Judge John Hodgman - Litter Crime
Episode Date: March 31, 2021Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are in chambers to clear the docket. They discuss the rules of Rock, Paper, Scissors, Appalachian turns of phrase, and cooking. Plus, we seek a ruling from t...he Court's Official Automobile Expert Rhea Butcher. And a new segment: Juvenile Court!Links discussed in this episode:The instagram account for Chanell Crichlow (PitchBlak Brass Band), a Friend of the Court and amazing tuba playerThe live episode of JJHo featuring musical guest Jean Grae singing "Minnie the Moocher," with PitchBlack Brass Band backing her. (Make sure to listen all the way to the end for the impromptu Night Court theme performance!)Rhea Butcher's new album "Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootleg" on A Special Thing recordsListener Dani's twitter account "Trash treasures for community"
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket with the king of Park Slope, Judge John Hodgman.
There's probably quite a few people with a greater claim to that.
Probably Mads Mikkelsen or something lives in Park Slope.
You talking about Hannibal?
Yeah.
You're talking about Casilius?
You're talking about the red bloody teardrop
from Casino Royale?
Yeah, talking about Mads Mikkelsen.
Does he live in Park Slope?
I'm just, I presume that he lives in Park Slope.
It depends, I guess, whether he has kids or not.
Yeah, no, I was going to say there are no kings or queens of Park Slope.
I don't know what rule by children is called.
Do you know what I mean?
I believe it's ruled by giant strollers.
Those are the true kings and queens of Park Slope.
Are those strollers where you're like, is this two strollers taped together?
But it only has one seat.
This isn't like one of those strollers for twins.
Double-decker strollers are very common.
I think maybe it's a Lord of the Flyocracy.
I don't know.
Lord of the Flyarchy?
I'll tell you, anytime I'm in Park Slope, Judge Hodgman, I feel like a king.
You know why?
Because you're wearing a crown.
Yeah, well.
They give it to you at the airport.
It would be rude not to wear it.
It's because somebody will say, like, aren't you Jesse Thorne from NPR?
Yeah, it's true.
And nobody in my neighborhood has ever said that.
Is it bad?
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I know.
But this is my country.
This is where I go to see Brooke Gladstone on the street.
Park Slope, Brooklyn.
Just on my street.
On my street.
A block away.
She lives.
I've never seen Mads Mikkelsen, and it's been years since I've seen Steve Buscemi.
Can I tell you something, though tell you something though that I like
about my neighborhood a lot? What's that? Well, you know, I sit here in my office in Brooklyn and I
face the windows looking out over the backyard of this building and I see all these other,
it's a real rear window type situation. It's a real New York scene. Like I'm Jimmy Stewart in a cast peeping on my neighbors
with a long lens camera. And sometimes I hear snippets of music people are playing. It's very
lovely. Sometimes people get out on the fire escapes and they read a book. It's what you
picture. It's a cinematic picture of New York City to a degree. And I'm a little depressed because earlier today,
someone of my neighbors was playing a sousaphone.
I've heard this person.
That's from what, the Butter Battle book?
No, someone was playing.
Look, can I tell the difference between a sousaphone
and a regular tuba by ear?
Probably not.
But this sounded, this bottom felt
deep. You know what I mean? And I think it was a sousaphone. A Hodgman's Guide to the Orchestra
is what we're doing here. Yeah. And I've heard this person before because one time, I swear,
they were playing the bass line from the theme song to Treme. And I was so excited the TV show Treme starring Rob Brown of Blindspot it was so
like boom boom boom boom boom boom boom boom I was like I was really hoping like they would be
playing it by the time we started recording today so we would have a new character in the
Judge John Hodgemaniverse like you know Susie the sousaphone, instead of Leafy, the leaf blower.
But then they stopped.
But it reminded me how much I miss
our friend Chanel Critchlow
of Pitch Black Brass Band,
who played with us at the Bell House
a couple of times ago,
because she is an incredible
sousaphanist and tuba player,
and she also plays something
called a flugabone.
I have to say, John, the highlight of all these years that I've been doing Judge John Hodgman,
we've been doing this show 12 years or something like that. I'm always glad to see my friend John.
I'm always glad at funny things that happen on the show. But truly the highlight of the entire run
of this program for me was that time when I saw the Pitch Black Brass Band huddled
backstage around a phone playing a YouTube video, but I couldn't tell what it was.
