Judge John Hodgman - Jean's Heat Lamp Terrarium
Episode Date: December 2, 2020The winter solstice is approaching and it's getting cold! We have a docket full of holiday and wintery disputes to clear. Luckily, we have guest Jean Grae in chambers with us to clear that docket. Nat...ivity scene setups, colorful fiber optic Christmas trees, home heating, lottery scratch offs, and more!Here are the links discussed in the episode:Follow Jean Grae on Twitter, Instagram, and Bandcamp!The Kasper Hauser Comedy PodcastHammacher Schlemmer: play along with the Court and decide which of the new arrivals you'd pick if you had to!Kasper Hauser's Sky MaulBullseye With Jesse Thorn, interviews with David Letterman and David Crossbit.ly/dicktownputthisonshop.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bill of Jesse Thorne.
We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket.
And with me, as always, is hooded sweatshirt memo getter, Judge John Hodgman.
That's a joke about something that our audience can't see, that everyone on this week's program
is wearing a hooded sweatshirt.
that everyone on this week's program is wearing a hooded sweatshirt. We are all wearing hooded sweatshirts today on our weekly Judge John Hodgman Zoom call.
Yeah.
It's how we stay in touch, how we stay connected.
And it's not just you and me and producer Jennifer Marmer, Jesse.
Look, I'm going to introduce our special guest in a second, but I got to set this up.
It is now December.
We are approaching the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, which this year is
December the 21st, the longest night of the year, the longest night of 2020.
Like we needed more of it.
Whatever holiday you observe around this time, it's a time across cultures to kindle a light against the darkness
and eat food, take comfort in family and friends,
maybe only by Zoom as we're doing now.
Don't travel if you can help it.
Definitely eat a lot of food
and hope at the end of this long night, the sun rises again.
But given 2020 so far, all bets are off. The sun may never rise again.
I don't know. We'll see what happens. December 22nd might be the beginning of perpetual night.
Who knows? But if that happens, if the sun doesn't rise, there is someone you want
six feet safely by your side. And that is our special guest, Jean Gray,
your favorite polymathic artist of words and music and pictures and ideas,
member of the Legion of Judge John Hodgman guest bailiffs long live the legion famed throughout the world for a portrayal
of monica on dicktown on hulu throughout the world minus the uk and canada and australia
basically any other nation sadly uh get a vpm mates bit.ly slash dicktown the creator of the forthcoming podcast stacy
jambles ace detective with no short-term memory and also a holiday entertaining super expert
the indescribable because she cannot be contained by words jean gray hi jean
hi and hygiene is so important especially especially right now. So important.
Wash your hands when you come in.
And also, hello to our special pandemic frequent guest, the leaf blower outside Jesse's house.
If you're concerned that the sun doesn't rise the day after the solstice, well, I have an ally.
No leaves will be left unblown in my neighborhood.
You're going to be like
Bruce Campbell in The Evil Dead 2.
You're going to strap a leaf blower
to the stump of your right arm.
It's going to be like
Mad Max Fury Road,
only instead of a guitar
that spews flames,
it's a guy on a giant spring
with a leaf blower.
That guy's the Doof Warrior.
You'd be the Leaf Warrior.
Yeah.
Jean Gray, thanks for being here. Those are good jokes.
That's where my
humor's at right now. I just
listen a lot and I'm like, that was
a fun chuckle.
That's more accurate. That's more
accurate than good jokes. I'll say that was a fun
chuckle. I'll take that. And
relatable now because there are lawnmowers and leaf blowers in my neighborhood. This is the life
I've never lived. Right. Because you have now moved to Balmer, Maryland. What used to be called
Washington, D.C.'s Brooklyn. I read that in a newspaper article. What year was that?
that in a newspaper article. What year was that?
That was in the 60s
when Brooklyn was not a good
thing. It used to be called
Loserstown too back then. So they
were like, this is where a lot
of black people are in the city.
It's the same. That's right.
And then in
1975 they got some
advertising executives to come up
with a new nickname for Baltimore.
And that nickname is, as you know, Charm City.
Yeah, it's very charming.
Charm City.
Jean, you have a new home in Baltimore, Maryland.
Yep.
You are getting ready to celebrate the winter solstice, Saturnalia, the darkest night of the year, and all attending the holidays for the first time.
And good thing, because we are here to adjudicate cases about holiday decor, traditions, home heating, and more.
So let's get into it.
Here's something from Corey.
My wife and I always get into a dispute this time of year.
to a dispute this time of year.
When we set up our Christmas nativity scene,
she has the shepherds and wise men face in toward the baby Jesus,
which is more like real life.
I prefer them to be faced outward toward the viewer, like a stage.
Who's right?
I can see and hear that Jean Grey is laughing at something.
She's having a pleasant trip.
Yes.
What's happening, Jean?
What are you reacting to? Well, I'm looking at the photo and I read...
This is a photo of their nativity scene.
This is a photo of the nativity.
And then I immediately realized that it is so awesome to have it have some sort of realism instead of to function like a stage play.
Like I normally see nativity's doing because immediately in my mind, I went to like, I'm wise man and number one and I brought the frankincense.
But wait, I'm wise man number two and I got the myrrh.
And then I'm wise man number three and no one's more important than me.
I brought gold.
Like it's not a musical.
I see in this picture here, baby Jesus framing his head with his hands and giving a little shake.
He's selling the whole son of God thing.
Well, I think that it will not be too controversial to say that religion is
theater to a certain degree.
Acceptable.
