Judge John Hodgman - J'Accruise!
Episode Date: July 3, 2024Stacey loves the reality show BELOW DECK. She says she would be a great stewardess on a luxury super-yacht and on the show. Her friend, Laura, says she can't handle it! So does Stacey's husband. And s...o does Stacey's own mom! Who's right? Who's wrong?We are on TikTok and YouTube! Follow us on both @judgejohnhodgmanpod! Check out the evidence from this one on the episode page on the Maximum Fun site, or follow us on Instagram @judgejohnhodgman.Thanks to reddit user u/_magpie_ for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com! Judge John Hodgman: Road Court! Tickets are on sale NOW! For dates and more information, go to maximumfun.org/events.
Transcript
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bale of Jesse Thorne.
This week, Ja Cruz!
Laura brings the case against her friend Stacey.
Stacey loves the reality show Below Deck about the lives of people working on luxury super
yachts.
Stacey says she's a natural lil' yachty and would be a great member of the crew and the show.
But Stacey's friend Laura says she can't handle it.
So does Stacey's husband and so does Stacey's own mom.
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.
I command a king's ship, not a private yacht.
We do not have time for your damn podcast, sir.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Laura and Stacey, 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.
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he does not
have a super yacht, but merely probably a skiff? Skiff seems about the right size. I
don't know exactly what it's called. I saw it one time.
I do, yeah.
I do as well.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Jesse, we have a dingy.
A dingy, okay, there you go.
Sorry, it's pronounced dingy.
What do you got there, like a dingy?
Yeah, dingy, we got a dingy in the dingy pen.
Laura and Stacey, you may be seated for an immediate summary.
Judge, we want to hear your favors.
Can you guess the piece of culture that I referenced
as I entered the courtroom?
Jesse, I think they're gonna get it.
And I'm gonna write down your guess, and I'm really going to do it.
I don't have a great guess.
My pre-prepared guess was Moby Dick by Herman Melville.
Moby Dick.
Don't think that's right.
Have you have you ever heard?
Have you ever heard someone read the first two chapters of Moby
Dick aloud in a fake
main accent by any chance?
No.
Well, hodgeman.substack.com.
That's all I'm going to say.
Oh gosh.
Moby Dick, you say, by Herman Melville.
A failure in its time.
Out of print by the time it was reclaimed by the American canon of great thick books.
And a handy guide to wailing.
Okay, I'll put it down.
And anyone who wants to go on the web
and see our YouTube channel,
you can see that I actually did write it down.
Underneath your name, Laura.
Now I'm writing down Stacey's name, Stacey with an E.
Yes, Stacey with an E.
And it's almost time for your guess.
And now it is time for your guess.
My pre-prepared guess, which now I'm unsure of being correct, is Fool's Gold starring
Matthew McConaughey and Kate Hudson.
Why did you guess that?
I've never seen that movie, so I don't know what connection that might be having to super
yachts or sailing or dinghies or maritime life at all.
Oh my gosh, you need to stop everything
and go watch this movie.
All right, I'll see you later.
Look, if we stopped recording this podcast
every time we had something better to do,
there would be no podcast.
Now, see, I forgot that we post full episodes on YouTube
and I failed to commit to the bit.
I should have just walked out of my office at that moment to go start screening Fool's Gold.
Yes, it's an action adventure romance.
And they're on a mega yacht looking for treasure.
Oh, all right.
Stacey told me she watches that movie, like,
at least once a year, which is hard to believe.
It's a good summer film, like, to get you ready for summer.
And in 1715, in celebration of the marriage of King Philip of Spain,
the largest treasure fleet in maritime history set sail from Havana, Cuba.
The 500 million dollars worth of gold, silver, and jewels came to be known as
the Queen's Dowry. What am I quoting from, Stacey?
That is a description of school.
Oh, that is on-screen text. Florida didn't ruin your life.
Wow.
These are all other people.
Who's Tess Finnegan?
Is that Kate?
What's her name?
Yes.
Something wrong?
Why would anything be wrong?
We just had sex in a church and we're not even married and now we're
going to dig up a grave?
It was a good movie.
I mean, what is that like a triple sin?
Surprised we haven't been struck by lightning.
That would have been a great guess if that had been the quote, but that was
the wrong guess for this quote as indeed all guesses are wrong.
What was I quoting, Jesse?
Master and commander, the far side of the world?
Master and commander, the far side of the world.
Russell Crowe, Paul Bettany, a lot of great British character
actors that you would now recognize,
including children actors who have now grown up.
Directed by Peter Weir, by the way, Peter Weir.
Uh, who brings this case to this court? Is it Laura or Stacey? Who's the complainant? including children actors who have now grown up. Directed by Peter Weir, by the way, Peter Weir.
Who brings this case to this court?
Is it Laura or Stacey? Who's the complainant?
I bring the case.
Laura, first, before we get into it,
you both love to watch Below Deck.
I've dipped in and out over the years, and I have my faves.
Can you explain to the listeners at home
who may not be familiar with it what Below Deck is? And, you know, I just want to preface this by saying we're not getting any yacht money out of this.
Andy Cohen isn't giving me any sponsorship deals on this.
Although maybe, Jesse Thorne, maybe you and I can parlay this into a spot on what happens live sometimes.
Yeah, what's worth not happening live?
Well, I guess that ruins that. on what happens live sometimes. Yeah, what's worth not happening live?
Well, I guess that ruins that. Okay, there we go. We are definitely not sponsored by Below Deck, but go ahead and tell people what it's all about, Laura.
Yeah, so Below Deck is a reality TV show on Bravo and streaming on Peacock.
Oh boy. Okay, okay, okay. Easy. Easy with the plugs.
I just like people to be able to watch it if they want to.
But the way I describe it, why I like it is that it's like a bunch of shows in one.
So it's people who come on to super yachts for like a charter for three-ish days and
the reality show follows the crew of the super yacht while they're chartering for different groups
of wealthy people. Right. Um, so the super yacht is really fancy
and they go to really pretty places. So it's like a travel
show and you get to see that. And then they're always, there's
a chef and they're always like cooking good food. And so you
get to see that.
So there's a food show element to it.
Yeah, food show. And then,'s obviously shenanigans with the guests
because they're kind of of a certain set of people type.
