Judge John Hodgman - Judge's Court, Judge's Rules
Episode Date: March 14, 2018Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are clearing the docket this week! They talk about how to deal with merchandise one receives by mistake, whistling, naming babies, going out post-cardio exe...rcise, and much more!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, we're in chambers clearing the docket.
With me, as always, the paragon of justice himself, Judge John Hodgman.
It's freezing in my chambers.
Why is that?
Because it's cold outside in Brooklyn.
Oh, right.
Other geographic locations have winter.
We are recording this in the dregs of Feb,
and I am having to wear a fleece collar around my trembling neck
because it is so cold in here.
I don't like it.
I just made the most luxurious purchase of my life.
Let's hear it.
It's very cold in the lower level of my home,
which is because I live on the side of a hill substantially, essentially below ground.
You're in the shadow of Mount Doom.
Yes.
And it is the home of both my sort of den, where my television is, and my office, where I often work.
I have a space heater, a portable space heater that I carry between those rooms to turn on while I'm working or watching something so that I can stay warm. Now, I just imagine you carrying around a gently pulsing glowing orb at all times.
Is that what a space heater is?
Yeah.
I mean, it's kind of like a dragon's egg if a dragon was a type of alien.
Very good.
Go on.
dragon's egg if a dragon was a type of alien.
Very good.
Go on.
And I, the other day, bought a second space heater so that I could have one space heater in each room and not have to carry the one space heater back and forth, which felt like
the most profligate, luxurious, like captain of industry, gilded age extravagance of my entire life.
I want to be clear too.
It was a $25 space heater.
It is not merely wasteful, Jesse,
but it is a reminder that this is not how the system is supposed to work.
You're supposed to feel warm in your home because of the infrastructure of your home.
Right.
Do you know what I mean?
It's like when you're a moderately famous person on Twitter
and you're having difficulty downloading the Acorn TV app
for all your fine British television
and getting that Series 3 of Detectorists to play,
and you say something about it on Twitter, and Acorn TV reaches out to you directly because you've got something of a
Twitter following and they give you a password to get it done right. And it works. And you're like,
hooray, I get to see my favorite Toby Jones plus Mackenzie Crook in the beautiful series three of
detectorists. But boo, because I only get to do this because I have a number of followers on Twitter.
This is not how the system is supposed to work.
Systems are supposed to work for everyone, not just Hodgman.
Yeah, that's a good point.
I think Bernie Sanders is pretty mad about the fact that I get a second space heater while others have none.
And I got to watch Series 3 of Detectorists while other dum-dums are still getting blank screens on their Apple TV.
Let me say this.
Series 3 Detectorists, I'll take no money
from you. You're great all the time.
Acorn TV, I'll take no
money from you because
you still got to get your act together on the Apple
TV for everybody, not just Hodgman.
But what I have
heard, if you sign up for it via
Amazon, it works fine.
Anyway, thank you for bringing me Detectors Series 3.
Thank you for trying Acorn TV.
Don't want your money.
Everybody, that's my lifestyle update for you.
Jesse Thorne, let's have some justice up in this piece.
Okay, here's something from Jeff.
Somehow Amazon accidentally sent me two pillows I didn't order.
Double buzz for
Amazon! It's my firm
belief that the error was on the company
and I shouldn't have to waste my time or energy
getting in touch with them to try and figure out what
happened. My wife says I stole
the pillows by not trying to return them.
We've brought the issue to friends and I
hate to say it, but most of them side with my wife.
But I just can't let it go.
I stole nothing
you know what i got uh this week jesse what an email an email from a listener
and the listener said as they always do love the podcast thank you very much but and then went on
to complain about something in this case complaining about the fact that I officially prohibit buzz marketing in the courtroom and ask people not to name brand names, but that I sometimes name brand names, such as Acorn TV, Detector Series 3, and now Amazon twice.
And the person said, I think that's unfair, and you should ban it.
You should ban yourself from doing it.
You know what I wrote back to this person
who said I should ban
my own mentioning of brand names?
What's that? My court, my rules.
I don't get money
from Amazon.
Alexa, subscribe to Judge John Hodgman.
That's for my Amazon friends out there. Now,
look. Wait, hold on. Something else here. Alexa, play Huey John Hodgman. That's for my Amazon friends out there. Now, look. Wait, hold on.
Something else here.
Alexa, play Huey Lewis in the news sports.
You know what?
If that happened right now in my Alexa, I wouldn't be so mad.
I haven't heard that album in a long time.
It's great.
Huey Lewis, everybody likes Huey Lewis, unless they're dum-dums.