There is no realism in a nativity scene because there are competing
descriptions in the gospels about what actually happened in this manger.
For sure.
There's no,
the,
the magi,
the,
the bearers of the frankincense,
golden myrrh,
by the way,
good job magi who brought gold.
That's a good gift.
Yeah, it's the best one.
Like, you brought oil and then incense.
Like, get out of here.
Somebody brought gold.
You better bring it.
Like, what are you doing?
I don't care about the other two.
I'll take the gold.
You two magi can go.
That's the first words of baby Jesus.
Give me the gold.
Give me the gold. Give me the gold. If a magi came to your birth, what would you like to, uh, the magi to bring?
The magus is the singular of magi, I guess.
So we're taking frankincense, myrrh, and gold off the table.
Yeah.
Those are, let's say three magi have brought you those three things, but hark, lo, upon
the horizon is a fourth magus what's he bringing
gene or she or they um for you what what is their whole deal like what do they do are they supposed
to be able to be like oh i know were they like oh i know who you're gonna be and so we brought this stuff? Alternately, they are wise men or kings who were drawn to visit the baby Jesus because they heard this prophecy that he was going to be hot stuff.
Yeah, there's sort of a stamp of legitimacy.
It's like, you know, the prime minister of Canada calling Joe Biden.
That's right.
That's right. That's right.
They're saying congratulations on being the son of God.
Right.
Yeah, I would want that too.
I would want like the full truth about like stuff
or I would basically like want a new home
because I don't know how they like brought him a bunch of stuff,
but they were like, you're in a barn.
Cool.
Bye-bye, kid.
Child.
Not merely at a barn
i learned it's a trough a manger i always thought a manger was the barn but the manger is a food
trough that he that they used as his cradle which makes sense because it's mange for m-a-n-g-e-r
it's the yeah the cognitive spl is or whatever it is the word
word is that plus there's no crib for his bed right they didn't have a crib they put they put
him in a bowl they put the baby jesus in a food bowl so maybe maybe a bed and not gold maybe
because i can't use the gold that is more practical because my first thought was ham. Like a big ham.
Like maybe like a honey baked spiral cut type deal.
For a baby?
Just wait.
Something for everybody to gnaw on because everybody's coming in.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
If ham is in your dietary wheelhouse, that's always a pleasant gift.
It lasts for years.
33 years, I believe.
Biblically speaking. How antibiotics oh yeah she just gave birth in case there was an infection yeah there's a lot he's in
a trough like or just the germ theory of disease yeah oh that's just the knowledge that people
should wash their hands while delivering the baby also Also soak the beans. Soak the beans.
Don't forget to soak the beans.
That's a Casper Houser reference.
Look it up.
The Casper Houser radio.
What is it?
Comedy podcast?
Yeah.
Casper Houser comedy podcast.
You need that.
Yeah. Go check that out on MaximumFun.org.
Yeah.
I agree.
The realism here that informs Corey's dispute is fakeism.
Because, of course, there are many different depictions of this moment in the life of the probably historical figure Jesus.
In the Gospels, they are often contradictory.
These three magi did not show up until two years after Jesus was born in one of the Gospels.
Don't ask me which one.
I'm not a biblical scholar.
I looked at it briefly.
Gospel number 14.
Right.
That's how they're labeled.
And the nativity itself was always a piece of theater.
And in fact, it started as like a Christmas pageant, like a live stage show.
Actually, according to Wikipedia, St.is of assisi mounted the first live
nativity scene in 1221 and that's why they refer to saint francis of assisi as uh the corky saint
claire of franciscans patron saint of community theater i just i don't want to see it set up like
a sitcom like i like the fact that they're all doing this but i would say like maybe just make someone
like break the fourth wall just one like the office just one sheep is looking at the audience
with one eyebrow raised like come on son of god what is this you're probably wondering how i got
here flashback
flashback to that sheep being born going where's my golden myrrh
i agree and concur with your wisdom uh you two other magi this magi i feel this wise person says
uh it looks better seeing their backs i mean they are there in veneration of the christ child a
b if you had them all facing outward,
it wouldn't look like a nativity scene.
It would look like a display of your Warhammer figurines.
This is better.
No offense.
No offense to your display of Warhammer figurines,
specifically Stuart Wellington from the Flophouse.
Yeah, Stu Wellington,
who paints Warhammer figurines live on Instagram.
I would like you to create a nat Wellington, who paints Warhammer figurines live on Instagram. I would like you to create
a nativity scene
of your Warhammer figurines.
What am I doing with my life?
I know.
All you have is your own church, Jean.
Damn it.
I did forget to mention.
I really need to think differently.
The Jean has her own church
called the speaking,
speaking of religion as performance.
Jean has her own church, which is the church of the infinite you, which meets on occasional Sundays on Twitch.
And the, and everyone follow Jean on Twitter and Instagram.
We'll give all the handles at the end to find out when the next one is, because this is some church you can really use.
And a nice family named the Wisemans
once came to the church. So there you go. What'd they bring? A ham? A ham. Three hams.
They brought me three hams and I was like, this is a lot. And I was like, that's also an interesting
gift from the Wisemans. And before I get letters, people of faith, I honor and respect your faith.
When I say that religion is theater, that is, in my opinion, a compliment to religion because theater is where we come together when it is safe to do so.
And sit in silence and contemplate bigger truths and enjoy a communion both in the audience and with performers on stage who are
asking the big questions. So please do not feel that I'm denigrating religion. I'm trying to pay
it a compliment. All right. Let's take a quick break. More items on the docket coming up in
just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members of
MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join, and you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket this week with our friend Jean Gray.