So Laura, let me break in for a second.
So you're right.
It's a food show.
It's a travel show.
When they're, and it's an upstairs downstairs kind of show
where they follow the lives of the crew members below decks, such the show's named, and then the very, very wealthy people who charter
these things.
And when they cast these people, because they do pick them out, they don't just randomly
assign people to work on these things for television.
I would say that the downstairs segment, the crew segment, would you say they're casting
for hotness?
Yeah, I would say they're all pretty, pretty good looking, I you say they're casting for hotness?
Yeah, they're all pretty, pretty good looking, I would say.
Yeah. Yeah. They're you know, they're they're they're young people,
some of whom have been in the yacht world for a while, some of whom haven't.
And what they're hoping is that there's going to be a little
a little bunk romance, perhaps is going to shake things up.
And I also think the like in between the management, they cast for that too, like, because they
have the captain and then the middle management and then the workers.
And so I think they're also really casting for like, either really good or really bad
middle and upper management.
And so it's like a workplace drama also.
So but the below the below deck,
so you have the food show and you have the travel show,
then you have the yachties,
the people who are working on the thing,
they're the smoke show.
And then would it be fair to say that when they're casting
the wealthy guests, they're looking for the freak show?
Probably, yeah.
Yeah.
All right, so that's what below deck is.
Now, Stacey, you also like to watch the show, right?
Yes.
What's your favorite version of Below Deck?
We got Below Deck OG, which is Captain, well, it used to be Captain Lee in the Caribbean,
Below Deck Mediterranean with Captain Sandy, Below Deck Sailing Yacht with Captain Glenn,
Below Deck Down Under with Captain Jason, and then one season of below deck adventure time
or something with Captain Carrie that didn't really,
which was your, which is your below deck?
Probably original or Mediterranean.
I do really like Sandy.
You like Captain Sandy?
Yeah. Controversial pick.
Yeah.
Not everyone likes Sandy.
What do you think Laura?
I do not like Sandy.
Whoa, here we go.
Not my favorite captain by far.
Why you don't like how she handled Hannah when Hannah had the Valium on ship.
I don't remember that storyline, I guess,
but I just feel like she always has her like fingers.
She's like a micromanager and I just, yeah,
I don't know. As I love below deck a lot for the like management
struggles between the different levels.
Oh, tell me more because I feel you on that.
I mean, Captain Lee has his
Captain Lee, everyone loves Captain Lee because they call him Bo Daddy. And he says things
like I'm madder than a pissed on chicken.
Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.
But here's where I stand.
I first started watching this because I really
wanted some sailing content after I broke my brain
and my shins learning how to sail.
By the way, I don't do it anymore.
Too scary, too painful to shins.
Here's where I'm with you.
I love, and this seems cruel, but I love to see people reprimanded on below deck by the captains.
Not because I love to see people fired, although sometimes that happens and it can sometimes be very gratifying.
But I am into competency porn.
And when someone can't be competent at their job, particularly when
they like can't call the right distance between the boat and the pier and they almost have
a crash and someone's got to talk to somebody else.
I'm like, I love it.
And I love when Captain Lee gets a little mad.
But then he also points out, look, you just need to learn this stuff because I want you
to thrive. But this comes to you, Stacey.
Look, you just need to learn this stuff because I want you to thrive.
But this comes to you, Stacey.
Why should I not fire you immediately
from your dream of being on below deck?
It's a hard job.
What makes you think you can do it?
I have a controversial opinion
and I think it's not a super hard job
to have the skillsets to do it.
You already have the skillsets to do it.
You don't think it would be a hard job.
You would like to be part of the smoke show or the freak show.
You're not going to charter a yacht.
You're going to go work on one in your fantasy.
Yes.
That's the argument at hand is I could work on one.
What position would you like to work?
Oh, stewardess.
I think you might need a little more like specialty skills to be a deckhand.
Oh, okay.
And the stew crew, they're the interior crew.
They deal with everything inside the boat.
They do the laundry, they do the housekeeping.
And then at night, they serve the food and the far too much wine and liquor to Roy Orbison Jr.
and the other weirdo cohorts who charted this yacht.
And then they deal with them and then they clean up afterward.
That's what you wanna do.
Yes.
Why, why do you wanna do it?
Well, the argument isn't about wanting per se,
it's whether I have the skills and the ability
and like the demeanor to do it.
And I think I absolutely do.
What, tell me, pretend I'm Captain Hodge.
And you wanna work on my dinghy.
Okay, well to start off.
As a chief stew.
Tell me what you got.
It takes like 20 minutes to clean.
Well, I think-
You don't know how many things to clean my dinghy.
My standards are extremely high. Well, okay, going off that, I think attention to detail is super important, so I think I
have that.
Why?
What experience do you have?
Have you ever cleaned a boat before?
Have you ever been at sea?
No, but I, well, I have been at sea a bit, yes, but not for stewarding, I should preface.
Okay.
What is your experience at sea?
So I'm a scientist and I worked on a scientific boat that went out and collected data on a
transect of the Pacific Ocean.
What's a transect of the Pacific Ocean?
I'm a ship's captain and I don't even know. So basically they have like this set line that they do every like the exact
longitude and latitude that they're doing every single year and they're
collecting data in this exact same data points every single year to collect like
a large segment of data. So what I collected in particular was like how
productive the ocean was. So I was looking at it like I was running through
like nutrients essentially. It's just how productive the ocean was. So I was looking at it like I was running through like nutrients essentially.
How productive the ocean is.
Yeah, like what are you doing a semi annual review on the ocean? Well, we've been looking
here at your stats and I have to say we thought you you've not been meeting this year's goals.
They were not the year I went out it was like not looking good for the ocean.
The ocean of great. Haven't we done enough to it
that we don't have to be reviewing it?
Giving it a performance review at the end of the year
for a 3% annual raise?
At the very least, we should be giving automatic
cost of living adjustments to the ocean.
Yeah.
Given the fact, I mean, if we treat it any more badly,
it's definitely gonna turn on us and destroy us,
which is pretty much aiming to do.
And it wouldn't be wrong.
Okay. So you go to, you go on a ship.
So I looked at Plankton, I guess I should make it easy.