He's fun.
He just wants to make us all happy and have a good time.
You know what he's got?
Good brows. I thought you were going to say
the power of love. No, he's got the power of love.
And also,
you know what the B-side for the power of love was?
What? Best brows in rock.
So let's see. He's got
the brows, he's got the power
of love, and a surprisingly credible
background in pub rock.
That's exactly so.
And a few dollars in his pocket, courtesy of the Ghostbusters theme song.
Yeah.
All right.
Now listen, let's get back to Jeff.
Jeff, believe me, yeah, it's annoying when people send you stuff that you don't ask for.
It's annoying when people send you stuff that you don't ask for,
whether it's a mailer or a menu or even if it's a thoughtful present.
You know who sends me thoughtful presents is Jesse Thorne.
I love getting his presents.
But I won't lie to you, Jesse.
There's a little bit of homework involved.
I've got to open up the cardboard.
I've got to recycle it.
I've got to process that stuff.
Right.
You know, and I love, I love your presence, but especially if it's something you didn't ask for at all, like two pillows from
Amazon that don't belong to you, that's not on you. That's frustrating. I appreciate that. It's
not your fault. And this is as close as possible, I think, to a victimless crime because probably, I mean, even if you imagine that the people who bought those pillows are poor orphans
living by their wits and nimble fingers pickpocketing on the streets of Burbank or whatever.
And they've somehow scraped together enough Bitcoin or whatever to order two pillows
so that they'll lay their tiny little cold heads on.
And then they didn't get them.
Well, all they did was probably click a different button on Amazon
and say, hey, we didn't get our pillows.
And Amazon figured out, oh, we sent them to the wrong place.
Send them two more pillows. It's all fine.
And Amazon didn't contact you,
even after surely realizing they had sent those pillows to the wrong place.
So no big, right?
Guess what? Two free pillows. Right, Jeff?
Right, Jeff?
Or wrong, Jeff?
Because there are two counter considerations
that your wife has figured out, and I have figured out,
and all of your wife's friends have figured out,
but you haven't yet, so I'm going to tell them to you.
One consideration is moral. Moral dimension. Why not just return them?
Amazon makes it very easy to return stuff, especially if you weren't expecting to get it.
You open it up, you're like, pillows I don't want. Close it up, send it back. It's easy to return
stuff to Amazon unless you've taken the pillows out of the packaging and put your monster head and dander all over them.
Sure, it's a slight inconvenience, but the pillows are not yours.
You know that.
You know that.
Everyone knows that.
I wouldn't be able to lay my head down and sleep at night on stolen pillows.
But even if you are able to, Jeff, because you're not a moral creature,
there's another consideration, a practical consideration.
Amazon knows you have them because Amazon knows everything about you.
Amazon knows where you are right now.
Those orphans called in and said, we didn't get our pillows.
And they're like, oh, looks like Jeff got those.
Send some pillows to the orphans.
Let's keep Jeff's record on file.
Because they know you've received stolen goods and didn't return them.
And I'm not going to say that Amazon is a vengeful entity.
That would be anti-buzz marketing.
I'm also not going to say it because Amazon was an incredibly,
incredibly generous marketer of
Vacationland for me, without me asking. They did incredible stuff for that book.
So thank you, Amazon. I'm just saying to you, Jeff, that maybe the next time you order a pair
of gloves or a copy of Vacationland somewhere in a fulfillment center, a red light will go on
and maybe you won't get those gloves or those Vacation lands or you'll just get a box full of asps, venomous asps. So don't test fate. Get those pillows of, uh, those ill-gained pillows out
of your life. You can't return them now. It's too late. You've already put your head sweat all over
them, but maybe call around and see if, uh, I know I'm not sure that a human shelter for people who
are homeless will take old pillows, but I bet you
an animal shelter would. Call around and see if there's an animal shelter that'll take these
pillows and do yourself and your karma a favor. Here's something from Stacy. Dearest Judge Hodgman,
my husband and I are fans of yours, but you've let me down. Oh, here we go. My husband wrote to
you some time ago about my whistling.
He asked that you order me to stop because he doesn't feel like my whistling skills are up to par.
But you provided no resolution for us.
With this lack of an official ruling, he's forcing his own sense of justice in our household.
He's begun making farting sounds when I whistle to try to drown out my tune.
Please order him to enjoy my whistling. Dearest Judge John Hodgman, I like,
first of all, I enjoy that pandering, but then all of a sudden, all of a sudden, it's another case
against me. People like what they like, and you know what they don't like? Stacey, you're whistling.