Here is a case from Leah.
My husband and I traditionally do not get too much into Christmas decorations for various reasons,
not the least of which is that he's Jewish and I am a lapsed Catholic. Yes.
eye on a fiber optic rainbow extravaganza Christmas tree from hammocker Schlemmer,
which he thinks is garish.
He prefers a more natural and understated tree.
I want an explosion of color and maybe an inflatable frosty,
the snowman on our lawn.
Help us decide whose design aesthetic prevails.
Jean,
have you received the most recent hammocker Schlemmer catalog in the
mails?
I have not.
I'm sure your new address is updating throughout the catalog community.
I hope so.
So, all right.
I have received it.
So I knew exactly what Leah was talking about.
And I found it on their website.
I put a link in the document that you can all now open.
This is my present to you.
Do you see it?
The white northern lights tree.
I don't know why they have to call it the white northern lights tree.
You know why it says white northern lights.
This is why I don't order this catalog anymore.
This is a full, fluffy, fiber optically, pine-needled fir tree imitation
that has programmable lights.
I think it can pulse and change.
It says it creates a dancing cascade of colors along its branches.
I got to say, what do you think about this in their home, Jean?
I think that that is awesome.
And as someone who grew up in a, my dad was a very strict Muslim.
And my mom was sort of like, I'm everything.
But she didn't get to celebrate that.
So we never got the opportunity to like have christmas in the house or i i had my
first like real christmas and like christmas tree like three years ago oh and man i love
i love christmas so much i am not a religious person of i just the feeling of it the idea neither is christmas
no it's not it's got his name in it but um i i was so excited to do it i was um just uh talking
to quali about like my mom um took us when we were kids to go see the santa at macy's like the macy's macy's not a macy's yeah macy's uh you know uh
macy's miracle on 34th macy's so we got to you know it was like 10 blocks away from us and she
got in a whole bunch of trouble because of it and she was like no i want my kids to have this
experience and i still have the picture of
us like sitting on santa's lap and i look very upset but the idea that she was like no you should
get to have these experiences we're at like this macy's it's magical it doesn't matter you don't
have to be a part of this faith or anything to appreciate celebrating or feeling good or good feels and lights and you know and toys and right
so we do big Christmas and this year especially because everything has been horrible I'm like no
we should go all out like yeah let's get a blow-up snowman and a and, and like maybe one of the car wash tube guys for no reason.
And they have them online.
They're $129 and the pump is 99 and they,
you can get the one with two legs,
which is much better than the one with one leg.
Well,
the one with one leg is just a tube.
He's just a worm.
He's just a tube.
Right.
And I'm like, let's, let's go all out to have some joy.
Just, yeah, go for it.
I love this tree.
I don't know if it would be our only tree.
You mean you might get two of them?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, they do come in a four and a half foot size and a seven and a half foot size.
I mean, the husband here is not wrong that it is obscenely garish.
Yes.
It's also extremely expensive.
That is true.
It costs about as much as 10 regular Christmas trees.
Oh, well.
Unless you're in Manhattan, then it's the cost of two.
It's $500.
For the seven and a half foot one, it's $500.
And for the four and a half foot one, it's $250.
But you really need to have both.
You really need to have both to get the mother and child garish Christmas tree look.
I feel like if you spend the $500 to buy the seven and a half foot version of this tree, you are sort of morally obliged to
spend the rest of the money to get the hologram Liberace to perform in front of it.
You mean the rest of the money in the world?
Yeah.
All of it. Why not the little tree? Why not the smaller one like next to the bigger one
or in another room?
No, go hard or go home that's my
feeling about these no i think i think you guys are um skimping on the factor of walking because
all we have is being inside so don't just make that one room the special room like put something
in another room and you're like oh this is a Christmas tree. And then you go into another room. You're like, but what about this Christmas tree? This
is a whole new Christmas. I think it's different this year. I think put as much joy in different
rooms as you can. If you got the space. I have always wanted one of those aluminum Christmas
trees that have colored up lights. Yeah, I think those are really neat.
I always have had a natural Christmas tree
because what better way to celebrate,
whether it is the birth of Christ
or the general sense of rebirth
after the longest night in the year,
because after all, Christmas is a synthetic observance,
taking in all different kinds of traditions,
pre-Christian pagan traditions of Yule in Germany and across the Celtic area,
and then obviously later all kinds of commercial traditions of Coca-Cola and Santa Claus
and all those other sort of commercially invented traditions
that kind of got rebranded with Christianity sometime during the early Christian church.
But in fact, Christmas itself was not celebrated by most Christians.
Indeed, the Puritans who invaded and then lived in New England,
the region of Southeast Canada where I am from, abhorred Christmas.
They thought it was a completely decadent tradition and essentially a pagan tradition.
It wasn't until the Victorian era, the Christmas that we know, came to be propagated throughout the English-speaking world.
So the point I'm saying is there are a lot of different traditions.
My tradition was always to get a natural tree in my home with my mom and dad
and then in my own home because what better way to celebrate rebirth
during the darkest night of the year than killing a tree and watching it die slowly.
But my grandmother always had not a mid-century modern aluminum tree like you speak of, Jesse,
but just a really classic fakie tree, fakie hardware store tree.
The needles were all silver.
And I have a fondness for that as well.
And this particular year, as you point out, Gene, this is a year where we really need a lot a lot of light
in all of this darkness i think it's a great time like as in many ways that way we've been
re-evaluating our relationship with work our relationship with our friends and our family
our relationship with our government what we want from a society it's a good time to just go ahead and try something new for Christmas.
