Judge John Hodgman - Judge of Sandwich, Massachusetts
Episode Date: June 10, 2020It's time for Summertime Guest Bailiff Monte Belmonte! Monte joins Judge Hodgman to clear the docket. They talk about mayo and lettuce on hot sandwiches, stealing church wifi, loud laughing in public,... 20 Questions, and a letter about books as devices.Here are some of the links and books mentioned in the episode:bit.ly/GETYOURFRIENDS75 Things White People Can Do for Racial Justicebit.ly/JJHOTDOGThe Fifth Season by N.K. JemisinSo You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma OluoThis Book Is Anti-Racist: 20 Lessons on How to Wake Up, Take Action, and Do The Work by Tiffany Jewell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman Podcast. I'm summertime, less fun time, guest bailiff
Monty Belmonte filling in for the actual bailiff, Jesse Thorne. We are in chambers this week
to clear the docket. And now, the Webby Award winning host of the Judge John Hodgman Podcast,
Judge John Hodgman. What a thrill it was, Judge John Hodgman podcast. Judge John Hodgman.
What a thrill it was, Judge John Hodgman,
when you included me in that tweet to tell me
that this podcast had won a Webby
and then I go online and watch the Zoom Webby Awards
and there is none other than Monica Lewinsky
giving you the award.
Yeah. It was really, you the award. Yeah.
It was really, it was fantastic.
Yeah, Monty, thank you.
That I did not predict.
I did not know that Monica Lewinsky would be virtually presenting me with the Webby Award.
But the name of the show is Judge John Hodgman.
But as you know, Monty, there are a lot of people on Team Judge John Hodgman.
Obviously, bailiff Jesse Thornton can't be with us today. Obviously, you, Monty Belmonte,
and Jean Gray, and all the other great guest bailiffs over time. Of course, Jennifer Marmer.
I can see you guys. We're in this new era where we're podcasting and we can see each other. We
could have been doing this the whole time.
I know.
But I see, Monty, you're up there in Northampton, Massachusetts.
Well, Turner's Falls, right?
Right.
It reminds me of when we would do this in the studios of WRSI.
That's right.
And we could see each other.
And that was really fun.
And you're sporting, I noticed, your Wagon Wheel t-shirt.
The Wagon Wheel being a great drive-in restaurant, an ice cream
place up there in
Gill, Massachusetts. How's the Wagon Wheel
doing, Monty? Doing takeout.
Ice cream. Taking out? Yep.
They're figuring out how to do it as
safely as they can. They weren't one
of the first adopters of the new
model of eating out, but they
have made that transition
and it's going great as far as I know. It's too crowded for me to go there most of eating out, but they have made that transition and it's going great. I, as far as I
know, it's too crowded for me to go there most of the time. So I guess that's a good sign.
And you're still brought in that. First of all, they make a very good black bean burger.
Yes. And they make their excellent homemade ice cream. Yeah, that's right.
And by the way, how are things up there at a WRSI? The river, 93.9, the river in Northampton.
Are you still spinning the wheels of steel every morning, given the news?
I am.
And it has become this strange dystopian future that I've read so much about in years previous,
where I continue to wake up at two o'clock in the morning, continue to go in and do my show.
continue to wake up at two o'clock in the morning, continue to go in and do my show.
And now people's listening habits have changed. And also people have really made it well known how important having this kind of communal campfire of a radio, how important that is to
them in a time like this. And I've adapted to that and changed the way that i do the show i'm doing a
lot more call-in slash request type stuff i develop these quorum themes like every day of the week
to help remind us what day of the week it is that's the heart that's one of the hard ones
so it's like michigas monday where i play like a lot of weird stuff, and then it's like, tear it up Tuesday, a punk and soul dance party,
and then it goes on from there,
where it's a gravitational force
that I think people are used to,
and usually our slogan is different is good,
but we've kind of jokingly said,
same is good,
in the midst of all this,
where it gives people this sense of familiarity
and community, when they can't have that in the same way that they've been experiencing it
previously you don't do weekends right you're only monday through friday only when i have to
yeah so you can't do scotter day well all day scott programming if you want to do it with me
on one of these days in the stay at home order,
John Hodgman, I would do Scotter day with you as somebody who went to go see the mighty,
mighty Boston's at every opportunity I could at an under 18 show when I was a kid. I, yeah,
let's do it. I'm afraid 24 hours of Scott would push even North Hampton over the edge. Probably.
And there's Jennifer Marmer, super producer,ennifer marmer up top silent as always or
are you hooked up to your mic i can't remember now she's muted silent purely muted you're wearing
you're wearing a lovely linen shirt you mentioned and speaking of the news of course uh we recorded
this a week ago this is coming out june 10th 2020 and of course a week ago we were in the midst of
now several nights of coast-to-coast um protests against uh police violence
specifically against people of color specifically black people in this country and around the world
and um it's upsetting uh and uh we're not going to dwell on it dramatically in this episode.
And who knows what the situation will look like when you actually hear the sound of our voices.
But I have been sharing a couple of links that you might find useful. And we'll have links for
them in the show page, MaximumFun.org and on the Judge John Hodgman Instagram.
One is I created a custom bit link for it.
I didn't make it up.
It's a bit.ly slash get your friends,
all capital letters, get your friends.
And that's just a link
to a Rolling Stone compilation
of links to various.