And then in the next song break on our live show in Brooklyn, they came out on stage and
spontaneously played the theme from Night Court.
They had learned it between shows.
They had learned it.
They did a song.
They did a song.
It was within the same show, John.
It wasn't even between shows.
Oh, really?
It was they did a song at the top of the show, you know, 15% in.
Right.
And then we went back on stage.
And while we were on stage, they were backstage learning the theme from Night Court
because we had mentioned the theme from Night Court.
Then they came out and performed the theme from Night Court, which goes hard.
The theme from Night Court is great in and of itself.
Right.
Get a really heavy brass band playing it.
It blew the house down.
Yeah.
It was spectacular.
You don't even know.
Until you've had someone play a sousaphone right in front of you at your stomach. You've not lived. You've not lived. I had never heard Jean sing, and she is a wonderful singer. Not that I should be surprised.
Her mother was a brilliantly gifted jazz singer who was discovered by Duke Ellington and recorded with Duke Ellington.
But she is a wonderful singer, which I had no idea of.
She came out and, again, blew the house down.
Anyway, we should just spend some justice.
Luckily, Jesse, we have Zoom now,
so we don't need to do live performance anymore
in the United States, the world, for the rest of time.
No, it'll come back.
It'll come back, everybody.
We're going to get back there.
And until then, if you want to check out some really good tuba, sousaphone, and flugelbone content and find out what a flugelbone is, Pitchback Brass Band, they've dispersed.
They're all doing solo projects.
But go check out Chanel at tubafresh on Instagram.
Check out her reels.
It's incredible.
We're going to get back on the road, John.
This is my promise to the Judge John Hodgman audience.
Right.
Because this is my one remaining life's
goal. We will return to Toronto, Ontario, Canada before they detonate the Rogers Center, aka the
Sky Dome, because I want to stay in the hotel in the Sky Dome. That's right. That's my only goal
in life. I just want to be in the hotel in in the Sky Dome, and I need one of the
rooms where you can see the field in the Sky Dome when the lights are on. I think you should be
there as long as they will guarantee your safety. I would like you to be there as they demolish it.
I want you up there in the hotel room, in the penthouse, wearing your crown as the Sky Dome collapses beneath you, and I want you to just surf the demolition
all the way down to home plate in your crown.
You know what?
They don't even have to guarantee my safety, John.
They don't even have to guarantee my safety
if there is a giant wave of pieces of the Sky Dome,
you know, a tsunami of memories of Joe Carter's legendary home run or
the time Jose Canseco hit a ball into the upper deck. I will surf upon that wave like I was
Bodie from Point Break and that is how I will go out, just like Bodie. He wouldn't let the FBI
catch him. He just went and caught the biggest, spoiler alert for Point Break,
he just went out and caught the biggest break he could find and died out there on the water.
Pointed at it.
That's why it's called that.
I pointed that break.
He let the ocean take him and I will let the skydome take me.
I never saw that.
Okay.
I never saw that.
Let's get into the justice.
Here is a case from Hannah.
Recently, one of our two cats committed a litter crime and left an unburied stink in the bedroom litter box.
Are litter crimes real crimes?
It's like mind crimes.
Okay.
Recently, one of our two cats committed a litter crime and left an unburied stink in the bedroom litter box.
My husband suggested we play rock, paper, scissors to determine who had to bury the offending mess.
I agreed, and he stated whoever gets best two out of three wins.
After two draws and a win, I declared victory.
My husband chafed at this and said that draws don't count.
After a brief argument, he agreed that I was right
and he should have been more specific when setting terms.
Later, when we relayed this story to friends,
they took his side, stating that best two out of three
implies that one person must win at least twice
before victory is declared.
Was I right to declare myself the winner
after one win and two draws?
Thank you, Judge.
Loved the show.
And I loved Dicktown.
Dicktown.
The television program co-created by Judge John Hodgman.
And David Reese, bit.ly slash Dicktown.
Thank you, Hannah, for mentioning the show and attempting to bribe this judge with flattery and praise and plugs. I appreciate that.
But I must resist your bribe and look at this with clear eyes.
Yeah, because you didn't mention IFC's The Grid, the show that I hosted in 2009.
That's right. You got to bribe both the bailiff and the judge.
Yeah.
And also, I got to be clear-eyed and firm when
it comes to litter crime litter crime one of the great phrases and one of the great mysteries
how often is your cat not burying its offending stink it's pretty common behavior for cats
there are a lot of mysteries here in this one.