And if Leah and her husband are in a position financially to splurge on the seven and a half foot tree, I think they should do it.
Because here's what.
You have this tree for this year and you just enjoy this garish display.
And then you can keep it next year if you love it.
Or I bet you could donate it to a school or to a nursing home or to some other organization that might appreciate it next year.
I would hope that you would make some equal donation to a charitable organization or to people who are in need.
Like if you only have $500 left in your life, take care of yourself.
Don't buy this tree.
But if you buy this tree, if you can afford $500 for this cuckoo tree, then put $500 into the hands of people who need it.
And I think that's a very nice way to create a dancing cascade of new experiences
in your Christmas and in others, or your holiday.
Quite like the Northern Lights themselves.
A dancing cascade of colors?
That's right.
One thing that I used to do with my son, we would play a game when,
remember the SkyMall catalog?
Oh, yeah.
Well, the SkyMall has gone to the great recycling bin in the sky.
We'll always have SkyMall, M-A-U-L,
Casper Hauser's pair of perfect books.
Pair of perfect SkyMall parodies, yeah.
Yeah.
But I've put a link in the document,
which you guys can both open if you don't mind,
because we used to play a game with my son and I in the SkyMall catalog,
where we would go page by page while we were maybe flying to a place and passing the time.
And we would, our agreement was, as a thought experiment,
if you have to buy something on each page, what would it be?
And while SkyMall is no longer around, Hammocker Schlemmer certainly is a good way to do this.
So I've sent you the link to their new arrivals page.
So Jean and Jesse, here on the new arrivals page, top row, there are four items.
You have to pick one.
The 750 watt wall outlet heater.
The Hammocker Schlemmer classic Lionel train that goes around a tree.
Children's race car simulator or four foot twinkling Christmas bubble light.
This is easy for me.
I love that giant bubble light.
This is something distasteful that I could get into in an instant.
I, you know, I, this summer, my, my father passed away
and there's never been in my life anyway,
a greater bubble light enthusiast than my dad.
Like my dad would plug in the bubble lights that he had bought at at at Cole Hardware down the street from our house.
And he would like giggle with glee as they feebly bubbled on our Christmas tree.
Just barely working, just always barely working.
He loved them so much.
And this one, which is four feet tall, seems perfect.
All right, four foot tall.
Jean, do you concur or do you get something else?
No, something else.
The race car simulator, hands down.
Because I have been known to anytime I see,
like if I'm somewhere and I see those kids,
like the little horses outside a supermarket,
just anything that is only for children and I should not be able to fit into,
I will cram myself into that area
and get on that child's toy and make children wait until,
and I have spent like $20 just
being there for a long time.
Perhaps I was drinking.
Perhaps I was completely sober.
Nothing would give me greater joy than to put this in the living room and to randomly
hurt myself.
Trying to get into it.
Trying to get into this. I'm sure I would break it,
but, and my knees would be up in my ears, but, um, it would bring, it would bring me a great
amount of joy. I have to say though, John, you unnaturally constrained our choices. And on my
front page, as it appeared on my computer screen, the item I would choose above all others comfortably by an enormous margin is item 96554,
the illuminated earwax remover. This is the ear cleaning tool that uses five LEDs to illuminate
the ear canal and an integrated 1080p camera to see and target wax buildup. So you hold it in
your hand, shove it in your ear and look at your phone where there's like
a colonoscopy camera broadcasting directly to your phone via Bluetooth.
All right, I'll give you that one.
Jean, I will offer you one more chance to trade up.
I'm not going to trade up, but if it were anything else it would be
the hand pain relieving mitt because i would just keep them on all the time
just as an excuse it'd be like oh i'm sorry i can't i just just type in with them just everything
it looks like a giant black gore-tex oven mitt yes that has mysterious red light inside no no thumb pocket
so you just your whole hand is in it and you can't get anything done the mysterious red light
cannot be overstated here the mist it's mysteriousness it's odd quality and like the
you know the neoprene body glove this of of this thing. It really is like anything could be inside there.
Like it's designed to be a void into which it's like a trust fall where you put your hand into the void and a red light comes out.
It says it's mitten-like.
It's mitten-esque.
It's not a mitten.
For legal reasons, we cannot claim we cannot
unfortunately fails to meet the fda standard for it's a hand it's a hand pocket it's an out
outside hand pocket well all right so jesse you get the illuminated earwax remover yes jean
for this holiday season i'm giving you the cordless LED mysterious hand pain relieving mitt.
Two of them.
I'm glad none of you snapped up
the world's largest putting pool table.
It's a putting surface
that's shaped like a pool table.
This is a time when we all should try
to be a little less material,
especially since a lot of people
are hurting these days.
If you want to make your holiday season gift less, which is kind of awesome thing to do.
Just get a free copy of the hammock or Schlemmer, the hammock or Schlemmer catalog and sit down with your family and pay this thought experiment.
What junk would I take if I had to take something?
And you will feel so happy that no one gave you a single gift this year.
And as you do it, just simply send $25 to MaximumFun.org as a royalty.
Because I invented this game.
Page by page.
There's an air-propelled bowling game.
Oh, there's more.
You can always load more.
I forgot.
There's so much more.
There's so much more. There's so much more.
Basketball hoop.
Where would I put that?
Jean, please close the Hammocker Schlemmer website.
Okay, but can I just say one more thing that we bought for the house?
Yeah, please.