It's a really, I mean,
I just happened to find it on Rolling Stone, a really great collection of links to various, it's a really, uh, I mean, I just happened to find it on
Rolling Stone, a really great collection of links to various bail funds, various local
protester support organizations, uh, various policing reform organizations, including Reclaim
the Block in Minneapolis.
And there are places that you can donate money to if you have the means to do so.
And they also offer you lots of opportunities
to support those organizations in other ways.
It's important that we all be part of this struggle
one way or the other.
And as well, another link that i've been handing out
is a link to uh on on medium that came came out a couple of years ago uh 75 things white people
can do for racial justice this was put up uh on medium by corinne shootak and it's an incredibly
thoughtful list about all sorts of,
if you are a non-non-white person,
let's just say a white person,
and you want to support and get engaged
and make anti-racism part of your life,
lots and lots of concrete ideas
of how books you can read,
activism that you can train in,
and organizations you can reach out to.
And it's a lot of valuable stuff.
So that said, I just wanted to put that out there before we move and settle some really petty, silly disputes, because like all of us, we deserve from time to time just to wear.
What are you wearing, Jennifer Marmer?
Just a simple linen top for yourself?
Yeah.
We all need to wear a simple linen top for ourselves sometimes.
Take a little break and wrap our minds around the bad ideas of weird dads and what things
are sandwiches and what aren't sandwiches. And in this episode, truly one of the most puzzling conundrums about playing the game
of 20 questions that I've ever come across.
So summertime guest bailiff, Monty Belmonte, why don't you start us off?
Speaking of sandwiches, which I think you are now the arbiter of everything sandwich oriented.
Here's something from Katie May.
I wish that only that were true.
You're the mayor of Sandwich, Massachusetts, which is not hot dog, Massachusetts.
No, I am not.
I am not.
I'm not the mayor.
I'm not even the select person.
You're the judge of Sandwich, Massachusetts.
No. the mayor i'm not even the the select person you're the judge of sandwich massachusetts yeah there is a town in massachusetts called sandwich i forgot that no the i wish i wish i could get the blt to the city in sandwich massachusetts but i am not so honored it is
still the debate over the sandwichness of hot dogs continues even though I fully settled it on this podcast years ago.
Bit.ly slash J.J. Hot Dog.
J.J. H-O-T-D-O-G, all capital letters,
if you want to hear my final ruling
on why a hot dog is not a sandwich.
But I do love sandwiches,
and I love thinking about it and talking about them.
So tell me, what's the dispute.
This comes from Katie May.
She has a dispute with her husband about sandwich making.
And she says, one of us thinks mayo and lettuce go on the sandwich before grilling.
The other thinks hot mayo and wilted lettuce are an affront to all that is holy.
Please help.
And you have asked for clarification
on what type of sandwiches are in question.
And Katie Mae said,
I'm a vegetarian.
So for me, it's cheese and veggies.
For him, it sometimes includes sliced ham or turkey.
So I also dug a little deeper
into this question with Katie Mae
and determined that the grilling
they're talking about Monty for your,
for your clarification,
because I want your take on that.
Okay.
I believe it is a panini press.
Not grilling.
Well,
in new England,
a grill,
a grilled cheese is not something that's been pressed in a panini.
Oh yeah.
It's been something that's been buttered on both sides and,
and,
you know,
cooked in a skillet.
You know what I mean?
Right.
But this is a panini press situation.
And would you put mayonnaise on a panini that you are grilling?
And would you put lettuce on a panini you are grilling?
And while I can see you and I can see the utter disdain on your face,
I will remind you, is an audio-only
audio-only court.
Absolutely not. I am
a huge proponent of mayonnaise.
You want to
put mayonnaise on your cereal,
I'm going to back you on that.
We're two white guys from New England.
We are mayonnaise. We are the living embodiment.
You are what you eat.
And we are mayonnaise.
Maybe I am Hellman's. Because you maybe i am hellman's because you reach for the hellman's you reach for the best there's very very little
distinction from my midsection right now and and what it looks like when you open a fresh jar of
hellman's that little that pasty white swirl right fresh mayonnaise if you could take the mayonnaise jar and burn a very small portion of the back of it,
that's how I look right now
because I went and sat by the Connecticut River
over the weekend.
So I'm like burned mayonnaise.
You're saying mayonnaise burns red like your skin?
No, it doesn't.
But, you know, no analogy you can take so far.
At any rate.
You love mayonnaise.
Put mayonnaise on things, yes.
Not before grilling.
No.
Right.
There shouldn't.
So if you're making a panini,
mayonnaise should never be a part of it.
Right.
I question whether you should call it
that grilling in the first place.
Like, I give you grilled cheese.
But if you told me
you were going to make a grilled
like turkey sandwich,
immediately I would think like,
oh, you're going to
put it on an open flame on like a back i don't know you're making up a new thing all right
nobody nobody puts turkey sandwiches putting it on a putting it on a grill no but we'd never do
that no i wouldn't but i i do grill a Like, I grill everything on an actual flame grill in my backyard.
And then yet, at the same time, my children make grilled cheeses, and I never do that.
Just as east of the Mississippi, Hellman's Mayonnaise is called Hellman's Mayonnaise,
and west of the Mississippi, it is called Best Foods.
Oh.