Let's listen to it again. Okay, you need to whistle.
Let's listen to it again.
Okay, you need to whistle.
Okay, that's enough.
That's enough.
Okay, case closed.
Wow.
Case closed.
Indeed.
Wow.
Yeah, I remember that case.
And so where is the wife? Because all I heard was a sick bird. No, that was the wife.
Wow. Yeah, I made my ruling on purpose, Stacey, because your whistling is bad.
And this is, you know, this is a sensitive podcast. We try to hear it from all sides,
try to understand why people are doing the things that they're doing.
We try to help them to understand each other.
But that doesn't mean we have no standards.
And sometimes helping someone else means hurting them a little bit by saying,
you're no good at whistling.
And there's no way just because you come back at me with a complaint? Am I going to overturn my own ruling
and order your husband to enjoy something
that not only he doesn't enjoy,
which goes against settled law in this courtroom,
but is intrinsically unenjoyable?
Now, is this rough? Is this hard to hear?
Of course it was.
But it was also hard to hear
when Holly Hunter told William Hurt that his imposter syndrome was absolutely justified and real in broadcast news 1987.
One of the greatest movies of all time. At a moment in cinematic history that I think about probably once a week, when William Hurt, who is the handsome, telegenic television news personality,
who, because he's so handsome and charming and affable, gets promoted to being the anchor at this local news station when he meets Holly Hunter,
being the anchor at this local news station when he meets Holly Hunter,
having been the sportscaster for two weeks,
having never gone to college,
knowing nothing about the news and admitting to her in her hotel room when they're about to hug and kiss.
He's like, I feel like a total fraud.
And she said, everyone does once in a while.
And he goes, no, I never went to college.
I don't write and I don't understand the news.
And Holly Hunter can't flirt with him anymore and says to him something that was so powerful to me when I saw it when I was 16 years
old. She said, I agree with you. You're not qualified. So get qualified. You can insist
on being better prepared. You don't have to leave it with just, eh, I don't write. I'm not schooled.
I don't understand the news I'm reading, but at least I'm upset about it, folks.
What do you want anyway from me? Permission to be a fake? Stop whining. Do something about it.
End quote. Do something about it, Stacey. You want your whistling to be good? That's on you, not on me.
You can't legislate good whistling. Go take a whistling class. Literally Google whistling class.
You will be surprised at the many, many free and paying courses that you can
take locally and online. And based on my research, they work. And pretty soon you're going to be
whistling beautifully. You're going to be whistling, I won't say Dixie. Let's say you'd be whistling
the state song of your state or Commonwealth. This is the sound of a gavel.
you'd be whistling the state song of your state or commonwealth.
This is the sound of a gavel.
That's Roadrunner by Jonathan Richman,
the official rock song of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
in my heart at least.
This is the sound of a real gavel.
Luckily, that was borderline atonal,
so we don't have to worry about ASCAP and BMI coming after us.
Come at me, ASCAP and BMI. I had a physical theater teacher in high school who had been for many years a sort of classy clown, not to be confused with a class clown.
Or murderous clown.
to be confused with a class clown.
Or murderous clown.
Yeah, he was in this thing called Pickle Family Circus,
which was a very big deal in San Francisco in the 70s and 80s mostly, into the 90s, I guess.
And he had performed in many crazy kind of cabaret situations.
And the most crazy situation that he had ever been in
was doing an elaborate clowning routine in the middle of a variety show,
hurting his back very badly so that he almost couldn't walk,
walking offstage into the wings,
and there was one bench on which you could sit or lie down,
and he asked the person there whether he could sit or lie down there because he'd just
been hurt. And the person there was a professional whistler, a man whose thing was he would go out
and do opera arias whistling. And he had played Woodstock in the Peanuts television.
I was just going to say, was he the guy on Peanuts? Because that was some,
I remember seeing a profile of that whistler on like CBS Sunday Morning or something around that time.
Anyway, that guy wouldn't give up the bench.
He wouldn't give up the bench because he also had to rest.
Yeah.
It's called rank.
Professional whistler pulled rank.
Okay, let's take a quick break.
More items on the docket coming up in just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Snoopy, come home.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course,
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket. I'm Jesse Thorne. With me, Judge John Hodgman. Here's something from Scott.
My wife and I will be having twin boys. The problem we bring to you is in regards to the last names of our children. We like to think of ourselves as progressive, but we don't like hyphenated last names. We also don't like the patriarchal tradition of taking
the man's surname. We thought the best solution would be for one child to have my last name and
the other to have my wife's. But we've gotten a lot of pushback on this idea. People generally
think that the children will feel like one parent likes them more or that they'll be teased at
school, but we just don't see it that way.