This is going along with that, like, needing to find like joy all over the place.
So, um, I, I re well, like in the past two years, I found out about the, the wonder of
electric fireplace inserts.
Sure.
Um, cause we had one in our, in our last place and we like did an entire built in around
it and it was amazing and wonderful.
entire built-in around it and it was amazing and wonderful um i grew up with the fireplace and i'll never had it again in another like house or apartment or anything um and although this is
a very old house a lot of things were covered up so we believe there's a fireplace hiding
um but we did not want to be in this house without a fireplace. So in...
You're just smashing down walls looking for it?
I would like to.
In trying to find the right electric fireplace insert
to build into something I'm creating,
like building mantles around them,
we now have four of them. And they
all operate differently. But one of the best things that I did in the past month was to put
them all in the living room and turn them all on at once. Four fireplace inserts? Yes yes one for each wall no some just in the middle of the floor because
they're just the log some of the cabinet gene would you do me a favor when when i've already
taken a picture okay yeah let's please send it into jennifer marmer so we can get that up on the
judge john hodgman instagram and they're very cheap. There we go. That's another
way to liven up the winter solstice. Foldaway illuminated bowling arcade game. Let's close
the Hammocker Schlemmer catalog and move on to some more justice. Aaron says, we live in Michigan,
which gets cold in the winter. Every winter, my husband and I battle over the thermostat. I'm cold,
he's hot. I turn the heat up, he turns it back down. I wear slippers and sweatshirts and blankets.
All I want is to be cozy and not shivering while wearing multiple layers. He frequently turns the heat down to 65 to 67 degrees.
I want Judge Hodgman to order that we maintain our thermostat at a minimum of 70 degrees in the winter months,
which is what I feel is a typical or average household temperature.
I'd really prefer 72 degrees to be extra cozy, but will compromise at 70 degrees.
Michigan is a cold, cold place in the winter.
You know what Michigan is?
No.
Mitten-like.
It's true.
It's true.
It's like a giant mysterious hand warmer.
It's the giant mysterious hand warmer of the Great Lakes.
That's what they call it why
is that red light emanating from it what is the glow oh i you know this is such a common dispute
in life and certainly in the judge john hodgman mailbag i've heard some hearsay over the years that gender assigned at birth men tend to run
biologically hotter than gender assigned at birth women. There's research about that in offices.
Is there? Yeah. Yeah. And therefore there is this fight over the thermostat constantly.
And therefore, there is this fight over the thermostat constantly.
And what do you think, Jean?
Do you and Quelle, your husband, have this dispute?
Well, this is our first time.
I mean, also, I think my first time living in a place where we are in control of our own heat.
Oh, right.
And having a thermostat.
Because coming from New York, like, that's not a thing. It's just on and you're either like my skin is falling off i'm dying i'm burning it's so hot
they're like i'm freezing so we we've never had the chance to do that and this is our first uh
thermostat living together he's he's had you, this experience before. Um, and he is a
generally, um, like, uh, like a walking radiator. That's just constantly like a bleeding radiator.
He is very warm all the time. And I generally, um, because I'm dead inside, I'm just freezing.
That's why you have four fireplace inserts in one room.
That's why I have them all over the place.
That's right.
And which is also part of our kind of compromise.
So I can get my like heat in areas where I really want it.
Jean sleeps on one of those heated logs like a lizard in a terrarium.
I do.
Let me tell you, if I could enclose part of the bedroom like that,
I would 100% do it.
And then just like a little water bowl
and I would roll over and just throw my face into it
because I get very thirsty at night.
That sounds awesome.
That's right.
A few crickets to munch.
A few crickets.
Listen, thank you.
I think we haven't finished our bedroom and maybe this is part of the construct.
Just Gene's Heat Lamp Terrarium.
Yeah, we ought to start a Build Gina Terrarium Fund.
Thank you.
Please go to buildginaterrarium.com and donate what you can.
Just donate any money you're going to use for yourself.
It really is what I'm asking.
If you're buying a $500 eight-foot fiber optic tree,
throw Jean a little bit of money so she can buy that multicolored gravel
to put on the floor of her bedroom.
Yeah, just give me that $500.
Just give me, I need the gravel.
What are we really talking about here?
So as things are getting colder
in baltimore are you guys starting to fight over that thermostat or what no we don't fight um
i think 70 72 feels like the normal thing that i've heard in life and we've tried it a few times
i think it's great in this i i I think 70 is a good compromise.
I didn't know I was going to feel the difference between something being like 69 or 70.
But that gets to the point in a day.
And if I'm feeling a little cold, I'm like, hmm, I feel like it should have switched over by now.
That feels like it's at least fallen below a 68.
I think 70s, that's where we have it right now.
Does this come up in California, in Los Angeles, Jesse Thorne, between you and Teresa at all?
No, this was a concern when I lived in San Francisco, a little cooler in the winter in San Francisco. But I don't think I ever had a thermostat until I moved to Los Angeles that
wasn't the kind where you move a little stick left and right and you're really looking at
five degrees-ish of precision. You know what I mean? It's like a little mercury-powered spring powered spring or something that powers a furnace from 1928.
Right.
My mom really does have a furnace.
Her furnace is huge and terrifying in the basement.
And it really is from like 1930.
We had a furnace like that in our basement when I was growing up.
And it was this massive cast iron nightmare machine with tendrils going out to all of the different hot air registers
throughout the house.
It was very impressive and very terrifying.
But it's definitely a question between my wife and I
where we have very strongly different preferences,
and it is the classic, I am usually too warm and she is usually too cold.