You know, Jennifer Marmer nodding in solemn assent nice to know
so there is still regionalism within this country so some people will say grilled cheese
when others would say toasted cheese for something that is cooked in a skillet
and i am perfectly willing to allow katie may and her husband to call panini grilling grilling okay needy pressing grilling
just so long as they do not call grilling barbecue in which case get off my podcast absolutely
okay so you say no katie may is right husband is wrong yes but if you want to put mayonnaise on it
after the fact i'm not going to stand in your way but how are you going to. But if you want to put mayonnaise on it after the fact,
I'm not going to stand in your way.
But how are you going to do that?
If you're grilling cheese into the panini,
if you see what I mean, you love mayonnaise so much that you want to put it on the top of the,
the grilled panini.
Right.
Again,
I'm not,
I'm not going to stand in your way here.
All right.
So here's a solution.
And I,
again,
I'm,
I'm not making a ruling yet okay
but if if you wish katie mae's husband if you want to follow the monte belmonte way and you
are making a sliced ham or turkey panini and you're adding cheese to it because why wouldn't
you if you're grilled if you're putting anything in a panini? Come on. You don't even need to grill it if you're not putting cheese on it.
Right.
But you have to keep one of the sides of the panini uncheesed so that you can take off that bread and add fresh, cool, Monte Belmonte-style cold mayonnaise.
What about this?
The hot, hot and the cool, cool.
What if you grill the whole sandwich, both sides?
Again, i use grilling
loosely here and then you have you've made your own fake aioli which means mayonnaise that you
bought at a store and truffled olive oil that you bought at a store and then you dip the grilled
sandwich into a bowl of the cold mayonnaise and truffled aioli.
And then you bite it.
And then maybe I want that sandwich.
How about this?
This is called the John Hodgman special.
How about you make a ham and cheese sandwich,
get a bowl of cold mayonnaise,
throw the sandwich away,
and just get a spoon and eat that mayonnaise?
I think a lot of people
just threw up nope not this person because you are what you eat i have to send a message to
my wife because there was a panini there was a legit panini that we had in a foreign country
that blew our minds and i want i want to know whether it had mayonnaise on it or not. What was in that panini we liked so much?
Did it have mayonnaise?
I'll let you know what was in that.
It was a little tease.
A little podcast tease.
Stay tuned.
If you want to know what was in the panini, you'll have to listen to the end of the podcast.
And also, have you tried this timeshare in the cape of cod we don't have
we're not doing any timeshare ads okay fine i don't know what's going on there wrsi no time
we're really bottom of the battle here's here's what i'm gonna say here's what i'm gonna say 99.99999%. Okay. But you have overlooked
one of the greatest sandwiches in the world
that specifically involves hot mayonnaise.
Tune them out.
Damn.
Tune them out.
Can I say that?
Yeah, you can say damn.
Okay.
These are challenging times times we need to be
able to express ourselves damn you're right hot tuna tuna melt hot tuna is a band is also
an ingredient in a tuna melt and how does it get hot you grill it and it's there's mayonnaise in
there man there's mayonnaise in that in that. There's mayonnaise in that tuna.
Do you like a tuna melt or what you would call a tuner melt?
Tuner melt?
I do.
Maybe your ruling should say that if they would like to hot grill mayonnaise with turkey, that they have to then start a commensurate band with the same name.
So like, we're the new band Hot Turkey.
Hot Turkey? Yeah. No, I don't want to katie mays and her husband's band hot turkey i just want them to enjoy themselves
you're right um yeah i i have to say that while i agree with katie may
that grilling either in a panini or skillet environment,
lettuce in a sandwich is gross.
Yeah.
I would admit mayonnaise on a grilled sandwich.
Okay.
Seems fair.
The other day I grilled a sandwich,
one of the classic grilled sandwiches or what we say pressed sandwiches.
I did a Cubano sandwich, which is the classic South Florida sandwich of roast pork, ham, Swiss cheese, mustard, pickles.
And I pressed that because I don't have a sandwich press.
I put it in a skillet and I put a piece of parchment paper on top
and I slammed a cast iron pan on top of that
and then I put a kettle full of water on it.
I love it.
And it worked really well.
And you know what I also did?
I added mayonnaise.
When it was grilling?
Yeah.
Wow.
And you know what?
Worked.
Worked good.
I don't mind hot mayonnaise.
I get you.
If it's not for you, Katie Mae, that's fine.
But I think the tuna melt invalidates your argument that it is never allowable.
One more thing before we move on with regard to the grilling of sandwiches,
which during a pandemic stay at home,
I have been doing a lot of obviously and thinking a lot about sandwiches.
Do you know the trick Monty of making a grilled cheese with mayonnaise
instead of butter?
No.
Yeah, Jennifer Marmer is nodding her head.
Well, well, well.
Knowingly.
My children grill a lot of cheeses.
So I'm eager to hear this.
I think I picked this up from Ken Reed, also a Massachusettsian, host of the TV Guidance Counselor podcast.
But there is a tradition, and perhaps it's a new England one,
or perhaps he picked it up just from the internet of instead of taking your
bread and,
and putting butter on the exterior of the bread and then grilling it with
your cheese in a,
in a pan,
use mayonnaise instead.
And it Browns really well.
And it tastes,
it does not taste mayonnaise-y.
It tastes super crispy.
Wow.
When you get that out.
So instead of butter, you just put mayonnaise in the pan.
Yeah.
It seems very easy.
It seems dangerous for somebody who hasn't tried it.
No, no.
But I'm willing to take that risk.