We need a real litter criminologist to dig into what's, so to speak, to dig into what's happening in this litter box.
And how this cat's humans are reacting to it.
reacting to it. I mean, Hannah, my solution would be if our cat Lolo, the dumb, dumb cat,
you know, had a, an offending mess in the litter box that was, you know, smellable,
do what, do what I do. Ignore it for several weeks until it stops smelling.
An alternative would be to just cover it up. Just go and scoop the litter box real quick.
But somehow this turned into a rock, paper, scissors game.
And I have to say, Jesse, you play rock, paper, scissors?
No, but I play a little bit of Rochambeau. What's Rochambeau? rock, paper, scissors? No, but I'll play a little bit of Rochambeau.
What's Rochambeau? Rock, paper, scissors. Is it really? Yeah, but you say Rochambeau instead of rock, paper, scissors. And are the hands, it's still a rock and paper and scissors?
Yeah, it's a regional thing, I think. I have never heard this before. And you know I love regionalisms.
Thank you, Jesse.
You're welcome.
I'll put it in my book of regionalisms.
That's what it's called east of the Mississippi.
West of the Mississippi, it's called Best Foods.
Carl's Jr.
Yeah.
In any case, when you play Rochambeau or any sort of tournée,
When you play Rochambeau or any sort of tournee and it's a best two out of three, what does that mean to you?
You have to win two.
You have to win two.
You have to win two.
This is obvious, right?
Absolutely.
What is happening here, Hannah?
Hannah's weaseling. Hannah is weaseling. And clearly Hannah is an effective self-advocate.
And that this has gone on for a long time.
Because after she clearly did not win the two out of three and declared victory on two draws and one win.
And her husband chafed.
That's a fair chafe. That's obviously a fair chafe.
Everyone knows you got to win two out of three. That's why it's called two out of three.
But then a brief argument ensued and then he agreed that you were right, Hannah.
What is going on in your relationship that you are able to force him into agreement to something that is obviously untrue. He should have been more specific when setting terms. Boy, oh boy, the psychological
power you have over this guy. It's very, very, very intense and deserves some interrogation
on your part. No wonder your friends agreed with your husband best two out of three implies that
one person must win at least twice four victories declared oh so what i would say is talk to your
vet to make sure there's no problem with your cat not burying its poops or uh talk to sarah
our friend who is the uh the the cat groomer and cat behavior expert up there in Toronto,
Canada at Cleopatra Cat Services. Cleopatra.ca. Just to make sure everything's going okay there.
And then I would talk to your husband and you guys should have a conversation about
why it was so easy for you to trick him into believing that you were right about something that you were very wrong about.
This is of concern to me.
Here's something from Julie.
I did not know I was from Appalachia until my now spouse told me I was.
I thought I was from the East Coast, which you'll probably find laughable when you find out that I'm from Uniontown, Pennsylvania, 10 miles from the West Virginia border.
My spouse, Will, is a graduate of the judge's alma mater.
We should explain for people who don't know that Judge Hodgman went to DeVry Technical Institute and knows the East Coast.
One of Will's favorite activities is to comment when my hick ways are showing.
Long ago, I thought I had rid myself of all my Southwestern Pennsylvania-isms, like saying,
my clothes need washed. But there is one which may remain. Please issue a judgment on whether
it's correct to say, I never ate a tomato until I was 19 years old. Will is convinced this is a holdout Appalachism.
He says, if you've never eaten a tomato, you have never eaten a tomato,
and that fact cannot be changed by eating a tomato later.
Whoa.
Is it better to say I had not eaten a tomato until I was 19 years old?
Two questions here, John.
Yeah.
One is, is it correct? One is, is it better?
I think it comes down to correctness, right? Is it correct? Is it more correct to say I had not
eaten a tomato until I was 19 years old? Is Julie incorrect to say I never ate a tomato until I was
19 years old? Now you said that I went to DeVry Technical College because you're making a little joke
at my stuffy Ivy League expense.
Because, of course, I went to Yale University,
a four-year accredited college in Southern Connecticut.
And I guess that Will did too.
And I have to say,
I never disliked a fellow Yale grad until today.
disliked a fellow Yale grad until today.
Okay, look, I know Julie a little bit. We've
exchanged emails from time to time about a lot of different things.
I know
she is a wonderful person.
I trust that her husband is as well.
I know that they will take this in good spirit.
Hick
is a classist
slur. Please don't use that term. And please don't internalize it, Julie.