Oh, got it.
I looked at Plankton and there was some Plankton and then more Plankton later.
That's basically the story of Moby Dick.
There's probably a Plankton chapter in Moby Dick, like just like that.
But a lot longer. Okay. So you're a research scientist and you're going on a boat.
You don't want to reveal a lot of details about your career, so we'll just call this
mystery boat.
You're going on a mystery boat and you're measuring plankton.
Yeah, and there's a bunch of other, it's not just me out there measuring plankton.
Like someone's like counting birds and someone's counting whales and someone's a bunch of other, it's not just me out there measuring Plankton. Someone's counting birds and someone's counting whales
and someone's looking at fish eggs.
It's a whole crew of people collecting different ocean data.
A whole bunch of counters.
Yeah, a lot of oceanography data.
Okay, I feel comfortable saying out loud,
she's obviously on the voyage of the Mimi
on PBS with Ben Affleck.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. So you have your sea legs.
How many hours would you guess you spent at sea?
Oh, I mean, okay.
I've spent a lot of time outside.
So that cruise was about 30 days straight
and it was super rocky.
Like you would sleep and like move in your sleep
because it was so rocky in parts of the ocean.
I also was a sailing instructor for a few years
while I was in college.
So I spent a lot of time doing that.
But a lot of our research was based on the Channel Islands.
And so I've gone out to the Channel Islands
a significant amount of times.
I also lived on Catalina Island for a while.
I've been on a lot of boats.
You've been on a lot of boats.
You've been on a lot of islands.
You've moved around a lot. Living on Catalina Island qualifies you for below decks golf cart.
Yeah.
Well, okay, like I did, I was around a lot of yachties and we actually called yachties
the rich people who live on the, who like come out to the island.
So I have very different experience with like yachties.
Right, because in below deck parlance, a yachtie is someone who works below decks as a crewmember,
who takes, you know, who goes on multiple charters per year, they just spend their
their professional lives going from boat to boat to boat, working. But you referred to yachties on
Catalina as the people who owned the yachts or the pleasure sailors.
Here in this studio, yachties are guys that collaborate with Big Baby Dram on the song,
Broccoli.
So you spent a lot of time on boats, spent a lot of time on islands. When you're on your 30-day
plankton party out there in the transect of the Pacific Ocean, who cleaned up after you or did
you clean up after yourself?
We cleaned up after ourselves.
Yeah, did you do a good job or did it get to be smelly?
It was fine, yeah.
You couldn't bring very much stuff,
so it's kind of hard to be dirty, I guess,
or cluttered, or.
Did you have to share a cabin?
Yes, so it's 12 hours on, 12 hours off,
so somebody who has the night shift is the person you share. So you're 12 hours on 12 hours off. So somebody who has
the night shift is the person you shave your share. So you're
never in the room at the same time because you guys are
working opposite shifts.
Right. I don't know, Laura, it seems to me Stacey is a lot of
actual expertise in this world. Why should I not hire her for my
pleasure dinghy?
Well, I think if you were hiring her for your scientific research cruise, I would say go
for it. No better lady to do the research. But on below deck, one of my arguments is
that I don't think she, as my mom would say, suffers fools gladly. I think Stacey would really struggle with all of that workplace drama of it all.
And it would just make it so that she could maybe get on the show,
but I don't know if she would last working with incompetent people.
And maybe incompetent middle managers or captains.
Yeah, I would say, Stacey, that Laura is correct
in that both below deck and above deck,
when they're casting these shows,
they're definitely cast for some straight-up fools.
Some very demanding, outsized personalities.
Do you think you can fit in with them?
Yes. Absolutely. Well, you're lying.
I mean, why should I believe you?
So this is where I get to, I think more people can do it because so many people have worked in the
service industry, which I have also done. And I think you put your pride aside a lot. And for all those jobs, I made minimum wage or slightly above minimum wage.
And I did all those gross things and dealt with difficult people.
And you get paid so much more to be on one of these mega yachts.
And so I feel like if you didn't think you could do it before, for the right amount of
money, you probably could deal with these fools and make it work. Don't you think your resilience would and your ability to put up with and suffer
those fools sort of dwindle as day after day goes by of filling up buckets full
of champagne and super soakers full of tequila for Roy Orbison Jr. or whatever?
Yes, but I also feel like I thrive in that environment.
I love work drama.
My coworkers always joke that I love to collect the gossip at work.
I feel like I would just dig it.
Then on top of all of what you just mentioned, one aspect of working as a field biologist
is you work in the field with the same crew for months at a time.
It's absolutely the same experience where you're like,
man, if I have to hear that story about the one time
you went to that one place one more time.
So they start to drive you crazy,
but you just sort of like figure it out.
And like that job was that I'm thinking of
was like way more manual labor than being a stew is.
So it's like, you're way more exhausted.
I feel like in that setting where you're like
backpacking or something. Laura, St like you're way more exhausted. I feel like in that setting where you're like backpacking or something.
Laura Stacey thinks she can handle it. Yeah.
Which is just by the level of delusion that I think that the blow deck casting
team would love to have in someone that they're going to shove into that laundry
room. Don't you think she could probably get cast on the show?
Is that why you're bringing this to me?
Do you think it's possible that if she would put her mind to it,
she would get cast on this show and you would never see her again?
Cause she's a famous influencer. would put her mind to it, she could get cast on this show and you would never see her again? Because she's become a famous influencer. Oh, God.
I think some of her arguments are compelling, but I don't think she'd have a good time doing
it.
And I think she would quit before the season ended.
And then I also think that she's maybe thinking about herself and all these experiences that she did in her
early 20s, let's say, and maybe not who she is right now.
Pete Slauson Well, how do you both know each other?
Ashley I have a good story about how we met, if you're
interested.
Pete Slauson I would a good story about how we met if you're interested. I would enjoy that. I would enjoy that story.
I am maybe shows my tenacity, perhaps.
So I first moved to Reading and I had no friends.
And I went to.
When you showed up in Reading, did you say I didn't come here to make friends?
So I was on the lookout for trying to make any friends that were like-minded, like myself.
So I went to a coral reef talk, which is funny because we're not very close to any coral
reefs.
So it was about coral reef bleaching.
Sure.