You want to heat up the pan for a while at low heat.
And then I know normally you would put a big lob of butter in there and it would sizzle around.
Yeah, you know how butter is going to react in there.
What's going to happen if I put mayonnaise in here?
Am I going to set the house on fire?
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, Monty.
Calm down.
Heat up your pan.
Okay.
Low to medium heat.
Get it reasonably hot.
It's clean.
Take your piece of bread.
You mayonnaise one side of it.
Put it mayonnaise side down in the pan.
Put your cheese on that bread.
Mayonnaise another slice of bread.
Put that mayonnaise size up and walk away.
And then come back, flip it.
You're done.
Oh, one last thing.
Can this podcast be five hours long and only about mayonnaise, Jennifer?
Yes.
I learned this.
Speaking of Team Judge John Hodgman.
Yeah.
From expert witness, Kenji Lopez-Alt, the great food writer, the author of Food Lab.
He's got a YouTube channel.
He's got recipes all over the place.
This is the guy who invented the concept of the reverse sear steak.
You know what that is, Monty?
No, but this is a cooking podcast now, so I'm all ears.
No, you have to go back and listen to Judge John Hodgkin's verdict,
number 465, licorice adjacent flavor.
That's a good one.
Kenji Lopez-Alt.
Really, really smart science-based food writer, but not like wonky science, not pure science.
He has fun.
He mixes things up.
And speaking of mixing things up and speaking of mayonnaise and speaking of hot, Kenji Lopez-Alt has a recipe for chicken breasts marinated in chimichurri,
which is a parsley, garlic, onion, olive oil sort of pesto that is used as a steak seasoning
in Argentina, and mayonnaise.
That's it.
Go find this recipe because it has changed my life.
Is it on the podcast?
No, that's not on that podcast,
but it's on the internet.
I discovered it since we recorded.
Kenji Lopez held that back from me.
Damn him.
Which I consider to be a crime.
You pound your chicken breast
into the quarter inch even thickness.
You get your chimichurri,
you whip it up.
Then you take like a quarter cup of mayonnaise,
whip that into it.
And then you just let it sit in that mayonnaise,
garlicky parsley marinade for like up to an hour or a day.
And then you just pull it out of there.
You don't do anything.
You just throw that right on the grill.
You know, whatever. Three,
three, five minutes total, depending on the thickness, maybe six. I've never had a better
food almost pretty much. And you know, it's all thanks to mayonnaise. You don't like mayonnaise.
Don't send me letters. What did I say? OK, so Katie May, hot mayonnaise, okay. Hot lettuce, no good.
Maddie says, my husband Nick and I just bought a house next door to a church with a public Wi-Fi
network. Nick wants to use the church's network instead of purchasing our own Wi-Fi. I'll also
add, we've been splitting the cost of Wi-Fi with various neighbors for almost seven years,
so we have never owned our own Wi-Fi. I believe that what Nick wants to do is stealing. It's time
for us to be adults and have our own network. I ask that you issue an injunction against Nick's
use of the public church Wi-Fi. Monty, I just want you and the listeners to know that I have received the information back from my wife with regard to the panino that we had.
Panino.
Good use of Italian.
That's right.
It's one panino.
It's many panini.
One graffito.
Many graffiti.
And it was one of the greatest sandwiches i ever had in my life and i will
reveal the details after the break but first here's what i have to say to maddie uh monty
what do you think i think um given a pandemic you can steal the wi-fi until the pandemic is over
and then you need to get back to real life and be a grown-up right now we are in we are in
like beyond thunderdome land right now so it's like every person for themselves and also tina
turner no no monty no okay no so that's why i'm the bailiff it's not every person for themselves
we have to be together on this oh yeah right yeah, right. We're all in this together.
This isn't barter town.
Okay.
All right.
You know, this is like-
Two men enter, one man leaves.
No, it's not.
That's not it?
It's not a Thunderdome.
I've been operating beyond the Thunderdome principles this whole time.
What has been happening in Northampton?
No wonder you're wearing that suit of armor made of chicken
bones and a weird doll's mask. Have you become a lawless raider up there in North Hampton?
Yes.
It's not the one I remembered.
You know, these are difficult times.
It's all about doing our best practices, wearing our masks, keeping our distance,
following the science news, learning
about anti-racism, supporting each other.
It's not about getting as much free Wi-Fi as you can, Monty.
But here's the thing.
Nobody's going to church right now.
So when people start going back to the church, then yes, you need to get your own Wi-Fi.
But right now.
See, look, you're counting on a return to normalcy of some kind.
What I'm saying is we need to forge a new, better normal together based on principles.
All right.
Now, if you want to eat three tuna melts a day
with mayo that's your business
self care and I understand your
argument that no one's at that church right now
the wifi is just sitting there
it's pooling it's pooling around
the pews
more than they can use
and maybe the church doesn't
mind if you use that wifi
it's church
but there's a very easy way to find out.
And that's to ask the church.
Not hack the church?
Ask.
Don't hack the church.
Ask the church.
The password is Jesus because I read a bumper sticker that says Jesus is the answer.
So if you're looking for the wi-fi password
jesus is the answer no here's here's the thing maddie and nick maddie knows what's right
this is the parable of the soda fountain this has come up on judge john hodgman
many a time and it shall come up many a time again it is one of the great teaching tools in the liturgy of the church of judge john hodgman monty two pilgrims go i mean this this
is happening in olden times right because people could go to restaurants then right Two pilgrims go to an In-N-Out burger in California.