There is zero wrong with your having grown up in Uniontown, Pennsylvania. And there is zero reason
for you to feel scrutinized by your yearly husband for the things that you grew up saying.
I'm a fan of regionalisms.
You know what I mean?
I mean, that's what we call them here in New England,
the region of New England that is the southeastern part of Canada.
Saying my clothes need washed is cool.
That's really good.
That's great.
That's really fun.
I'm really into that.
I might could start saying that now.
Yeah. I never said it before today. You know, I understand what Will is getting at and perhaps grammatically he has a point, but it took me on multiple readings of the two different phrases
to discern what the difference was between I never ate a
tomato until I was 19 and I had not eaten a tomato until I was 19. There is, I guess,
a grammatical difference, but I never ate a tomato until I was 19 sounds extremely natural.
It's obviously colloquial. It's perfectly understandable. And there's no reason to
split this hair. If you're both, you know, just kind of like word and grammar and usage nerds, I guess it could be fun to debate.
But I do take issue when grammar is used as a cudgel or to point out a lack of education or to make someone else feel self-conscious about the way they express
themselves because it's it's gross will sorry and the thing that happens when you're so busy
correcting someone else's grammar is you're missing what they are saying which the which
is that they never ate a tomato until they were 19 years old that's an incredible story
that's a story there's a lot going on in there they're like well
wow why not why didn't you what what was going on in your life you didn't eat tomatoes till you're
19 was it a cultural thing is it a regional thing what were you growing up like what was it like
when you first ate a tomato what was it like when you what did it taste like when you finally ate it
why didn't you call it a tomato by the way way? So, you know, listen to what people are
saying when they're saying their things. And don't get so hung up on trying to scrub someone's
Appalachisms out of them. Because regionalism in language is one of the things that makes language
fun and expressive. You know, sometimes I say on this show, probably instead of probably,
or probably. And I had someone write in in and thank you, listener, for listening.
But they're like, I notice you doing this.
And I suspect that it's probably it's sorry.
And I suspect that it's probably you resisting the fanciness of your Yale education.
It's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
This is me imitating my wife who grew up saying prolly.
Because she grew up in Atlanta.
I don't know why she says prolly.
I just like the way it sounds.
I mean, you have to be careful when you adopt different regionalisms too,
because you don't want to be inappropriately culturally appropriative, right?
But what you really want to do when people are talking is not listening to how they're saying
it, but listening to what they're saying. And I say you should go ahead and say, I never ate a
tomato until I was 19. I think you should say, I never ate a tomato until I was 19 years old.
Et. E-T. Don't let Will push you out of that one, because et. E-T, that's a playable scrabble word.
You go get him.
Go get him, Julie.
Do you think we have Judge John Hodgman listeners who have never eaten a tomato?
Of course.
I mean, we have at least a few listeners who live in Europe before tomatoes were introduced from the New World.
introduced from the new world. But leaving those people aside, pre-Cortez people,
do you think we have listeners who have never eaten a tomato? Yes. I know for a fact, because I am now routinely getting emails from eight-year-olds
and 11 and a half-year-olds, that statistically speaking, there are probably some, as advanced
and sophisticated as they are
to write me beseeching letters on email, on email of all things. They're not coming at me via TikTok.
They're like 35-year-olds. I'll send an email to Judge John Hodgman, and they're eight,
11 years old. We'll hear from them later. But statistically speaking, I bet even though
they're very, very sophisticated in terms of their correspondence, even old fogey-ish,
probably a bunch of them haven't eaten a bunch of foods because, you know.
What about an adult? Do you think there are adults who listen to our show who have never
eaten a tomato? Of course. Of course. If you've never eaten a tomato, email hodgman at maximum
fun.org. Whoa, how dare you? Tell us how old you are. How dare you? Why you've never eaten a tomato, email hodgman at maximumfun.org. Whoa, how dare you? Tell us how old you are.
How dare you?
Why you've never eaten a tomato.
You're basically opening the floodgates.
All right.
You can tell us if you've, there's two categories here.
One is I've never eaten a tomato product.
So that includes pizza sauce, pasta sauce, and ketchup, I think are going to be your
top categories where they're coming up for people.
And then secondarily, I've never eaten a piece of tomato, a whole piece of tomato in some context, like a green salad.
Yeah.