And there were other people-
That's where I always go when I want to meet people.
People don't move to Redding to be close to coral reefs.
They move to Redding to be close to tax-free car purchases
in southern Oregon.
Exactly. So it's hard to make friends. So anyway, so I was at this talk and I saw people
and they had like cool stickers on their water bottle. And then the talk kind of turned into
this weird argument about chemtrails. And this poor like PhD scientist was like, I don't understand why you're asking about chemtrails and this poor like PhD scientist was like,
I don't understand what you're asking about chemtrails.
Laura was the one who raised her hand and said,
how do we know that birds are even real?
I wanna talk about the chemtrails
and the robotic pigeons that followed me here.
And I was like, that's the girl for me.
No, so they left during that section. So that was like a clear that I was like, that's the girl for me. No, so they left during that section.
So that was like a clear that I was like, I bet we could be friends.
So I chased them out and I was like, I just moved here.
I don't have any friends.
Will you be my friend?
And they did become my friends and they invited me out
that next week and I met Laura,
cause they worked with Laura.
Oh, got it.
Laura, are you a boat person or no?
I am not an ocean person.
Okay.
I, yeah, lived on the beach once doing some stuff
and decided that was not for me.
Right, so you're saying to Stacey
that she can't handle being on a super yacht,
has nothing to do with your vast experience
in working on ocean going or sea going vessels
or something or anything like that.
No, no, Stacy is definitely in our friend group,
the ocean expert and she's been on the most boats.
You're just a concerned friend who loves Stacy
and doesn't want her to have a dream.
No, I have a friend who Stacy likes to argue.
And so this is one of the reoccurring arguments that we have.
Right.
So just putting to bed an argument and standing up for, you know, she'll argue with you and
just, you know, beat you down to submission on some of these arguments.
So standing up and say, no, this is one that I'm pretty confident you wouldn't be successful on below deck.
So this is a recurring argument.
Yes.
And you and Stacey's husband and Stacey's mom and others in the friend group are tired of it and just want to put it to bed forever.
Yeah, I think it actually started with Stacey's mom. So Stacey was visiting her parents
and they were watching the live demo.
I hear she's got it going on, is that true?
Yes, she does.
She does.
And so Stacey's mom, I think said,
like, you could never do this.
And so then Stacey came back from visiting her parents
and was like, guys, my mom said this, can you believe it?
Laura, when you submitted the case,
you alluded to a friend on your side of the
case, who is Rayanna and what does she have to do with this?
Yeah.
So Rayanna is just another one of our friends that, um, probably has contributed
to this being an argument that's kept alive.
She really likes to argue with Stacey, whereas I would like to argue with Stacey
and then like never talk about it again.
Um, but she, uh But she's on my side.
She agrees that, you know, Stacey's qualities,
she has many great qualities,
but they might not be well suited for Below Deck.
All right, Stacey, you're an adult.
You're married to a person.
You have a fairly settled life.
Yes.
About how long ago was it that you were on Mystery Boat,
counting the plankton?
Nine years ago.
Almost a decade ago.
Was that your last big sea voyage?
Yes, but I've done difficult jobs since then.
Okay, tell me more.
I mean, I worked in fisheries for a long time and out here that involves salmon.
Okay, I don't know if you're familiar with like the life cycle of salmon.
Intimately.
But because some of our listeners may not be why don't you explain?
Okay, so it's kind of beautiful and they're amazing. So they come from the ocean as adults.
Finally, I figured that out.
I didn't, I thought that they came from caves.
So we have four kinds, four runs of salmon,
and they're all named after when they passed
through the Golden Gate Bridge, basically.
So like fall run, winter run, spring run,
and they all have different life histories. Four seasons of salmon pass under the great Golden Gate Bridge basically. So like fall run, winter run, spring run, and they all have different life histories.
Four seasons of salmon pass under the great Golden Gate.
Fall, winter, spring.
Late fall too.
And late fall.
The four seasons of San Francisco.
So before I worked out here, I worked on the Merced, Tuolumne, and Stanislaus rivers,
which all go through the central valley into the delta. Anyway, it doesn't matter. So,
on those, we have to do them on these tiny tin boats. And you're constantly moving down
the river. And so, as you're moving down the river, you have to collect these dead salmon.
And some, they're at all different degrees of decay like some are really fresh some are not and
So you collect them and when they're really gross and they can't be counted in the survey anymore
Because they're falling apart you cut them in half with a machete TGTC too gross to count
Yeah, I gotta say Laura if you've been collecting dead salmon carcasses
You're probably in a good position to plunge a dookie out of a golden toilet bowl on a big, big dot.
Wow.
This is a wild and wonderful job.
You also included some evidence, which is a design for a t-shirt that you would like
printed up in case I were to rule in your favor, that has a photo of both of you on
here, Laura and Stacey in front of
One of the below deck ships. Is that a below deck ship? I don't I don't recognize that particular one
Yeah, I think so. Um, I think it's when from the like normal og
below deck
Anyway, this is a design for a t-shirt that Stacey you would have me
Order be printed up and I presume you would want Laura to wear it around town that says Stacey was right on it.
Yes. For this show we were told to come up with repercussions and that's what I came
up with.
Well, let's talk about the ultimate repercussion, which is you actually working on not just
a luxury yacht,
but on below deck.
So I just want to ask you a series of questions.
Sure.
To clarify, you don't just want to work on a super yacht,
you specifically want to work on a super yacht
on below deck or does it not matter?
The argument was specifically a super yacht,
not specifically the show below deck.
Not specifically the show below deck, okay.
Yeah, it's like, do I have what it takes
to be on a super yacht?
Right, so this is a hypothetical question, right?
You're not actually thinking about signing on to a super yacht
or auditioning for below deck, are you?
No, no, I'm a scientist.
Yeah.
Although I would probably make more money
working on below deck, to be honest.
Yes, the nice thing about the Yachties
is they make their own money on the show.
Like they're not making their money from the show.
Yes, exactly.
Right.
So you don't wanna be on the show,
you don't even wanna be on a super yacht,
you just want your mother and your husband
and Laura to be wrong.
Yes, and I, yeah, if I could take a pause on my job
just to go on a mega yet to like prove everyone,
I totally would.
