say. Thank you, Amy, for that. But Amy did go on to
write, quote, I realized I cannot use this to help me get to sleep because I end up listening to the
whole show. So I'm sorry. I do apologize for keeping you awake, Amy. And to some degree,
I apologize for wordplay. But thank you so much for listening. And if Jesse and I have been keeping
you awake and you haven't already, please consider going over to Apple Podcasts and leaving a review there or letting anyone know wherever you can about listening to the show.
It really helps people discover the show.
And you may know that Apple Podcasts in particular did an update.
So if you were subscribed to the show before, you might not be following it now.
So maybe go over to Apple Podcasts if that's what you use and re-follow us or do whatever it takes to let people know when you're over there.
Leave a review.
It really, really, really helps.
And hey, if you need a podcast to fall asleep to, there is a Maximum Fud podcast that's fall asleep to it themed.
John Moe's Sleeping With Celebrities, where celebrities go on and talk about the most boring thing
that they really know a lot about until you fall asleep.
Yeah, it's terrific. It's really great.
Judge John Hodgman was created by Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman.
This episode, engineered by Amir Yacoub
at Bison Studios in London, England.
The podcast edited by A.J. McKeon, our video editor, Daniel Spear, our producer, the ever-capable Jennifer Marmer.
Now, Swift Justice, where we answer your small disputes with quick judgment.
Matthew from Columbus, Ohio, writes,
I seek an injunction on my cousin Casey.
an injunction on my cousin Casey. He needs to stop buying abandoned churches and banks until he explains what his plan is. This is one of the most delightful letters I've ever gotten in my
life. That's it. That was the entire sentence of the entire email. And I will absolutely order this
injunction on Casey until he can explain what his plan is buying all these abandoned churches and banks.
But I also mandate that Casey and Matthew appear on the podcast as soon as possible so that we can get to the bottom of this injunction granted pending a full hearing.
You know, John, it's springtime.
Yeah.
The season of new beginnings.
And I imagine that there are some new beginning related squabbles out there in our audience.
Some spring related squabs is what you mean.
Spring cleaning disputes related to flowers blooming.
Jennifer Marmer asks, does your weird partner insist that the Easter beagle is real?
That's a peanuts.
That's a peanuts-themed dispute.
Absolutely.
How about this?
Since we were talking about sport,
March Madness is coming up.
That's a sports thing, right, Jesse?
It is.
Well, Judge Hodgman,
I'm headed to spring training this week.
There we go.
I'm going to see what conflicts I have
with our former Max Fund colleague, Nick White,
with whom I'm going to spring training. I have with our former Max Fund colleague, Nick White, with whom I'm going to spring training.
I think there could be something good.
I don't know if you saw, but Judge John Hodgman legend Joey Votto is currently a baseball
free agent, hasn't signed with a team.
And he recorded a very funny social media video where he was driving through a car wash
looking mad. and he said,
this is not spring training. Joey Votto, go on Judge John Hodgman. Spring is sprung.
Spring your spring disputes to us at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO. And Jesse, it says here
we're eager to hear about all your disputes. Is that correct? Big or small, we judge them all.
Maximumfund.org slash JJHO. We are always grateful to hear your disputes.
So please look at the people around you and think about what problems you have with them.
Then go to Maximumfund.org slash JJHO.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I gotta say, I watched a compilation of bowlers running off non-striking batters.
Those sneaky little s***.
It was fun.
It was fun to watch. You know what?
Leave out the bad word, but leave that in the edit.
Maximum Fun. Fun to watch. You know what? Leave out the bad word, but leave that in the edit.