Look, if you're going to open this door, I do want to be perfectly clear.
we are we are asking about have you ever at a slice of tomato either on its own or on a sandwich i don't want to be hearing about as jesse was saying barbecue sauce or ketchup or whatever
you know what i mean that's the point you know what i mean and i will open the flood i would
open these floodgates even further make it any. If there's a common food that you have not that you did not eat until later in your life that is surprising to people. Tell me about it. I'd like to know your story with it.
We're going to take a quick break to hear from this week's partner. We'll be back with more cases to clear from the docket on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
How am I already getting emails on this? We haven't even posted this yet.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week. We have a
case here from Teresa. My partner will frequently flash his headlights at cars who are changing
lanes ahead of him. Then he becomes angry when they cut him off.
He believes he is communicating to other drivers,
don't go, I'm driving here.
That's a 1978 New York movie.
Hey, I'm driving here.
Don't go, I'm driving here.
He also flashes his headlights at people who are waiting to pull out of driveways
or roads, and this causes great confusion. But I was raised by a trucker who taught me the etiquette
of flashing headlights means you go or you're clear to change lanes. We have discussed this
with many people, and nearly everyone agrees with me. The one glaring exception is our friend who
is originally from Argentina.
I am from the great Commonwealth of Massachusetts, which maybe is in Argentina. I don't know where
that is. And my partner is from Colorado. Is it possible that there are regional differences
within the US as well? Jesse, do you know one of the funnest things I ever found out
from Wikipedia was? I don't know. Because I've looked up the etiquette
of flashing headlights before. Because it is fairly mysterious.
Because it's hard to know what the person means.
And I learned from Wikipedia that certain car
manufacturers in their manuals for the cars refer
to this as using the optical horn.
My optical horn is just a beam of light that emanates from the center of my forehead.
I know.
The sad thing about it is when you come to Park Slope, your crown covers it up. But here, it is mysterious because it is not fully agreed upon what flashing headlights indicates.
And I was very interested in this letter because I was in Argentina when I was 20 years old.
You can read about how I scammed money from the Yale Spanish department to go to Buenos Aires to walk around and have deep thoughts.
Feel guilty about it for the rest of my life.
In my book medallion status.
And one thing I noticed there was that taxi cabs would flash their high beams to tell you to get out of their way.
And that's because the streets were very narrow and they would come barreling down them.
And I don't think that they had stop signs.
So they were flashing those lights
to create a visual cue that someone is coming.
Be careful.
And I gathered from this Wikipedia page
that this is true also in other countries
like the Philippines and Bangladesh. But on the
East Coast, it definitely means you go ahead unless you're flashing your lights behind someone
in the left lane, the passing lane, and you're a jerk and you're telling them you're going too
slow. I want to go faster. Get out of my way. But those are the two possible meanings in the East
Coast, at least as far as I
know, now I know that you're a West Coast driver. We have, we're glad to say, in the Judge John
Hodge maniverse, an automobile expert, our friend, the comedian and car expert, Rhea Butcher,
we've had on the show to talk about car talk before. And they are both a Los Angelino and an Ohioan.
So I asked them for their thoughts on this dispute, and here's what they said.
Hey, John and Jesse, Rhea Butcher here. Thank you so much for considering me for this ruling. I
am honored to bring this ruling to Judge John Hododgman uh for me flashing high beams primarily
serves to let a driver know their lights aren't on at night that is what i was taught that is my
first meaning of flashing high beams my secondary meanings uh meaning the ones i've learned after
and continue to use are to go ahead at an intersection and then also to let oncoming drivers on a freeway situation
know that highway patrol or police are up ahead with radar guns in their direction and you should
slow down. This is the most stealthy definition and as such the most rewarding. This is the one
I like to use the most and as always ACAP. But in regards to the complaint, I think this man honestly just has to realize that
his use of his high beams, where he currently lives, is actually causing more damage and
confusion than good. I have no idea if it's regional, but we'll say that I think most uses
of high beams, horns, all these little intricacies, which I thoroughly enjoy, tend to be incredibly regional.
But he now doesn't live in the region that he used to live. And honestly, it doesn't really
matter to me. He is using his high beams in situations where a horn honk is much more
appropriate, i.e. someone backing out, something like that. We have blinkers to signal turns and
brakes to signal stops, but there are no signals to single I'm
going because the going itself is the signal. So my ruling is this man's use of the high beams is
causing confusion on the roadway and he must adjust to his new surroundings and his use of
high beams. If he must use anything, it needs to be the horn and that should be used as sparingly as possible. Nobody likes a horn.