There is a soda fountain there offering, lo these many sodas.
And then there is a button for water.
And then there is a button for seltzer.
Is it acceptable to fill up your cup with seltzer or water without paying for it.
Because after all, saith one pilgrim,
the cost incurred by the in and out is the soda syrup,
your doctor's pepper, your Cokes and cherries, and all the rest.
doctor's pepper your cokes and cherries and all the rest and lo judge john hodgman saith unto the pilgrim maybe it depends just ask them don't ask me i don't run it in and out there are more costs
associated than you think of in a soda fountain than just the cost of the syrup.
There is electricity, there is maintenance, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
And yeah, it's just water or just seltzer water.
And maybe they're like, go for it.
Maybe they're like, here's a cup for you to filleth and slaketh your thirst from my soda fountain with just plain seltzer, if you wish,
for I am a good Samaritan. Or maybe they will say, no, but you can buy a cup for a dollar and
have as many free raffles as you want or whatever. The lesson of the parable of the soda fountain,
Monty, is that there is no reason to talk yourself into taking something that you want
for free when the proper thing to do is to simply ask. There is no reason to come up with a system
or a scheme or an explanation as to why it is okay to take a thing for free when the avenue is available to you
to simply ask and be told yes or no, especially if the answer is probably yes. It's church.
You'd probably say fine. Being a grownup, Maddie, I appreciate that you're wanting to grow up,
Maddie, but being a grownup does not mean buying your own Wi-Fi. A lot of people try to define
grown-upness by the fact that they can buy stuff. Like, I'm a grown-up because I bought a car.
No, being a grown-up means not being a sneak, not trying to cheat the system,
means going up to the people in your world and say, may I have this for free?
And if they say, no, no, it's mine.
Then you go, I get it.
No problem.
Thought I'd ask.
We're trying to have a civilization here.
We're trying.
We're trying really hard.
And part of this time is having conversations that are not always comfortable face-to-face with our neighbors
and to a lot of people including me having a simple face-to-face conversation such as may i
steal wi-fi here can feel a little like uh hard to do but i telling you, the more you go up to the people in your world, no
matter who they are, no matter what they look like, no matter what their background is,
and just have the conversation you need to have, even if it does not end with the result
that you want, even if they tell you things that are hard for you to hear you grow as a person from having direct
contact with other people at a safe distance that's the other complicating factor don't go the way
of northampton
don't fall into a dystopian Thunderdome Fury Road type situation like
Northampton, Massachusetts.
Now let's move on, Monty, because I know you got,
you're taking a run down the Fury Road to the gas farm later.
So.
We don't need another hero.
Let's take a quick break.
More items on the docket coming up in just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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cookware.com. Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. This week, we're clearing the docket. And Leslie says,
And laughing hysterically.
While it's a minor annoyance at home, it's become a point of debate in public.
I've shushed his cackling on every form of transportation imaginable.
Cross-country flights, overnight bus rides in foreign countries, quiet train cars, the list goes on. Am I right that he needs to clam up and stop embarrassing me? Or is this acceptable
behavior that I just happen to find annoying? How do you tell your loving partner of six years
that his face is cute,
but not when hyena sounds come out of it?
I'm seeking an injunction to end this behavior for good
and save hundreds of innocent people
from disruptive giggles.
Is he laughing like that, do you think?
Is it a villain laugh? I imagine he's laughing like that do you think is it a villain laugh i imagine he's laughing like me and i have a wicked witch of the west laugh like really there are people that can recognize me no matter
what the circumstances because they hear this kind of cat wow and that's like my my legitimate
laugh and there's another person that i know that has a very similar laugh.
And so we have actually been confused in public spheres because our cackles are so similar.
I don't like that, Monty.
That brought me right back to when Wizard of Oz was on television once a year.
Stop it.
What are you going to do?
I feel like Monty, I can see you,
but I still,
in my mind's eye,
I'm picturing you on top of a,
a thatched hut throwing fireballs at me,
trying to set me on fire like a scarecrow.
That's,
I don't like that.
Scary,
which is more,
I'm going to answer Leslie's question in a second.
Cause we actually do have a recording of her partner's laugh.
I think we'll, I think we'll make a recording of her partner's laugh i think we'll i think we'll
make a lot of difference okay but when it comes to traumatic childhood movies which is worse
wizard of oz or watership down the ways or the what i know for you it's watership down because
literally anytime i see a picture from
watership down on social media i know it is john hodgman that is supposed to be talking about the
anime the animated film from 1979 or so not the netflix remake which i have not seen because it
seems unnecessary but if people like it let me know if you're of an age to know what movies i'm talking
about tell us in the in the reddit the judge john hodgman reddit discussion for this episode
which was more traumatic for you as a child of the of the 70s and 80s wizard of oz
watership down or the miniseries i claudius all right now oh i thought you loved that one i just
assumed because i did i do i do but but if you're a kid who accidentally watches it right it's it's
got some heavy stuff it's got some intense intense scenes all right i don't want you ever to laugh
that way at me ever again monty but can But can I stop you from laughing that way?
That's the crux of this issue.
I don't like it.
But do I, even if I were your partner, your romantic partner in life, your husband, which would be a lovely outcome to an alternate timeline.
Absolutely.
Would I have the right to say that that laugh, because it scares me so much, causes me damages that you must not do it?