For me, I had always attributed it to being a native San Franciscan, like any temperature below 60 or above 70 seems uncomfortable to me.
So like anytime I'm not wearing a sweatshirt, I feel uncomfortable. And indeed, like when I read Erin say that she wants to be
cozy in the house, my immediate thought was that I am much more cozy in a sweater when it's 68
than I am in a shirt when it's 73. Yeah, Erin, I mean, it costs a lot of money to heat a house
in Michigan, I bet during the the winter because it's cold there.
So you do want your home to be a refuge from the cold, not just a version of the cold.
You definitely want to feel a real difference between the outside and the inside.
You're not just looking for reduced brutality.
Right. And I kind of feel like 65 is pretty low for inside temperature.
But I also concur with you, Gene, and you, Jesse, that coziness, if that's what you're after, Aaron,
coziness is enhanced by woolens and socks and sweatshirts and blankies and throws and usually like a point up like a
focused source of heat like a roaring fire or one of gene's many electric fireplace inserts
that to me is coziness so for ambient temperature i'm I think I need to rule in favor of Aaron, but not all the way up to 72 and not even all the way up to 70.
I think the appropriate compromise here is 69.999.
If you have that level of control, put it at 69.999 because 999 upside down is 666, the number of the beast.
I looked on energystar.gov,
the federal government's energy efficiency website.
Oh, we have a federal government?
I know.
Well, hopefully we still do by the time this episode comes out.
They recommended 68, but said 70 is also acceptable.
Shooting for 68 is what they recommend.
And I think probably even more important than the difference between 68 and 70, for example,
is certainly 69.9999999 and 70
is a smart thermostat,
not a computer thermostat,
but a programmable thermostat is very inexpensive and easy to install.
And you just make sure that you are heating your home less when you are asleep and when you are away from the house when leaving the house returns to our lives.
Yeah, you know what?
Put Santa Claus in charge of the thermostat
because he knows when you're sleeping
and he knows when you're awake.
So terrifying.
He's the original smart thermostat.
That's right.
Yeah, 69 feels right to me.
That's the best number.
And by the way, Aaron,
when you're really, really cold there in Michigan,
think of late June.
June 21, 22, depends.
That's the summer solstice, the longest day of the year.
Unless you're in the southern hemisphere, in which case, psych, it's the longest again because the Earth is a globe.
Jesse, Jean, before we go to a break, can either of you guess where the holiday known as Midwinter Holiday is celebrated in June?
It could be my hometown because we are the reverse.
Cape Town?
Yep.
You're in the Southern Hemisphere.
We are.
We're the flipsies.
Close, but not cigar.
Close, but not cigar.
That's a saying I just made up.
Same to you then.
Antarctica.
Every southern hemisphere winter solstice, all of the research stations in Antarctica stop what they're doing and celebrate midwinter holiday.
And they have a feast based on whatever they have around because they cannot take any shipments during the winter.
And do you know what some of them do as a ritual?
They watch The Thing.
What?
They watch the movie John Carpenter's The Thing,
which is about a research station that is snowed in
and then terrorized by an alien creature that wants to eat them.
That's their holiday.
I'm telling you, Jesse, when we get Jennifer Marmer, when we get to do live shows again, book Antarctica, please.
I would love it.
Are you booking Antarctica as a guest bailiff?
Yeah, we can all go.
Just do a huge midwinter holiday pageant in Antarctica.
The frozen body of Shackleton or whatever is the guest bailiff.
You know, John, I have been in the very dawn days of broadcasting, maybe the proudest moment
of my entire podcasting career.
Maybe the proudest moment of my entire podcasting career, and maybe I'm going to say 2005, perhaps, there was a call that went out on the Yahoo group for podcasters that said, I am sending data CDs of content to Antarctica via airplane for Antarctica's radio station. If you send me data files and give me permission to air them on Antarctica's radio station, I will.
And I sent in MP3s of the sound then called the Sound of Young America.
Now my NPR show Bullseye.
And it was the thrill of a lifetime to know that they were airing in Frozen Antarctica.
I'm wearing a Ross Island Trail System Antarctica T-shirt that was sent to me by Listener Dave from Antarctica.
I still don't understand why Listener Dave was in Antarctica.
He wasn't even a scientist, if I remember correctly.
He was working on painting things i don't i guess
they need someone to paint things and i don't and and i think that this was not sent from antarctica
i think he brought it from antarctica and then sent it to me he also sent me a t-shirt that said
take only one banana please because apparently apparently there's a big problem with banana
hoarding at the in the cafeteria at this particular, whatever research station he was at.
Apparently, Jennifer Marmer, our producer's grandma, went to Antarctica.
Oh, she's nodding along.
Did she come back?
Oh, that's good.
That's a midwinter holiday miracle.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, we'll hear disputes about scratch-off lottery tickets and an update from a past litigant about solar panels.
Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my
podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman,
and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to
embrace because, yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I-R.
Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
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A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge Sean Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket.
We're joined by our friend Jean Gray.
Here is a dispute from Sarah.
We're joined by our friend Jean Gray.
Here is a dispute from Sarah.
She says,
My husband and I both dislike receiving scratch-off lottery tickets as gifts.
We both feel that they are a waste of money and they rarely result in winning anything other than more lottery tickets.
However, several members of my family enjoy giving scratch-off lottery tickets as gifts. It's a, quote, tradition, unquote, started with my grandfather, Pop, who is no longer with us.
My husband says we should ask my family to stop giving us lottery tickets and to save their money.