Yeah, nobody likes a horn. Horn, right, Jesse?
My experience, John, comports with Ria's. As an Angeleno originally from the San Francisco Bay
Area, a lifelong Californian, I would say the place where this comes up the most
is when someone's lights aren't on at dusk or at night.
Right.
Which happens a lot in Los Angeles.
I don't know why it happens so much more in Los Angeles than it did when I was driving in Northern California, but it is astonishing.
I know why.
Do you want to know why?
Almost all cars have automatic headlights at this point.
I don't know how it's possible that so many people
have their lights off at dusk and at night. I know. I either forget to turn them on because
they're listening to podcasts. There you go. But I would say besides that, the situations in my life
where this has come up most frequently are there's a jerk tailgating me who's mad that I'm going 10 miles over the speed limit and not faster.
Right.
And occasionally someone who is trying to get my attention to indicate something unusual.
So I don't think I would expect that if someone flashed their lights at me, I would immediately pull out in front of them.
Right.
From my driveway, for example.
But if they flashed their lights at me, I saw that, and then they gave me a little wave
or slowed to a stop or something like that, I would know they were gathering my attention
to suggest that I could do something.
It's an attention getter.
And the problem is no one knows
what you're trying to draw attention to.
There are so many different little customs
that might vary from region to region, place to place.
And as with all of driving,
if you don't know, stop moving.
Like if you don't know what's happening, slow down.
And, you know, Teresa, I would say, I don't want to say that your partner is just a jerk. He's a dangerous jerk because his presumption
is I am letting the world know I am keeping going no matter what. And my intentions are more
important than theirs. And they should know better because they see my lights and therefore I'm going to put myself and others into danger all the time
since my presumption is I go, not you.
Teresa's partner, I hope you take this in the same spirit
with which I destroyed Will the Yalie earlier.
I know you probably don't mean to be a jerk,
but when you are putting other people at danger
because you are using and interpreting an ambiguous signal differently than most people are,
but mostly just thinking you have priority to move over others, you need to rethink your driving.
When you don't know what's happening, whether lights are flashing that you are not, slow down.
And if you want to be a jerk about it, like say you're in that left lane and Jesse's driving too slow
and you want to let him know you want to pass him because you're a jerk who's more important than him, don't flash.
I don't even care that I have a license plate frame that says super dad.
I know, like you want super dad to get out of your way.
Okay.
Sometimes you got to be a jerk in life.
Just like my friend,
Jess Moss's mom told me when she kicked us out of the,
out of the apartment that we were house sitting in.
Cause she wanted to use it.
I know it's wrong,
but I'm doing it anyway.
Sometimes if you have to be a jerk,
don't,
don't be an ambiguous jerk by flashing your lights own it
honk your horn that is that is vehicular jerkism at its finest horn honking honk your horn if you
need to yell at someone that's what it's there for if you need to yell at someone or warn someone
that you're there flashing your lights is not only ambiguous in terms of all this regionalism, a lot of
people just won't see it.
So if you're a jerk, own it.
If you're a horn honker, honk it.
Release your horn like the mighty goose.
Rhea Butcher, by the way, is one of the great comics and podcasters and people of all over the place.
Real rules.
They have a new album out called Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootleg.
That's available now on a special thing.
And you can follow Rhea at Rhea Butcher on Twitter.
That's at sign R-H-E-A-B-U-T-C-H-E-R.
Thank you, Rhea.
Yeah, they're one of the coolest and the funniest.
Here's something from Shiloh.
I'd like to bring a case against my mother-in-law, Julie.
She claims making nachos cannot be considered cooking because of the low level of skill and effort involved in preparing the dish.
Yet she will attest that a dish like ceviche can be considered cooking because it
requires more skill to put together. My husband, Steve, and I think both are cooking since they
both require combining different ingredients together to form one dish. Despite our argument,
she refuses to accept making nachos as cooking. If you find it my favor, I would ask you to demand she acknowledge that preparing nachos is cooking.
Mm.
Mm.
Jesse, you make nachos?
Sure.
What's your nacho game?
I like a pretty simple nacho.
Tell me.
I'm talking about refried beans, chips, cheese, and then, you know,
sometimes I will top it with a little something extra.
We're talking about maybe some green onions, aka scallions. We're talking about maybe a little
salsa fresco or whatever kind of salsa is around the house. Usually a salsa verde is what I would
keep around the house. And then maybe some avocado or some guacamole if that's around.