Is it that disruptive?
Because that's really what this comes down to.
In many ways, you know, Leslie sent this in, obviously, when travel was still a possibility.
Right.
When ideas like, you know, cross-country flights and overnight bus rides in foreign countries
and quiet train cars.
Boy, oh boy.
Who's Leslie?
Hercule Poirot?
Planes, trains, and automobiles solving...
Anyway.
Everywhere, everywhere they go together,
Leslie's partners laughs.
But that's all done now.
However, we are working together
face-to-face, person-to-person, safely, to build a new and better normal. And will
Leslie's partners laugh be part of that new normal? Let's take a listen. And we'll listen to it one more time. now see that laugh does not scare or disturb me it's it's loud i'll give it that but what I find the laugh is not the problem it's the weird under mutter
did you hear that I'll do my imitation of Leslie's partner
that was the non-laughing but weird kind of like talking to yourself kind of thing that gave it a
a kind of joker style menace monty if you were on i don't know a cross-country flight an overnight
bus ride in a foreign country or a quiet train car and leslie's partner was over there with earbuds in making that noise
how would you feel i didn't notice the kind of under murmur but that now is all of a sudden
disturbing to me and so the initial outburst of laughing to me seemed very joyful but you gave it a dark twist and now i can't unhear that under murmur where
they seem like they have reeled in the legitimate expression of joy and so i've poisoned i've
poisoned the well well of your judgment with my insight obviously so the laugh itself i'm fine
with you're fine you would be fine if you were in a quiet train car or an overnight bus in a foreign country
with a guy listening to even the Judge John Hodgson podcast going,
like Christopher Lloyd and Who Framed Roger Rabbit at the end?
Oh, yeah.
No. Actually, no.
Would not be cool.
That would not be cool.
In normal circumstances, like that's like you're at home,
you're on a car ride, all of that.
I think, yes, let that bubble up and express itself
in the way that it will in your body.
But you do need to know your surroundings.
So even when I'm'm in bed watching something funny
and my wife is sleeping next to me
and I know she's sleeping,
you got to reel that in.
You got to try.
Not always successful, perfectly honest.
We have had partners who had difficulties
with their partner's sneezes,
which you think are an involuntary
noise, but you can rein in your sneeze in certain public situations.
I can't actually.
My children have deemed my sneeze the Hamilton sneeze because it sounds like I'm saying the
issue, like when he says the issue on the table.
That is how I sneeze every time.
Totally without thinking about it.
Look.
I could stifle it, but I might blow my eardrums out.
They're not going to blow your eardrums out.
I might.
You don't have to laugh like the Wicked Witch of the West.
I do.
But I love you and I allow you to do it.
I do.
When you're around friends leslie's partner including leslie who
frankly you know you're you're you're presumably your partner's best friend you laugh laugh the
way you want i'm never going to try to stifle laughter especially not in this time but when
you're in public laughing uproariously especially with a with a creepy
under mutter in a closed cabin of a cross-country flight overnight bus in a foreign country or
quiet train car is not only impolite but bear in mind droplet city oh yeah Listen to something else. Listen to the fifth season by N.K. Jemisin.
Listen to a novel.
Listen to a podcast.
Listen to So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo.
Or listen to Minority Corner on Maximum Fun.
That's funny, though.
Can I make a recommendation?
Take some time then to think and think and not laugh so much. What? Yeah, can i make a recommendation take some time then to think and and think and not laugh so much what yeah you can make a recommendation there's a book called this book is anti-racist
20 lessons on how to wake up take action and do the work by tiffany jewel who happens to live in
northampton massachusetts and i think it might be an excellent addition to the not laughing out loud
and really taking some important self-assessment
in these times when we need to be together apart.
That sounds appropriately unhilarious.
Right.
Or, you know, listen to something just fun and low-key, but not comedic.
Unless you can get that laugh under control, Leslie's partner, you have an obligation to people in closed spaces around you who are not Leslie and your close friends to not scare them the way that Monty scared me.
Sorry. All right, let's move on.
Let's take a quick break. And when we come back, we'll hear a case about the game.
20 questions.
questions. 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. tricky. Let me give it a try. Okay. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit. No, it will. Let me try. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close. Stop podcasting yourself. A podcast from MaximumFun.org. If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. This week, we're clearing the docket.
Here's something from Josh. Okay, here it comes. This is payoff number one of tease number one.
Top of the show, I teased a conundrum regarding 20 questions. At the end of the first third of the show, I teased the best panino I ever had.
Here comes payoff one.
Stand by for payoff two.
Go ahead.
Anytime you want to do a show on any of our radio stations in Northampton, Judge John Hodgman, you are more than welcome.
Here is something from Josh.
They call me Chef Tease of Sandwich, Massachusetts.
Cooking up them teases. There's a little bit
of the cackle right there. I know, I got
you. It's fine. But see, you got it under control.
You're a professional. I reeled it in.
I'm seeking the judge's wisdom on a
semantic... You wouldn't laugh that way
on the radio. Oh, I do it all the time.
I cry on the radio. I'm so
unprofessional. Well, I know you cry,
but you do the Wicked Witch laugh on the radio? Sometimes. Yeah. You reel it in. You let it go for the
podcast. You reel it in for the radio. I know you Monty Belmonte. You're a professional. I do my
best to be professional, but I don't always succeed. All right. Let's hear, let's hear from
Josh. I apologize. I'm seeking the judge's wisdom on a semantic issue. wife and i were playing 20 questions my answer was amazon river
and my wife asked me is it on land and i answered yes but that didn't go over very well how should
i have answered i love this question so much there it is again yeah there it is that's good
that was good that wasn't the same as the the one that really scared me where your whole face turned green, too.