We think as long as they're loved, all will be fine.
Please inject some sage perspective into our conundrum.
So wait a minute.
So Scott wants to reject the patriarchy, right?
So he doesn't want to give their twin boys his last name.
They don't want to hyphenate the last name,
presumably because it becomes clunky.
And his wife, what is her name?
Is she named in this, or is she just...
No.
Okay, she's of Scott.
Yeah.
Right.
Okay.
So Scott and of Scott are thinking about giving their upcoming twin boys,
soon to be born, different last names.
One being his last name,
the other being hers.
Now, I don't know if they're identical or not.
It doesn't look like we know.
But I think the idea of identical twins especially,
but any twins with different last names
is perversely attractive.
It seems like phase one of an incredible lifelong prank.
I'm into it.
However, your boys' whole lives do not exist for my amusement,
nor do they exist for yours.
And I got to say, I think that this arrangement is going to cause
both logistical and to some degree emotional confusion.
If you've got like, if Jesse and I were twin brothers,
oh, were it only so.
And Jesse's last name was Thorn
and my last name was Hodgman,
but we're brothers.
That doesn't make any sense.
Sorry.
What do you think, Jesse?
Yes or no?
I wonder if they've considered
making up a new name.
That's what my,
I have an aunt.
Right.
Who I love very much named Aunt Gail.
And Gail became what at the time was known as a militant lesbian in the early 1980s.
Right.
Which is to say she was very actively and ideologically feminist at the same time as she came out as a lesbian. And one of the things that she did was change her surname from her maiden name, which was Chase, my grandfather's name, to Dorita, Rita being my grandmother's first name.
And she still has that surname.
And it has worked out exceptionally well for her. That said, we did
once have a situation on Jordan, Jesse go where someone called in and asked us to rename their
family. Uh, when they were being married, we thought of something and then they didn't use it.
Um, so I do have a little bit of saltiness around this. What was the name that you thought
of? Do you recall? I believe we suggested the Rockets. Their surname should be Rocket.
Well, here are the options that I'm going to give to Scott and of Scott, his wife.
One is, I think, Jesse Thorne's very wise suggestion, and one that has definitely happened
before.
It is not a hyphenated name, but sometimes people just combine their names to make a
new name.
My acquaintance, I dare say friend, the very fine playwright David Lindsay-A-Bear.
Lindsay-A-Bear is not hyphenated, but it is both of his and his wife, Chris Lindsay-A-Bear's
names combined. So everything is now just Lindsay-A-Bear. That'sated, but it is both of his and his wife, Chris Lindsay, the bears names combined.
So everything is now just Lindsay, a bear.
That's just the way it is.
That may sound too hyphenated for you.
You can come up with a completely whole new name, uh,
which in, I think based on precedent from Jordan, Jesse go,
if we were to name it, uh, it wouldn't be the rockets.
I think it would be the super podcasts you could be you can name your twin boys john and jesse super podcast that's a good idea
but one option uh that i noticed scott that you didn't even bring up as a possibility mr
sensitive is just giving them your wife's last name. Your solution is to give one boy your wife's
last name and the other boy your last name, because you've still got to get your last name in there.
So let's face it, dude, patriarchy lives on in your house. I would suggest that you give them
your wife's last name and give them your last name as a middle name. And just use all three names
the whole time without a hyphen. Just make it all part of their name, like David Foster Wallace.
Imagine that David Foster Wallace was one set of twins where his mom's last name was Wallace and
his dad's last name was Foster one other possibility that I will allow,
give them your last name as a first name, which is a non-uncommon thing to do. If a woman takes
her husband's name in marriage and they have a child, to give that child the husband's last name,
but as that child's first name, the woman's birth last name, maiden name,
as they say.
And so it would be, what was your militant lesbian aunt's original last name?
Chase.
Chase.
Right.
So her child might be named, for example, Chase Dorita, which is a pretty cool name.
That is a pretty cool name.
And since they're twins, what you can do is,
let's say, Scott, that your last name is,
what's the last name?
Jesse?
Thompson.
Hunsucker?
Yeah, Hunsucker.
That's exactly what I said.
Yeah, and your wife's last name is Smith.
So son one would be named Hunsucker 1 Smith
and son two would be named Hunsucker One Smith, and son two would be named Hunsucker Two Smith.
Those are good names. The point is, I agree with the people who disagree with you.