That's like super nachos, nachos supreme.
Nachos supreme have meat, John.
Oh, excuse me.
I apologize.
Yeah.
I am not from the Bay Area, a region of the western United States.
Super nachos have meat, John, and burritos do not have lettuce in them.
Let me ask you a question.
When you're doing your basic nachos, refries, chips, cheese, right?
What's your, I mean, genuinely, I'm not asking you to prove a point.
I want to know, how do you do it?
I cook them in my countertop oven.
Right.
And I set it to a medium baking temperature, 350 or something like that,
and wait for the cheese to melt, at which time,
if I've layered the beans correctly, the beans are warmed through.
That's the thing.
You've got to layer.
And some of the chips brown a little.
You put down a layer of chips and a layer of beans.
Then what?
Yeah.
Layer of chips?
I'm, no, I'm mostly just working on spreading out the beans.
That's because the beans will glop if you're not spreading them out.
I see Jennifer Marmer's nodding.
Yeah, she hates glops.
Yeah, she's very anti-glop.
But you said something very interesting.
You say you cook them in your countertop oven.
That's true.
Is nachos cooking?
I mean, I think applying heat and transforming the food are two elements of cooking.
I think ceviche-
Go on.
I know where you're going.
Go on.
I know where you're going.
Involves a substitute for heat, which is the transformation that the acid produces in the fish.
Jesse, are you talking about denaturation of proteins?
Yeah.
Yes.
Sure.
Sure, J. Kenji Lopez Alt.
Love you, Kenji, but I can read a thing too.
Yeah.
Yeah, ceviche, there is a chemical change to the proteins in the fish.
When you add all that lime juice and lemon juice, it is chemically cooking.
It is doing the same things to the proteins, denaturation, you can look it up.
That is what heat is doing to a protein in protein food when you're cooking it,
when you're heating it, when you're hotting it, as I like to say.
What else is cooking? What else isn't cooking?
I think it's a stretch to say that making a smoothie or making a green salad are cooking.
It's assembling, right?
Yeah, that's more of an assembling. I think the transformation element is key, and I think the heat is central to it.
But if somebody, that said, if somebody said to me they were cooking and they made a salad,
I wouldn't be mad about it. Yeah. I don't know what's going on with your mother-in-law Shiloh
that she needs to make this very, very small bore distinction. What's going on here, Jesse? I think that Shiloh's mother-in-law
is proud of her cooking and judgmental of Shiloh's. It could be. I mean, here's the thing.
So I have to say that even though this is a hair split and kind of an annoying one,
a hair split and kind of an annoying one.
I have to say that I kind of side with Julie, the mother-in-law.
Really?
Yeah, I kind of do.
You don't think nachos are cooking?
Well, is hotting up something cooking?
Yes.
You're melting cheese.
Is that enough of a transformation?
You're melting the cheese. You're browning the chips. True. You're heating cheese. Is that enough of a transformation? You're melting the cheese.
You're browning the chips.
True.
You're heating the beans.
I know.
If you heat the beans, I guess it's cooking.
I mean, I get the distinction that she's making. And I appreciate better now that you've articulated it this way, Jesse, that it may be that she's proud of her cooking and nachos seems like easy trash food.
But I will say this, maybe the problem is that Steve and Shiloh, when they make nachos,
they're making trash nachos. Because nachos, whether you call them cooking or not,
they're an art form. They're easy to get wrong. They're difficult to get right. There's a balance.
I mean, you know, you've got to be spreading the beans or else you get the glob.
You've got to be layering the chips and the cheese in a careful way so that you get all of the stuff or as much of the flavor combination as you can in one chip rather than just 17 dry chips and one that has a whole bunch of cheese on it, right?
That's true.
There is art to it.
And I would say that whether or not you technically call it cooking or not,
and Jesse, by the way, thank you, my bill, if you have swayed me, it's cooking.
I find in favor of Steve and Shiloh.
But whether you call it cooking or not, there is an artistry to it. And I think, you know, as equal an artistry as there is to making ceviche, which I have never done, but I'm going to give it a try.
I want to give a shout out to my favorite nachos, John.
Please.
I grew up eating relatively complicated super nachos at El Toro Taqueria on Valencia Street in San Francisco.