I feel that if my family members get enjoyment out of giving us lottery tickets, we should just let them continue.
Well, Jesse, Gene, what do you think?
Should Sarah and her husband honor Pop or throw his legacy into the garbage
like so many used $1 New York State Lottery
Snow Me the Money cards?
A real scratch-off card.
I have immediate strong feelings about this, John.
Please.
I'm not a gambler.
No.
I went on an entire trip to las vegas where all
i don't know you don't know when to hold them nor do you know when to fold them no i went an
entire you don't know when to walk away usually you're walking closer and people are like what
are you even doing are you a gambler it's not his fault it's because the song doesn't tell you when
to at all it just presents the problem and then there's no resolution or no suggestions.
It's one of those
if you've got it,
you've got it situations.
It's not intended to be instructional.
It's about an essential quality
of a human being.
I guess.
Jesse, you and I are islands in the stream
and I talked all over you there
and I apologize as your friend and partner.
So please go ahead.
I went on an entire trip to Las Vegas once
where I just put $1 into
an antiques roadshow slot machine because I was so excited there was antiques roadshow themed slot
machines. I'm so happy. I had no idea. Oh my goodness. Oh my days, as they say on Love Island.
It was a really fun trip to Las Vegas. vegas is not my favorite place to visit but
um i stayed at the golden nugget and which really does have a giant golden nugget which i didn't
know that's it has a titular golden nugget and there was a women's bodybuilding competition
going on uh in the hotel at the time so it was just full of enormous muscled women
and their tiny male handlers,
which was just a great vibe.
Just in general, it was just like,
this is cool.
This is great.
This is why you want to go to Las Vegas.
But yeah, I am not a gambler,
but I have to say that as a non-gambler,
I think it is a waste of money to spend your money on scratch-off lottery tickets.
But I think this family tradition is fun.
And if I was in a family where it was a family tradition to give lottery tickets out as gifts, I would think it was very fun to get them as gifts.
As long as no one was spending an amount of money on them that was problematic.
You know, I wouldn't want my mother-in-law, Beth, to buy me $500 in lottery tickets where
it would, you know, cramp her household budget.
I would only want her to do that if it was offsetting her purchase of a seven and a half
foot fiber optic tree.
Yeah.
if it was offsetting her purchase of a seven and a half foot fiber optic tree.
Yeah.
But I mean, if it was in the scale of an appropriate gift, in my wife's family, they give each other $20 gifts usually,
and they do a Secret Santa type situation.
I would think that would be fun.
A $20 lottery ticket, that's quite a ticket.
Well, $21 lottery tickets are $10, $2 lottery tickets.
And then, you know, the net proceeds probably, depending on the state, go to schools or something.
What do you think, Jean?
You are a gambler.
I know that because we went to Las Vegas together.
You do.
Stayed at the El Cortez Hotel.
I did not see an Antiques Roadshow slot machine there.
I'm very upset about it.
No, I didn't see one either. You were very successful at your slot machine.
For a while.
For a while. And then for a while, and then it was not. And I was like, yeah,
you should have gotten out of here. I was down there until three o'clock in the morning
and it didn't go well for me.
I'm sorry.
But I love slot machines.
I love Vegas.
I love the whole vibe of the place.
However, I have a song on my That's Not How You Do That adult instructional trilogy called
instructional trilogy called you're not gonna win the lottery about me being annoyed and especially in bodegas uh when people are in front of me in line having me in there all day because they're
picking their goddamn numbers and i'm like you know what how about you just step to the side
and let everybody else go because i want to get of here. You're not going to win the lottery.
It's not going to happen.
I know you want to do this.
That being said, I under, like, you, how are you going to be mad at Pop for winning you,
for also getting Joy, like, out of buying his lottery tickets and then being gracious
enough to be like, and you know what?
Because this is how pop sounds. I want to give it to you so that maybe you can win a million dollars and then be
like, oh, I don't want that. That's rude. Take your lottery tickets. I want someone to give me
lottery tickets. I'll take them. In the secular observance of midwinter holiday,
there's a creature called the Grinch. Somebody just can't get into it.
Now look, gambling can be a seriously destructive addiction. And I certainly wouldn't want my aunt or aunt, as we say in New England, who's got a gambling problem, buying $5,000 worth of scratch tickets to give to me, even though that would greatly increase my chances of winning.
That would be bad.
So I don't mean to diminish gambling.
It's deleterious effects.
But, yeah, I come from a family where I had a grandfather named Pop.
We get some scratch-off tickets in our stockings.
It's fun.
It's like there's so much.
If you're stuffing a stocking, it's going to be junk anyway.
Might as well have something to do for five seconds.
Maybe you'll win 25 bucks.
You can't fill a whole stocking with Satsumas.
with satsumas one thing i learned looking into this is that the maryland lottery has an extremely elaborate web page detailing all the different scratch off games they have
there's a scratch off finder where you can you can filter them by uh payout by what kinds of games there are.
Celebrity endorsers.
Cal Ripken Jr.
Oh, wow.
John Waters.
John Waters would be amazing.
The character Omar.
Just the character Omar from The Wire Scratch-Off.
Yeah, you come at the king you best not miss uh you can even get a sortable
exportable spreadsheet that you can download it's an incredibly elaborate website so yeah
jean i'm gonna send you uh you and quella each a peppermint payout times i don't want that i don't
want that i want we're not talking about pop sending us lottery tickets. This is John Hodgman sending us something.
And we want slot machines.
So you're going to send us a slot machine?
You send us nothing!