It will be confusing to give your twin sons different last names. You got to settle on
something, unless your wife is totally in agreement with you on
this and then go do whatever you want. But I really do think of all of these options,
John and Jesse Super Podcast is the way to go.
Speaking of Jesse, we've got something from a listener named Jesse, who is not me.
Oh.
I don't listen.
On Friday evenings, my wife Jenna teaches a body pump class at our local Y.
What if this was from you?
What if you're the secret wife?
I've got to go to the Y for body pump tonight.
Sounds wrong.
It sounds like you have to get something out of your body
or else you'll die.
Frankly, it sounds like something that would have gone down
at the Y in like the early to mid-70s.
This is about an hour of cardio strength exercises.
Okay.
Okay.
After the class, she meets my daughter and me at a casual pizza place for dinner.
We usually grab a quick spot at the bar and often get the same server.
Every time we go, Jenna tells the server and almost everyone she talks to she's very sorry for being sweaty and gross because she just came from the gym.
I believe that while she may be self-conscious, it only draws more unnecessary attention to herself.
Also, she may be in gym clothes and feel this way.
She doesn't smell or look bad or out of place.
By apologizing all the time, I believe it actually makes it more embarrassing for her and us.
I request you order Jenna to stop apologizing for herself when we meet for dinner,
after her gym class
when there is no apparent offense given or taken.
This guy's really enjoying being a dude.
Oh, tell me why.
I didn't get that take.
John, think of all of the male-female romantic couples that exist in your life.
I thought you meant in all time.
Yeah.
I was going to go into this deep fugue state.
I was going to go into a coma for five years as every romantic couple flashed before me.
John Hodgman ascends and becomes a watcher.
Uatu the Watcher.
That is the role that I've decided I would like to take in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
I've given up on MODOK. I'm ready to be Uatu the Watcher. I'm not shaving my
head though, because that would be on the nose. Jesse, go. Imagine all the romantic couples.
So imagine all the romantic couples you know. In how many of them, in what proportion of them
is the man the more socially sensitive. I see what you mean now.
Okay, now secondary question.
In what proportion of them is social cohesion, coherence,
abidance by sometimes unfair social norms,
more expected of the man than the woman?
Good point.
I'm just saying this guy's really
trusting his instincts on this one. Now that you've opened my eyes to this lens that I should
have been looking through the entire time, may I add an observation? Sure. Between men and women,
which one is more likely to disregard the terrible smell of sweat?
to disregard the terrible smell of sweat?
And also, which one is more likely to consider it socially acceptable to arrive at a public establishment in sweaty gym clothes?
Which is more likely to be judged by their appearance by others?
I get your point now, Jesse, and thank you for
helping me confront the patriarchy on my own podcast.
I will say this. It does really hinge, though, on whether Jesse is a reliable narrator when it comes to his wife's stinkiness and appearance.
I mean, if she's sweaty and gross, then she should not be showing up at the restaurant at all.
She should be going and taking a shower before coming there to the restaurant. And if she is not sweaty and gross, legitimately, objectively not sweaty and gross,
if his assessment of her smell and appearance is accurate, then I would say I would agree with him
that there's no reason to introduce the idea of your smell to your server and your fellow diners. Most people don't
care. And this is something that guys, I think, intuit because it's been reinforced throughout
all their lives. But I think that it is a truism across the board. Most people aren't paying as
much attention to you and your smells as much as you worry they are. So long as you're within a reasonable range of socially normal, acceptable smells and looks.
Like you don't smell like, well, you know what I'm talking about.
Body stuff.
And as long as there isn't a sufficient critical mass of somewhat smelly people.
Yeah. A sort of comic con.
And concentrates the accumulated medium odors
into a large odor.
Yeah.
You know, it's like most people aren't noticing
what kind of shoes you're wearing.
Most people aren't, you know,
obviously this is different for men than for women,
but I think it's the case that, you know,
people aren't in general
interrogating your appearance and your smell at the same level that you are yourself.
And there's no reason to introduce the idea of your smelliness since most people, unless
you're really smelly, most people probably are not thinking about it.
And in a restaurant environment, you know, your server and the people around you don't even want to start thinking about it. And in a restaurant environment, your server and the people around you
don't even want to start thinking about your smells because then you get phantom smells.
Just like that time I was sitting in an adult steak restaurant for an adult midday steak meal
with some adult middle-aged dude friends of ours and a bunch of babies came and sat down at the
next table
and even though I'm sure they were perfectly clean babies,
it was so out of context that all I could smell
was diapers for the rest of the meal.
And I've changed a lot of diapers,
but you know what?
They were cute babies.