Why?
But here's the thing, I'm going to ask you another couple of questions.
Why interior department?
Why be a stew?
Why that as opposed to decant?
I mean, you're out in the world collecting bodies.
You really want to be scrubbing toilets?
Yeah, well, for the money, absolutely. collecting bodies. You really want to be scrubbing toilets? Yeah.
Well, for the money, absolutely.
Like I already do that at my house.
Good boy.
And like I've worked at, you know, food establishments where I did that for the public.
So I feel like I've done that.
And I did that for $7 an hour.
Yeah.
But don't you think that the, the I mean the deckies get the same
Tip out as the as the interior. Oh, well, I guess I feel like they're outside
they're not yeah, they don't have to deal directly with the with the
Primary charter. Yeah. I mean, I do think I'm particularly well suited to work with
People on the boat as well. Well, we do have some, we do have, we did, you know, I'm not an, I'm not an expert on
being a stew aboard a super yacht.
So we did reach out for an expert opinion and we're going to share it with you now.
Oh boy.
Oh my gosh.
Hello, Stacey!
You gorgeous, beautiful, aspiring Stuart-ess! How are you?
Now, first of all, I would like to apologize for coming to you in my dressing gown.
I am actually going on Watch My Opens Live today, which I'm so excited about.
Look, I'm in New York. Very exciting. in New York, very excited and I'm waiting for
Here in Makeup to arrive. They're gonna do me up all lovely and then we're gonna go
and film Watch What Happens Live and I haven't done it in the studio for so long
so I'm so happy I get to do that. Oh it's gonna be amazing but anyway I have been
talking to your lovely John and he tells me that you fancy yourself as a bit
of a stewardess.
You think that if you got the chance you could step on the boat and you could become a stewardess.
Now I thought that we could run through a few of the qualities that you have to have
to be a successful stewardess.
The first one is you have to be able to function very well on pretty much no sleep. We, during a season, on the show we do two months, a normal season will be three months.
You do 16 hour shifts for every single day for two to three months straight.
When I'm doing that, you don't step foot on land.
Well, now that I'm the chief steward, I do because I go on some excursions and things.
But generally, you do not step foot on land, you don't talk to the outside world, you don't communicate with any sort
of like life form, you are literally just waking up, working, going to sleep day after day after day,
and that's why so many girls quit yawning once they get to like 30, because there's no way that
you can start a family or find a partner or do these things when you are literally just in this boat vortex for months at a time.
And then you emerge at the end of the season and you're like, wow, oh, there's a big bright
world to help here.
So functioning on lack of sleep is very important.
Being able to maintain your composure because you're gonna get guests that are kind of assholes
and you're gonna get stewardesses
that are gonna really test you
and you're gonna get provisions that don't arrive
and you're gonna get a massive workload
and you have to just have the ability to just breathe
and stay calm.
And then the third one is you need to have
a very good eye for detail.
We used to detail the boat to such an extreme
that my person would come around
after a whole entire day in one room
and she'd get out her stool
and she'd pull down that air conditioning vent
and run her finger along the top of it
and be like, thought you said you cleaned in here.
And there's like two specks of dust on it. So you have to have an insane, insane eye for
detail and really think about every single little, little, little thing. So you
also need to be outgoing, confident, you need a common sense which is insane how
many girls really don't have common sense.
Not just girls, sorry. That was very exclusive. Any gender that wants to be a student, it would be a surprise how many don't have common sense. It's a very big part of it. And my favorite one,
you need to have a sense of urgency because if you are not doing everything as quickly as
humanly possible, I do not want you on the boat the boat okay so I've got very high hopes for you and your yachting career I think you're
gonna be absolutely amazing I hope that I see you swatting around the
yachts one day or maybe it will just stay in your dreams but either way thank
you so much for watching this show thank you so much to Lauren too and your mum
who I know are fans and watch the show and it honestly means so much to Lauren too and your mum, who I know are fans and watch the show.
And it honestly means so much to me because it's just the best thing that ever,
ever, ever happened to me. I love it so much.
The more people that watch it, the longer it will go on.
So truly thank you. So all my love, Stacey and to you, John.
So in case you weren't able to hear it,
Aisha's message ended with her blowing kisses to me.
So that's very nice.
That's Aisha Scott.
She saw the chief stew now on the most recent
below deck OG thing.
Oh, sorry.
No, Mediterranean.
Yeah.
The one that's airing right now.
She started on Down Under.
She started on Down Under, then she went to OG.
Now she's on Mediterranean.
She's on all of them and boy, oh boy, does she have a lot of energy.
And I think, I think that's required.
I mean, what do you think, Stacey?
Do you feel inspired?
Yes.
Okay.
So there are two things I think would be a challenge for me. But everything else
I thought was fine. The sleep thing I didn't know about.
That's what I was going to say. The sleep thing I didn't know about. Interesting.
Yeah. I think that would be a challenge. Absolutely. But I also think with the money, I would just
do it. And I don't think six weeks is that long.
You're saying money solves everything.
I just think it would motivate me
to finish it out and not quit.
You're saying you're very greedy
and money solves everything and science is stupid
and doesn't pay you the most time for you to live.
Well, I'm just saying that like a lot of people
do very similar difficult jobs for way less money.
So like, which I have done in the past, like that salmon carcass job, I got
paid like $12 an hour.
You would look in Aisha's face and go, your job isn't that hard.
I think it's hard.
I think people with the select amount of skills, like I think the attention
to detail is a big one, like what she was saying about the common sense stuff.
Like, I feel like I get that.
Like, sometimes I'm just listening to just stuff, like I feel like I get that. Like sometimes I'm just-
Yeah, you have common sense.
Well, sometimes you're just like,
oh, I thought everybody knew this.
I don't understand why you don't.
So I get what she's talking about with that
because that's definitely a relatable experience.
And then just like being able to work under pressure,
I think is also just a trait that some people have
and some people don't have.
And I think I have that.
I think being able to swallow your pride
and just not overreact or not be able to get into a fight,
especially when it's completely unnecessary.
And just being thick-skinned in general,
I think is a really good policy.
Well, then why can't you swallow your pride
and accept that your mother and your husband
and your friend, Laura and Rayanna,
don't believe in you, but you don't care about the haters
because you know inside it's true.