That was weird.
Yeah, I know.
So he was playing with his wife.
20 questions.
The answer that he had prepped in his mind was the Amazon River.
Right.
And she's asking, like, is it a famous person?
No, obviously.
Is it a fictional character? No, obviously. Is it a fictional character?
No, obviously.
Is it on land?
And then according to my reading of his letter, he had a little question mark after yes.
So I feel like I feel like she said, is it on land?
And he said, yes.
Right.
Yes.
Right.
Which frankly, I think in 20 questions is a fairly fair, that is to say, playable clue that the answer is not, is a little tricky.
And that gives information to the questioner.
Yeah.
So I think that he played fair, right?
If he said, yes.
Yes.
right if he said yes yes because then then josh's wife can start like well wait a minute how how can it sort of be on land and then might get to the point where it's like oh is it a body of
water right yes and then you're off to the races then all you have to do is name every river in the world and
you're done right and and luckily there there are only 10 of them so and amazon is going to be the
first one that you're going to guess and probably try to make an order from and you know an
inebriated late night uh decision so anyway but that still doesn't settle the question.
Is it on land?
If you were going to answer that question without
the question mark, what would you say?
Is it on land?
I have no idea how to
answer this question, which is kind of why I love it.
Is the Amazon River on
land?
I think the only actual answer is the answer
that he probably gave in in his testimony which is
yes like jennifer jennifer marmer i can see you but you can't speak what using only body language
is he she it's yes she put her hands palms up in the in the uh international uh symbol for either yes
or I really don't
care. Can we move on?
Well, now she's drawing her finger
across her throat. Kill this segment.
No, she's not doing
that. One of my favorite 20 question
like answers
for other people is
20 questions.
Yes.
So, like, you have to guess that what I'm thinking of is 20 questions.
And that causes all sorts of conundrums like this, which is part of the reason I really love this particular question.
Like, is it on land?
Yes, it is, I guess.
Oh, Monty. like is it on land yes it is i guess oh monty i'm now i'm so glad that i know that so i never get tricked into playing the game with you you're a little bit younger than me you're a true child
of the 90s you got meta in your bones sorry the answer the answer to your 20 questions is 20
questions right the show is the show of the show this is the show of the show. This is the show of the show.
Here's the answer.
Josh, first of all,
I've established played correctly.
But if you want,
and frankly, generously, because you gave her
valuable information
to teasing out the correct answer.
However, if you wanted to answer without a question mark,
a definitive yes or no,
the Amazon River is on land.
Yes.
Because what's at the bottom of the river?
Land.
It's sitting on land.
It's sitting in a valley of land.
It's moving over the riverbed,
which is soggy land man but land and you can dispute this if you
want in the reddit too what was the most traumatic which was more traumatic i claudia and your
childhood i claudius watershed down wizard of oz and how wrong is john hodgman on this one go ahead
i know i'm right but the fact is he played correctly because by going, yes, instead of yes, saying yes
plainly would be a misdirection to her, a real misdirection.
It would be frankly as bad as playing the game and the answer being 20 questions.
If only she had asked, is it blue on a map?
I mean, that's actually what we're kind of thinking about.
That's a great way.
That's a great way. How would she know to ask, is it blue on a map? I mean, that's actually what we're kind of thinking about here. That's a great way.
How would she know to ask that question? She would not.
So I think
your ruling is correct.
Monty, sideshow.
Yes. All right.
A maximum
fun one-off.
A live
on Zoom 20 questions competition between you and me.
I love it.
So we play three rounds, best two out of three.
And then maybe we can figure out a way for viewers to qualify to try to stump us.
for viewers to qualify to try to stump us.
Or we could choose in like the comments,
like I'm going to ask this as one of my 20 questions.
No, no, I got to figure it out.
Don't worry about it. All right.
You know how to do this way better than I do.
I got to plot it out in my head.
We're going to do this.
It's going to be good.
All right.
Love it.
What's the name of the game going to be?
20 questions?
20, 20 questions.
20. And it'll be 20 20, 20 questions. 20.
And it'll be 20 rounds of 20 questions.
No.
Let's move on.
It's only 400 questions.
Come up with a name.
I want to come up with a name.
I'll let everyone know as soon as we can work it out, Monty.
This will be a fun thing to do of an evening.
Absolutely.
With our listeners.
All right, let's move on.
A listener named Hannah wrote in about
a recent piece of swift justice that was issued. The question was whether or not a book is a device.
The court decided that a book is not a device. Yeah, Monty, let me read this because obviously
I get a lot of pushback on my correct opinions. And this was one, and I
normally just say thank you for your input, but
I stand by my decision.
But regarding whether or not
a book was a device, a lot of people pushed
back. A lot of
bookish people in the audience, which I
love. And I
read this letter and I started to
compose an argument
as to why I was still correct,
even though Hannah, you will learn, is a historian and publishing scholar
who dedicates a lot of her time to trying to convince students that books are a technology like any other.
But then I realized, you know what?
I'm wrong.
Wow.
So I'm going to read this for Hannah.