They were cute babies.
I take it back.
Everything was fine.
It was fun watching those babies eat those huge hunks of steak.
Don't do that.
Don't feed your babies hunks of steak, you guys.
At least order them well.
I mean, in no other circumstance would I recommend that.
But if you're going to feed the steak to the baby,
if it's going to take care of that whole porterhouse,
you should be careful about foodborne disease.
Look, all right, look, I'm going to be honest.
Don't bring your babies to a midtown steakhouse where middle-aged men are meeting to drink a martini in the middle of the day because
they're getting laid off right and left and don't know where their lives are going to go.
I would add to that and just say overall, don't go to midtown unless you have to.
Yeah, that's exactly, good point. Good point. I guess what we're saying is be wary of context.
And Jesse's wife, if Jesse's correct and you don't smell bad, do yourself a favor and don't introduce that as a topic of conversation.
You're probably great.
But on the other hand, what if Jesse's wrong?
What if his wife does smell bad?
What if Jesse's wrong?
What if his wife does smell bad?
I mean, the fact of the matter is, if you're teaching a body pump course, an hour's worth of high cardio exercise,
if after an hour you haven't put some sweat out, I'm not sure you should be getting money from the Y for that.
You should be going harder.
You don't want to be going to the Y and pulling a Bill de Blasio, who I see at the Park Slope Y every morning doing his gentle stretches instead of mayoring.
He's got a long way to stretch.
That's true.
He's a big fella.
He's half giraffe, you know.
Maybe he needs to keep limber.
If his nickname isn't already Stretch.
I think his nickname should be Giraffee.
That's what the Bronx
borough president calls him?
Yeah.
Hey, get in here, giraffe-y. We're playing stickball.
Such rivalries
among the borough presidents.
That was a perfect
Bronx accent. Yeah, that's right.
But Jenna,
if you're teaching your class correctly
and you're getting all sweaty,
then you shouldn't be apologizing even in a casual pizza place.
You should be hitting the showers after.
I go to the showers at the Y now.
It took me a long, many, many years of deep psychological work and trauma to be able to be nude in the locker room
at the Y for me. It's not a comfortable place for me. But now I've gotten used to it. I take
a shower after I work out. I put the sweat out. I shower it off. I get dressed. I listen to the
old men sing doo-wop down there. And added bonus, last week, for the first time in my almost 25 years of living in New York
City, my naked body was seen by the mayor of New York. So that classic rite of passage. So you know
you're finally a real New Yorker, not a New Englander anymore. Yeah, I feel a sense of
liberation and it makes me feel very cosmopolitan as well. It's very important. I mean, I think that's a central to what it means to be not just
a New Yorker, but an American, to have our elected leaders see our bodies in their totality.
That's right. And, you know, I think it was just a coincidence after years of seeing the mayor
at the Y and him sort of like brushing past me and never saying anything, even though I used to be on television sometimes, which it took to be a real affront.
A couple of days after he saw me in the nude, he's walking out.
He goes, hey, buddy.
Finally.
It's a big upgrade.
Finally, I get something out of this guy.
Anyway, to my neighbor, Bill de Blasio, thanks for keeping it real and coming back to the
Park Club Y. It's always a thrill to see you there. To my neighbor, Chris Claremont, the greatest
writer of X-Men of all time, great to see you there at the Y sometimes. We have a good time
at the Y. We take showers there. Maybe I'll take a body pump class sometime. But Jenna, listen,
I got to find in favor of your husband. If you stink, take a shower.
If you don't stink, stop talking about it.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Can I put an addendum on that decision?
Yeah, of course.
The patriarchy, Jenna, is neither your fault nor your responsibility.
We all share that fault and responsibility, especially the dude ones.
Yeah, I'll take that.
I'll wear that cloak of shame.
Unless I'm in the shower in the Y,
then I'm just going to go totally nude.
Let's take a break
and hear about some other great MaxFun shows.
We'll be back in just a second.
I love MaxFun shows.
I want to hear about them.
Yeah.
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.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D
Ah, it'll never
fit. No, it will. Let me try.
If you need a
laugh and you're on the go, try
S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from
MaximumFun.org
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
This week, we're clearing the docket.
I'm Jesse Thorne.
With me, Judge John Hodgman, who you might know from the Park Slope YMCA.
By the way, I'm Jesse Thorne of the South Pasadena YMCA.
Here's something from Megan.
I'm the mom of a family of
sweet, smart introverts.
I don't like alcohol and caffeine makes
me jittery. At a restaurant, I often
order plain water with fresh cut
lemon. I then add a packet of
sugar. It's light, refreshing
and zero calories. Nope, not true.