Why don't you just swallow your pride?
Why do you have to fight back?
What's gonna happen when some primary guest on the charter
says, I'm afraid you're no good at your job
and you know you are, you're gonna fight back then?
What's gonna happen?
So this is the other thing that I feel like
this is why Laura Ray and my
husband and mom don't understand is like, you're a completely different
person in a work setting than when you are with your friends.
Like you can, I can be comfortable complaining or saying whatever I want,
you know, in front of my friends.
I'm a completely different person at work where I can't be like, you're
incompetent to my coworkers or whatever, you at work where I can't be like, you're incompetent
or whatever to my coworkers or whatever.
You know, like I couldn't do any,
you just like, you're a different person professionally
than you are with the people you're most comfortable with.
And like, of course my husband sees me
when I'm most whiny.
Right.
Laura obviously doubts that you'd be able to go
and be a stew on below deck or a super yacht in general
Is this indicative of other stuff that she misunderstands about you? Oh
I think she just sees the whinier side of me. Like this one time we went backpacking and I hurt my ankle and
I was really upset like the whole last two miles of the trip and I feel like that one trip is really catering to life
Yeah, I I didn't want to bring that up two miles of the trip. And I feel like that one is really catering to like,
Yeah, I didn't want to bring that up.
But it hurt and I was sad. You like bucket up at work. Yeah. I just feel like Stacey says that she's really resilient and, you know, can deal with a
lot of metaphorical and physical poop being thrown around. But
I just feel like there's multiple times we've been backpacking or even just like on friend trips and
something. There's a slight setback and then Stacey's upset about it or wants to turn around
or something like that. But I do recognize her argument that maybe at work it's different.
Laura, this is hypothetical.
Stacey says she's not going to audition for Below Deck.
She's not going to apply for a job in a super yacht, which is, I think, frankly,
a waste of her life, but whatever.
You just don't want to yes her along anymore.
You want you want her to stop.
What would you have me rule if I were to?
Yeah, I just want the answer to the argument and for the answer to be
final and to be able to watch below deck and talk about below deck without
this argument coming up all the time.
Do you genuinely believe she's not cut out for this?
I genuinely believe that she would not be happy doing it and wouldn't last the entire
time.
How does it feel, Stacey?
Never mind your own mother.
How does it feel when your friend sitting next to you says she doesn't believe in your
dream?
I mean, the reason I brought up the whole issue in the first place was because I was so certain
that they would be like, oh yeah, of course you could do that.
So I am like, I just think she's wrong.
I just want to like do it so badly just to like be like, see.
Because why?
I mean, how does it feel when someone says,
no, you can't do that?
Well, it just makes me feel like
you don't see the skill sets I have
and you think I'm like weak or something.
And I'm like, I feel like my work history
has proved otherwise.
Stacey, if I were to rule in your favor,
I would be ruling what?
That you are correct and that Rayanna and Laura
have to wear a t-shirt that says Stacey was right.
Yeah, there's just for a day and then you guys get like workout in it.
Yeah, and then I would, obviously talking about it, I'd only brag about it once a month.
I am now going to go into my stateroom to consider my verdict, but I'm not sure I'll
be considering my verdict.
I think I might be writing to the below deck stateroom to consider my verdict, but I'm not sure I'll be considering my verdict.
I think I might be writing to the below deck franchise to pitch the new show, Below Deck
Science Boat.
Sounds great.
You know what?
I'm cutting out in the middle, man.
I'm just going straight to below deck plankton edition.
Plankton.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Laura, how are you feeling about your chances? I'll be back in a moment with my verdict. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Laura, how are you feeling about your chances?
Honestly, not great.
Why is that?
Stacey makes some really good arguments.
And I think the whole not believing in your friend
portion of the argument is really tough to come back from.
Stacey, how do you feel?
I feel pretty good.
And like, I do feel like I can just like feel it in my bones
that I can do it.
Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman
has to say about all this when we come back in just a moment.
Watch out, America, because here comes Jesse and John.
Why that's us.
Are you suggesting that we are perhaps going back on the road?
We're taking this court on the road.
It's road court.
Tickets are on sale now for our incredible tour this fall.
We're going to New York City, Philadelphia, where we have not been for an age, Washington,
DC, Pittsburgh, where we've never been, Ann Arbor, another debut, Madison, Wisconsin.
We're coming back.
St. Paul, Minnesota, coming back.
Burlington, Vermont, very first time.
Portland, Maine, you know we're coming back.
Ternes Falls, Massachusetts, Monte Belmonte, you know it's going to happen.
And then I'm really excited.
My hometown of Brookline, Massachusetts, where we'll be appearing at the Coolidge Corner Movie House
where I used to work as a teenager.
Yes, it's Judge John Hodgman on the road.
You can get tickets right now
by going to maximumfund.org slash events.
That's maximumfund.org slash events.
And if you live in or near those cities
and you have a dispute, you know we wanna hear your beefs.
Submit it now at maximumFun.org slash JJHO.
The Judge John Hodgman Roadshow is like,
I want, if anybody hasn't been,
it is a great time for people,
whether or not they are listeners to Judge John Hodgman.
Bring a friend, because this is a fully featured program.
You don't need to know the lore.
You don't, it is a blast of program. You don't need to know the lore.
It is a blast of a comedy and theater show
for anyone who enjoys going out and having a good time
with live cases on stage, live music on stage,
us yelling at people in the crowd who have volunteered
to be yelled at, not just random people.
If you don't like being yelled at, don't worry.
It's not going gonna come up.
It is a great time out.
We wear our little outfits.
Look, if you've been watching the YouTube of this,
and a lot of people I can see from the comments
like to see the top half of my uniform,
well, if you wanna see my uniform pants,
you wanna see me wearing security guard shoes?
I got security guard shoes.
Let's do this thing.
It's a great big fun show and, and, you know, not to not cast any aspersions, but it's one
of the rare podcasts where the hosts actually stand up on stage and put on a real show.
We have a lot of fun.
And it's always really fun to see you.
And it's obviously better when you're there.
Tickets are on sale now to get them, go to the events page
at maximumfund.org slash events.
And of course, give us your disputes
at maximumfund.org slash JJHO.