I'll tell you what I want.
I'll tell you what I want.
I want to get back into the seat of that huge Game of Thrones slot machine that I played
in the El Cortez.
It was like 12 feet tall.
And it surrounded you.
And you had to get into it.
Like you didn't just sit down.
You got into the slot machine.
Right.
And it was like surround sound.
It was incredible.
Like you're playing Need for Speed at the arcade or whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
But bigger, just more.
It was just, and i was doing so well
on it it was so loud for a long time on an iron throne i sat on an iron throne and it you know
what i got some scratches because that's you're supposed to be reminded as the ruler that but
you know it had all these voices in it including this peter dinklage sound like who would say
things like well done or whatever.
And after a while of this, I realized, oh, from an 826 Valencia event I did a million years ago,
I have Peter Dinklage's email.
So at two o'clock in the morning in Las Vegas, I emailed Peter Dinklage to say,
did you record your own voice for this Game of Thrones slot machine that I'm in?
Five minutes later, yes.
That was the whole email back.
Yes!
Somebody recognized. The dink is a straight shooter, John.
Told me the truth.
Told me the truth.
Okay, so we finally have some follow-up here from Carrie in Minnesota,
who you may remember from episode 443, Daylight Savings Crime.
I wasn't the bailiff on this episode, John.
What happened?
That's right.
Ify Wadaway was our guest bailiff that week.
The host of Maximum Fun's own film show, Who Shot Ya?
Exactly.
And member of the legion of guest bailiffs, long live the legion.
And member of the Legion of Guest Bailiffs, long live the Legion.
And so for your benefit and yours as well, Gene, Kari brought the case against her husband, Joshua, about the home solar panels that he had installed.
And she was feeling that his obsession with energy efficiency was getting out of hand.
And so what did Kari have to say?
Joshua's excited to report that we went net zero on electricity for the year.
In fact, we produced 69 more kilowatt hours than we consumed.
Wait, how many?
69.
Sorry, I want to write that down.
Thank you.
It was a squeaker, but we did it.
Joshua is complying well with your ruling by majorly toning down the frequency of his stats reports and back of the envelope jottings.
It's been a win win. Thanks for your help.
And they sent in a photo, which if you scroll down, Jean, you can see Josh snow squeegeeing his solar panels on his shed.
That's what's up in Minnesota. Oh boy, oh boy.
You know, look, I spend part of the time and even part of the winter in Maine, but I'm telling you, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, they get the real winter.
That's the real stuff there.
I tell you, I think, I think if you, if you've gone net zero and you've put out 69.999 whatever's,
you've earned yourself a fiber optic Christmas tree, you guys.
Happy midwinter holiday.
That's impressive.
It's cold.
That looks cold.
It's very cold.
It looks cold.
That was taken recently.
You know how you just, you look at something, you're like, yeah, but it's snow.
You're like, ah, but I just feel it.
I can feel it.
The, the, the, yeah, that's the the there's snow all over the ground there's snow all
over the roofs there's snow all over the trees and the tops of the gates and we record this in
advance this was recorded in august so minnesota is not i love i love minnesota never seen a more
bleaker landscape than in minnesota in the middle of february as i drove from minneapolis st paul
airport to morris minnesota to do a show up there the university of minnesota at morris
which is up on up on the way to fargo and i would just drive through what literally seemed to be
abandoned towns like nothing was open no one was on the streets. No cars in the streets. I'm like, where is everybody?
And then I would crest a hill and then I would see down off to my left, one of these lakes they have, they have about 10,000 of them.
And I realized where the town was.
It was on the lake.
Everyone had moved onto the frozen lake.
There was trucks after truck after truck after fishing camp after fishing camp after
fishing camp on this lake.
Wow.
Hardy people.
Hardy people up there in northern Minnesota.
John, I'll never forget when my radio show was with Public Radio International, which was based in Minneapolis, St. Paul.
Yeah.
Having a phone conversation with my person there.
We had a weekly meeting.
Her name was Heidi.
Very kind woman.
a weekly meeting.
Her name was Heidi, very kind woman.
And I'll never forget the feeling I had when Heidi said to me
that she was hiring a man later that day
to clear the snow from her roof.
And I said, oh, it doesn't just fall off or whatever?
And she says, no, if a man doesn't come to clear it,
my house would collapse
oh my lord oh my face that's uh too much snow i like a little bit of snow i like a snowpocalypse
here and there because it gives it it was originally the excuse to be like,
oh man,
I'm sorry.
That got canceled.
Can't do it.
Right.
And at this point I just want to need a snowpocalypse.
No,
we don't need it,
but I do want to see the environment,
like do something else.
Like,
like just,
just do something else.
And then it would give me a reason to be like,
oh, I can't go do anything like for a different reason.
That would be great.
The docket's clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our thanks to our friend Jean Grey for joining us this week. on Twitter at Jean Greasy and on band camp at Jean gray dot band camp.com J E A N G R
A E dot band camp.com.
Uh, Jean has some holiday EPs up on band camp right now, including, uh, one called with
her husband, Quelly, Chris called Mary apocalypse.
How fitting.
That's fun.
Um, and there's all kinds of other stuff that she's created up there, including the, uh, apocalypse. How fitting. That's fun.
And there's all kinds of other stuff that she's created up there,
including the, the adulting trilogy,
right?
Yeah.
Check out,
although that's not how you do that,
which does include the song.
You're not going to win the lottery.
Our producer is the ever capable Jennifer Marmer.
You can follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at judge John Hodgman., at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
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Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets,
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