Nope, there's calories in sugar. Yeah, that. Nope, not true. Nope, there's calories
in sugar. Yeah, that's where they come from.
Yeah, it's like one of their top
places where they keep them.
My husband
and children, ages 13,
15, 26, are
appalled because I'm not paying for
what they refer to as lemonade.
I'd be happy to pay for it,
but these restaurants don't offer zero-calorie
non-caffeinated ice drinks for sale. I don't flaunt my drink, only request more water as needed.
Since they're a bunch of shy introverts, they're afraid I'm somehow cheating, stealing, and or
drawing attention to myself, all equally horrifying. Am I in the right, or am I truly the shame of my
family? First of all, I only half listened to that because coming back from the break when you introduced me as John Hodgman of the Park Slope YMCA, I thought you were going to say John Hodgman of Parks and Rec, referring to my one episode on Parks and Rec when I had five lines.
about a sitcom set in the men's locker room of the Park Slope YMCA,
in which I am the star or co-star,
and it's just an ensemble comedy of nude middle-aged men all the time.
You know what it makes me think of, Judge Hodgman?
No.
A world in which I am castable even on a sitcom casting for NPR hosts.
If you want to be in my locker room, it will be called Locker Room Talk.
And you want to be in my ensemble comedy of nude men, you're in it.
Thank goodness. Because what I see in the locker room at the YMCA is such a variety of male physical weirdness.
Yeah.
That it's really like,
you really get to see a,
the true strangeness of the human body.
And it's reassuring that you're not alone in your strangeness,
which is always great.
And it also gives you so many more reasons to feel apologetic to women.
Now you understand what they've been going through.
Women and anyone, I should say, who occasionally has to hug and kiss a nude man.
That's a lot. to the YMCA, there will always be one 87-year-old man who's wearing slacks and a dress shirt
and slowly turning the wheels on the recumbent stationary bike.
Yeah.
Like that man is so wonderful to me.
I know.
Just on the floor doing curls of dumbbells while wearing wingtips.
Old abused wingtips, his gym wingtips. His gym wingtips.
It's incredible. The personalities. Those guys who are down there.
They truly are. They're singing the doo-wop and they're talking about movies
and they're girlfriends and they're all 50 to 80 years
old. They've seen it all and they don't care what you look
like. That's a great place to be
psychologically for me. Anyway,
sorry, Megan,
here's the deal. First of all, maybe you're
talking about a packet of a
sugar substitute?
I'm going to go ahead and buzz market
it because I don't want to get pushed around by that email guy.
Maybe a Splenda or a Stevia
or a Sweet and Low? Is that
still a thing? Yeah, I think so. But if not, if you're really putting a packet of sugar in there, or a Sweet and Low. Is that still a thing?
Yeah, I think so.
But if not, if you're really putting a packet of sugar in there, that is not zero calories.
That's where calories come from.
So first, that's a little nutritional information break for you.
Check it out.
That's a caloric distillate.
Yeah.
But set that aside. If you are combining complementary water, which I hope is complementary,
aside, if you are combining complementary water, which I hope
is complementary,
complementary lemon
with complementary sugar packets from
the table, you're combining
three complementary things.
That's free for you. That is
fine. Your kids,
ages 13, 15, and
26, quite a spread, Medican.
Well done.
Are just getting on their mom's nerves for their own amusement.
But I will also argue that most restaurants do offer
zero-calorie, non-caffeinated iced drinks for sale
called iced herbal tea or iced mint tea,
which I guess is an herbal tea too.
But I see nothing wrong with combining a little free water
with a little free lemon with a little free Splenda packet
or whatever it is.
You can even put some free salt and pepper in there.
It's all for you.
Enjoy.
But tip your servers.
My friends from New York City, the internet's celebrities,
Dallas and Raffy. Dallas and Giraffy, the mayor of New York City? No, no celebrities, Dallas and Raffi.
Dallas and Giraffi, the mayor of New York City?
No, no, no, no, no.
Oh, I misheard you.
Different guy.
He sang Baby Beluga.
Oh, I apologize.
Yeah, so my friends, Dallas and Raffi, have this thing called Internet Celebrities. a video called Ghetto Big Mac, which is about how to go into the McDonald's and trick them
into serving you a Big Mac while only paying for a cheeseburger or whatever. Through a system of
requesting modifications to your cheeseburger, it somehow magically becomes a Big Mac.
Can I get the sauce on the side? And then can I get two buns?
I don't remember how it works.