Let us know you're gonna be at the show
and perhaps we'll call you on stage
to adjudicate your dispute right there live on stage.
You're on notice America.
Let's get back to the show.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
Life is like a feces sandwich.
The more bread you have, the more feces you have to eat.
Thus spoke Captain Lee.
In one episode of Below Deck,
pertaining I suppose to the trouble
of having too much money.
I don't know.
I just felt like I needed to start with a profound quote
from a renowned ship captain, some wisdom from the sea.
There is a person in my life to whom I am married,
whole human being in her own right,
who years ago, more than 10 years ago, overheard or we were having a conversation or maybe
we watched the movie or was a friend group convo about the movie Cool Hand Luke and she
said, I don't understand what the big deal is.
I could eat 50 eggs in an hour.
I could eat 50 eggs in an hour. I could eat 50 eggs in an hour.
For years, this claim, this brash claim circulated through and energized our
friend group as we all, all of us tried to convince her she were wrong.
I dare say we were madder than pissed on chickens about this whole claim.
on chickens about this whole claim.
Indeed, my friend and a co-creator of Dicktown, David Reese, made a poster so that he could talk about this incredible claim on stage.
And I believe I have the poster here.
Hang on, I'm gonna grab it.
And if you'd like to see what it looks like, you can go to our YouTube channel.
And my wife was a whole new medium, right?
Would look at this poster and for years would say,
I would, I don't care.
I would just eat one egg and then another egg
and then another egg until there was 50.
And I would get so upset.
I would say, you could drive a straight pin up my butt
with a 10 pound sledgehammer.
I wouldn't say that, Captain Lee would say it.
I would be so upset by this.
And I'd be like, you don't understand the
cumulative effect of eating one egg after another within an hour. And she's
like, I don't know. It's just like, I could do it. It's just be like eating 50 heads of lettuce.
You can't do that either. I wanted to scream. But as the years went on, I
realized, what are we gaining from this? She's never gonna try to eat 50 eggs.
I mean, if she really were, right?
Then I might have a leg to stand on.
But since she wasn't, to quote Captain Lee again,
I felt like a one-legged man in an ass-kicking contest.
I didn't have a leg to stand on
because it was purely hypothetical, Laura.
Purely hypothetical. If she were going to do it, I would have a leg to stand on, because it was purely hypothetical, Laura. Purely hypothetical.
If she were going to do it,
I would have that leg to stand on,
and I would have to say,
please, I love you, I want you to live,
don't do this, because you will get sick.
It could be very dangerous.
It was in a movie that doesn't,
not even Paul Newman could do it.
Like, I don't want to step on your dreams,
but I also don't want to have to drive you
to the hospital with egg poisoning or whatever.
But over time I realized, what do I gain by trying to talk her out of this?
What does it do to our relationship?
For someone, whether it's a loved one or a friend or whatever, say, I believe
I could do a thing to say to that person, no, you can't.
If it doesn't matter and it's never going to happen, I don't think convincing the other
person that they're wrong about their own dream, whether it to be a stew on below deck or to eat 50 eggs in an hour,
is worth the effort compared to, I think, the challenge that it puts on the relationship.
And this is especially true in this case because,
and this is especially true in a case like Stacey's where it's completely hypothetical.
Like she's not going to leave her husband to go on below deck or to go on a yacht.
I mean you've gone on the boat for science, now can't you do it for money?
And if it were the case that I agreed with Laura that Stacey couldn't do it or that it
would be dangerous if she were to even try, and it
seemed like she was going to try, then I could almost understand the argument.
But as I have met and gotten to know Stacey and her salmon carcass collecting
ways, I'm like, yeah, there are very few people who are more qualified than
Stacey to go on a reality show right now.
This is an obvious yes. more qualified than Stacey to go on a reality show right now.
Obvious. Yes.
Like if I were, if I were doing now, I don't do casting for below deck, but if I
were, I would be like, yeah, let's give this person a try.
What's the worst that could happen?
You know, I bet they could probably do well.
Now I do think, do I agree with you to a certain degree, Laura, that there is the cumulative effect of day after day of 16 hour days of exhaustion
that would take a toll on someone who, you know, isn't as young as we all used to
be. I mean, the same thing that gave Stacey herself pause when she saw the video
from Asia about, you know, the sleeplessness.
I mean, you know, sleep deprivation
is really, really dangerous. You know, it's not only dangerous physically, it was also dangerous
to decision making. Do you know what I mean? Like I could see that it could be a little bit more than
she bargained for. But overall, I don't see why this wouldn't work in some way or another.
But overall, I don't see why this wouldn't work in some way or another.
It could be her 50 eggs, but I don't think it's so dangerous that, that I would feel compelled to stop it.
But I am not your friend, either of your friends.
I am your judge, both of you.
And my judgment is clear.
Like, yeah, she would probably, she, she could probably get, she could probably
get hired and would probably do a good job.
And I hope that she would have a good time.
And I think that that's really where you need to be as a friend, Laura.
I'm happy to quash the argument.
Um, but not for the reason that you like, not for the reason of like convince her.
She can't do it because, because why, why would I even do that?
I'm not a cruel person.
You know what I mean?
Like she's chopped up dead salmon on a moving boat and got salmon guts in her face.
I kind of feel like she can do anything.
boat and got salmon guts in her face.
I kind of feel like she can do anything.
And I kind of feel that she deserves to have your back and her husband's back.
And I would say her mother's back
because it's very, very unlikely that she's going to even try.
And if she were to try, I think she'd be unlike, unlike eating 50 eggs.
I don't think it's a hundred percent likely that she'll regret it I think there's a possibility of that that this could turn into 50 eggs for her
But I don't know that that's necessarily true and there it's her life
so obviously I find in
Stacey's favor and
I do order you to wear the t-shirt
And Ray to order the t-shirt.
And Ray also has to order.
You know, here's the thing.
I like the t-shirt design.
But what I'd like you to do, Stacey, actually, is get some boat uniforms.
Like the whites. What they call the whites, which are the white, the
white shirts with the epaulettes that they wear whenever they're ushering
these lunatic guests onto the boat or off of the boat, you know, where they
have to look their most formal, it's like black slacks and this white sort
of naval style shirt, right?