I'm a book historian and publishing scholar
who dedicates a lot of my time
to trying to convince students
that books are technology like any other.
The desire to distinguish between electronic gizmos
like e-readers and print books,
which was my,
that was personally my John Hodgman's
dividing line. You wouldn't call a book a gizmo. Therefore, it's not a device.
The desire to distinguish between gizmos like e-readers and print books not only leads to all
sorts of ableism in that it seems to degrade e-books, but also reflects an ahistorical
tendency to pretend that books were never themselves new
media. In fact, there are many moments in history that suggest how device-like these technologies
once were. My favorite example, this is Hannah still, is that of Johannes Fust, the business
partner of Johannes Gutenberg. The two Johanneses, they called them. That was me.
It was two Johanneses and a baby starring Johannes Gutenberg. The two Johanneses, they called them. That was me. It was two Johanneses and a baby starring Johannes Gutenberg.
All right, back to Hannah's letter.
Johannes Fust loaned a significant amount of money to Gutenberg
to fund his printed Bible.
Just as the Bible was being completed,
Fust brought suit against his business partner
and got everything, including the Bibles.
Foust then attempted to sell the printed Bibles in Paris as manuscripts. The authorities got wind
of these uncannily identical books, and Foust was charged with witchcraft, forcing him to reveal the
secret of the Bibles that they were, in fact,led devices that is to say mechanically printed books
some scholars have speculated that foost was the inspiration for the legend of dr faustus
and his quest for limitless knowledge given your established preference for historical accuracy
over semantic categories a preference that i don't think is i've established but anyway fine
i may want to reconsider whether books are in
fact devices and i do reconsider it it is a hair that i i split tid right that's the best sense of
split split it i splitted that hair that gizmo versus book hair i never intended, and I apologize, Hannah, to suggest that books as a physical object were not indeed absolutely historically massively disruptive technology.
And they are, you know, they are, while device tends to imply in contemporary definitions, an electronic component which books do not at
least not printed books you're absolutely right that even though a book is content that we refer
to as being readable across many different kinds of devices. The physical thing we call a book is a hinge.
It is mechanical.
It was an invention.
And I apologize.
I got it wrong.
First time in 10 years.
First time in 10 years, I think,
that I have admitted wrongdoing.
See, I'm growing.
All right.
That was very big of you, Judge John Hodgman.
Well, it's time for guys who look like me
to listen to the expertise of others
and adjust accordingly.
So, Hannah, thank you for your research.
Thank you for that great story about Fust
and books being suspected of being the tools of witchcraft.
Do the laugh now, Monty.
Be a witch.
Oh, Johannes Fust, you come to haunt me.
No, I'm Johannes Gutenberg.
Too many Johannesses.
That's it.
The docket is clear.
Thank you for joining us again on another episode of judge
john hodgman our producer of course is jennifer marmer follow us on twitter monty belmonti is
guess what at monty belmonti m-o-n-t-e b-e-l-m-o-n-t-e love it it just rolls off the tongue. It's like a cheer. M-O-N-T-E-B-E-L-M-O-N-T-E.
Less like a cheer.
That was better, I thought.
And I am at Hodgman.
H-O-D-G-M-A-N.
H-O-D-G-M-A-N.
We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets.
Hashtag JJHO, and check out the Maximum
Fun subreddit to discuss this episode.
Remember, remember to talk about which is more traumatic in childhood, Wizard of Oz
or Watership Town, and how wrong I was about the other thing.
But do not get in that Reddit and complain that I never revealed the best panino I ever
had in my life life because I saved it
now to the very end.
A long
time ago. This is also a
story from ancient times.
It's American Pie. A long, long
time ago, I once
had a panino.
Oh no.
Sorry. Doubly traumatized.
Went into Weird Al territory right there.
Which is more traumatic?
Wizard of Oz on TV,
Watership Down in the movie theater on VHS cassette,
or listening to your dad at some point sing American Pie?
Anyway, it's not an American Pie because, in fact,
we were in Venice, Italy,
the most beautiful city in the world have you ever been monty no i have not yeah well you can't go i can't go plane tickets are real cheap right now
yeah i can't you know you can't go but i hope that when we forge this new, better normal together, part of that new, better normal will include finally addressing climate change issues that are currently causing Venice to disappear beneath the ocean forever.
But before that happens near the Peggy Guggenheim Museum, there is a little bar called the Corner Pub.
It is in English.
The name of it is corner pub.
I mean,
it presents itself as an quote unquote English pub,
but of course inside it's very Italian.
They have Chiquetti.
Chiquetti is the Venetian bar snack,
which is often just like a little piece of lard on a piece of bread or like a
toothpick and a huge piece of provolone.
It was an anchovy on it it's all
everything i love it's just mayo grilled yeah no and then they have panini right and this panino
i'm not going to bury the lead it did not have mayonnaise on it okay but it was you know long bread panini press with arugula butter speck which is smoked prosciutto yes and hard-boiled eggs
and boy was it good so i'm gonna make one of those for my dinner tomorrow night i guess
but now i'm gonna leave you and sadly leave you, Jennifer and Monty.
It was great seeing your faces.
Remember to submit your cases
at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO
or email me, John Hodgman.
The email address is Hodgman
at MaximumFun.org.
Hey, Monty, see you again this summertime.
Jennifer, see you again.
And for the rest of you, I will not see you again because it's a podcast on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Maximumfun.org.
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