Right.
I'm going to watch the video.
This is one of the first instances on the Judge John Hotchman program of me liking someone who's trying to beat the system.
But I don't think she's beating the system.
I think if she's bringing her own packet of sugar or sugar substitute in for this purpose, then she knows she's sneaking.
She's sneaking a thing.
I'm not sure.
I just presume she was taking it off the table.
But if she's sneaking some sugar in, if you know you're sneaking, then you're sneaking.
Think about that.
Oh, wow.
Well, it's like that double pillows creep.
He knows he's sneaking.
Don't pretend you're not sneaking when you're sneaking.
We'll shine the light on you.
Okay, so we had an episode from SF Sketch Fest on the show recently.
And I said that one day my dream, and this is absolutely real, is to name a dog Hambone.
Sure.
I recently met a dog who, by the way, who was half
poodle and half German shepherd. And it looked like a two thirds size Irish wolfhound,
maybe half size Irish wolfhound. It was fantastic dog. Fantastic. And I wanted to name it Hambone
very badly. Well, if you quietly name that dog
Hambone just for yourself, then that's real. Oh, good. Thank you. That's one of the unreleased
chapters in The Secret. If you name a dog inside your head, that becomes its name.
A listener named William wrote in to us about another pet named Hambone.
This is what he had to say.
I wish to present to you my cat, Hamish.
No thank you, I already have two dogs, but I appreciate it.
My sister adopted Hamish, a two-year-old Persian, when she was studying in Australia.
When she brought him home and introduced him to our family,
my loving late grandmother couldn't learn the name Hamish and instead called him Hambone.
Needless to say, it stuck.
He's more frequently called Hambone than by any other name.
Here are some pictures of the cat and one of him with my sister.
He's a real bundle of love.
We'll have those pictures, I presume, on the Judge John Hodgman Instagram.
Jennifer is nodding yes.
Yeah.
Of course they'll be there, Judge John Hodgman Instagram.
But I want to take a look at them with you in a minute.
He looks like a disgruntled old man, but he's one of the most gentle, cuddly cats I've ever known.
He has an Instagram account.
His username is sir underscore Hamish.
If you desire more content of the lovely ham bones, I hope Jesse gets a ham bone of his own one day.
Our thanks to William for that.
I'm going to look at this Instagram.
Yeah, let's take a look.
William.com slash sir underscore Hamish.
Let's see what this dog is, what you're hearing now are the sounds of Jesse Thorne in pure delight responding to photos of a cat named Hamish.
of a cat named Hamish.
If you've been listening to the Judge John Hodgman podcast for a while,
there have been more than one occasion where Jesse Thorne has reacted to the photo of a dog or a cat or other cute animal.
It's one of the greatest delights of the podcast.
And this is John Hodgman here with a special message for you
at the end of March when this podcast will be aired.
We're coming up on MaxFunDrive.
We'll be asking for your donations in the future.
One of the benefits of donating to MaxFun and the Judge John Hodgman podcast is you
get special bonus donor content.
That might be a special episode that no one else gets to hear.
I'm here to promise you right now that we're sending Jennifer Marmer back through the archives
to create a supercut of Jesse Thorne reacting to photos of dogs and cats and will only be available
to donors to the max fund drive coming up this April.
So mark your calendars and get ready to make your pledge.
Cause you don't want to miss out on this.
What are you looking at Jesse?
He's one of the scrumpy face cats,
you know?
Yeah.
And then there's one picture where I presume the lady who wrote Into Us is holding him from behind and sort of lifting him up with his arms up in the air like in sort of like cat jazz hands.
And he looks so mad about it.
He's like, I'm not celebrating anything.
The Jesse Thorne reacts to animals.
Supercut.
I am presuming it's going to be about nine weeks long,
only available as a donor bonus at max fund drive coming up this April.
Well,
that went about as well as it could possibly go.
Thanks.
Oh,
he's in the hibachi.
Maybe I'll just take the credits this time.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
The show is produced by Jennifer Marmer.
Follow us on Twitter.
Jesse's at Jesse Thorne.
I'm at Hodgman, 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, JJHO.
And check out the Maximum Fund subreddit to discuss
this episode. Submit your cases, as always, to MaximumFund.org slash JJHO, or email me,
John Hodgman, directly, Hodgman at MaximumFund.org. What do you got there, Jesse?
Now I'm looking at one. It's the first one on the whole thing. And it's just him staring contemplatively into a hallway mirror.
Like, who have you become?
Thanks very much for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Jesse Thorne, and we'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Listeners all.
Goodbye.
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