And I want you all, all of you to get them.
Right? And I want you all, all of you to get them. And, uh, and you know, on below deck, if you're Chief Stew or First Stew or Second Stew,
your epaulets have different stripes on them designating your rank.
I want you to line up your friends, maybe on the back of a nice boat,
if you can get out on the water for a weekend. And I want you to, um, instead of the t-shirt that says Stacy was wrong,
where their name would be, it just says where the name would be embroidered,
just as Stacy was wrong on it.
And then what I want you to do is you want to walk down the line and your
friends have and your friends and your mother and your husband have to say,
I'm sorry, I was wrong.
And you just tear their epaulettes off and throw their epaulettes in the sea
or fire them Captain Lee style or something.
And then once that done, I want you to let it go
because you love each other.
You all love each other.
And if a friend of you, if a friend in your friend group or someone you love has a dream that they could might be able to
do something impossible, you gain nothing by pooping on their dream. So this is the
sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Stacy, how are you feeling?
Good.
I do want to defend Laura.
I brought this upon myself and asked them.
So they weren't like, I don't know.
They're good friends.
But I do feel really, really, really good about this, especially because it's been like
so many years in the making.
Laura, how do you feel?
I think it was coming.
Yeah, so I'm not surprised.
I do think Stacey could do it.
She put her mind to it.
Yay.
How are you going to feel when you see your friend on Bravo
being transformed into a weird caricature of herself? Yay. How are you going to feel when you see your friend on Bravo
being transformed into a weird caricature of herself?
Yeah, Stacey on Bravo would be fun to watch.
Well, Laura, Stacey, you're both heroes to me.
Thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Thank you.
Thank you.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
We'll have swift justice in just a second.
But first, our thanks to redditor underscore magpie underscore for naming this week's episode.
If you want to name an episode of Judge John Hodgman, join us on Reddit at maximumfun.reddit.com.
Or if you just want to check out other people's dumb puns
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Follow and subscribe to see our episodes
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Yeah, and thank you to Cuppy Colburn
over on Apple Podcasts for your very kind review
of the Judge John Hodgman podcast,
the one you're listening to right now.
Cuppy says, I started listening to the show
on my first solo cross-country road trip.
Not only does it remain one of my favorite podcasts
of all time, but to this day,
every time I hear the gavel drop,
it gives me a sense of nostalgia for that very first trip, but not this day, every time I hear the gabble drop, it gives me a sense of nostalgia
for that very first trip, but not in a toxic way. And then Cuppy, Jesse, adds three heart emojis.
Three. Three heart emojis, but five stars, which is really, really lovely. Thank you so much, Cuppy.
And speaking of road trips, we are heading into the summer travel season. It's a great time
road trips we are heading into the summer travel season. It's a great time for you to load up your device with podcasts to listen to maybe as you're heading to the beach or
whatever you might be doing or to recommend the podcast to anyone you know who's going
on a road trip or an airplane ride or a hot air balloon journey or a zeppelin voyage or
maybe it's just something you'd like to listen to when you walk around in the cool of the morning before it gets too hot outside.
Please recommend Judge John Hodgman if you like it.
Your reviews on Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts, your shares on YouTube
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They really do help people discover the podcast, which helps us keep bringing it to you.
So thank you.
Judge John Hodgman created by Jesse Thorn and John Hodgman.
This episode engineered by Eric Allen and Mark Miller
at Black Box Sound Company in Redding, California.
Our social media manager is Natty Lopez.
It was nice to see Natty in real life.
Natty came and visited the office.
We had lunch at Antohitos BB.
And Nanny.
I heard about it.
Nanny brought some cookies that she made with her dad
in West Covina.
Nanny's a real person, not a myth, a real one.
A real one.
And I heard about that lunch, and I'm very jealous.
I can't wait to get back out there to California
to have some food with you and maybe serve some justice
with you. Stay tuned.
Yeah, John. Look, we could be eating Baleadas right now. That's a type of Honduran bean
egg quesadilla thing. Anyway, this podcast edited by AJ McKeon, our video editor, is
Daniel Spear, with whom I also had lunch this week. Keon and I had lunch at La Beja.
Why do you keep bringing up these lunches?
I love lunch.
I'm so jealous.
Yeah.
Our producer is the ever capable Jennifer Marmer, now
Swift Justice, where we answer small disputes
with quick judgment.
Jennifer, who is not Jennifer Marmer,
says, someone in my home uses a knife to turn a burger in a pan
and not a spatula.
Please stop them.
I mean, sometimes you just gotta turn that burger over
and sometimes you gotta do it real quick.
You may not have planned, but all of a sudden,
you know, cause burgers cook quick.
So I get it. But here's why you don't want to use a knife.
With a spatula, you can pick up the burger and then as best as possible, lay it down relatively
easily away from you so you don't get splattered with hot grease the way I did yesterday when I
was making this halibut. With a knife, you're really, that flip is going
to be a lot less gentle and a lot harder.
And that means whether it's you or your backsplash, you're going to get covered in hot grease.
And unless that's your thing, you don't want it.
So that's an actual genuine non-joke answer to that dispute.
Jennifer, not Jennifer Marmor, whoever it is in your home who's using that knife to
turn a burger, they're wrong.
We talked about Below Deck speaking of TV, which is both a reality television show and a workplace drama.
I would like to hear about your workplace dramas and disputes. Does your cubicle mate have terrible taste in decor?
Is there hot beef between the produce department and the deli counter at the grocery store?
There better not be hot beef in the produce department and the deli counter at the grocery store? There better not be hot beef in the produce department.
That would be bad.
Did someone take your yogurt from the shared fridge
yet again?
Send us your workplace disputes at maximumfun.org slash JJ HO.
And by the way, if your workplace is a super yacht,
absolutely send them in.
I want to hear about them.
Yeah, no matter what your dispute is,
send it in to your favorite messy boys
that live for the drama, maximumfund.org
slash JJHO, because big or small, we settle them all. And remember that if you are a member
of maximumfund.org, if you've gone to maximumfund.org slash join, we will answer your question,
whether it is here on the main feed or in the members-only monthly Membo mailbag that we have been recording
every month exclusively for the members of Maximum Fun.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Bye.
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