But my current favorite nachos are garbage nachos. I live in a neighborhood adjacent to
a neighborhood in Los Angeles called Lincoln Heights. And there in Lincoln Heights,
there is a place called Carnitas Mishwakan. And at Carnitas Mishwa Khan, they make nachos with tortilla chips, pickled sliced jalapenos.
So far, I'm describing ballpark nachos.
Okay.
Your choice of meat.
Right.
Carne asada, al pastor, whatever.
And cheese sauce.
That cheese sauce.
And it is so good. The cheese sauce really. And it is so good.
The cheese sauce really is.
It is so good.
That really, yeah.
Because, I mean, I see what you're saying.
And I want to be clear.
This isn't some Tex-Mex, queso, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
This is cheese sauce.
Yeah.
Right.
Let me also be clear that when I say that,
you know, there is garbage nachos in the world,
I'm not saying that you need fancy ingredients
to make good nachos.
I'm not that much of a Yale-y snob.
What I'm saying is that there's a skill level
to combining the ingredients, whatever they are,
such that they are satisfying and good versus
junk. And I would agree with you, Jesse, that if like the nachos that you get,
if we ever go back to the movie theater, like movie theater nachos, which are, you know,
they're just a paper tray full of chips from a bag doused in cheese whiz. They have their place,
but that's not cooking.
I would not call that cooking.
John, what about Danchos?
Those are the nachos that my college friend Dan Grayson used to make in his dorm room,
which were just chips with cheese on top of them microwaved.
Cooking.
The cheese is transformed.
The cheese is transformed. The cheese is transformed.
I'm not sure.
If you just heat it and there's no transformation, I'm not sure.
I'm not sure what's happening there.
Yeah, if there's no transformation.
But if there's browning or transformation, I think, to me.
Let's take a break.
When we come back, we hear again from Rooney, the eight-year-old with an email address,
plus 11-and-a-half-year-old Z an email address, plus 11 and a half-year-old Zola
in a new segment we call Juvenile Court. 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.
Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
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.
We promised juvenile court, John.
Yeah, Jesse, and I'll explain juvenile court in a second,
but just one quick warning to anybody who's about to go out there and make ceviche or you know do yourself a favor don't squeeze limes in the sunshine don't squeeze don't get lime juice on your hands in the bright glaring
sun because a chemical transformation will occur and you will get a perhaps terrible inflamed sunburn just like jonathan colton did
denaturation my friends wow insider info now yes earlier we were talking about rooney who wrote in
last week on their own email address eight years old to bring a case against their dad who didn't
want them to make their own avocado toast.
And I was a little unnerved by an eight-year-old with an email address because eight-year-olds
shouldn't be writing to 50-year-old podcast hosts.
Live and play in the sun.
That said, I do know that we have a lot of listeners uh who are young and and i'm really
glad that they listen on their own or with their families they're they're kids who have disputes
kids are humans with agency who deserve to have have disputes in the world and and see them
settled i can't open the doors of our court to eight-year-old live litigants.
That's just not where we're going to go.
That's a different kind of show.
But if you're a kid who's got a dispute-
Specifically, that's our sister show, Dr. Game Show.
They would open any door to any eight-year-old and be thrilled.
I absolutely-
It's a great show.
Absolutely.
But if you're a kid and you've got
a dispute you deserve to be heard so go get your go get your email or your quill and your parchment
you can write me a letter pull your parchment out of your briefcase judge john hodgman listening
eight-year-olds pull your parchment out of your briefcase judge john h Hodgman, who was an eight-year-old.
If you can take a moment away from watching Taxi.
Yes. Go ahead. And from time to time, we will deliver you justice. So what's the first one we got on the docket?
docket. Here's a case from Zola, who is 11 and a half. I, Zola, child of Fred and Ashley,
am an animal lover and would like to add a new creature to my collection. Currently, I have two guinea pigs, two rats, and a tank full of fish. We also have two family dogs.
I have done my research and feel that a Madagascar hissing cockroach is the best option for my next critter friend.
My parents disagree.
I need help convincing them this is an easy to care for, harmless creature with a short lifespan and a good option for me.
Thank you, Zola.
Jesse.
Yeah.
You have two dogs.
Yeah. And, of course, Finney as well.
Don't forget Finney the fish.
I did forget Finney the fish.
Yeah, Finney's a bit of an afterthought.
I'm going to be honest.
I feel like I never knew about Finney the fish.
Finney's a beauty.
Swims around in that little tank of his, shows off those fins. Oh, is that why he's named Finney the Fish. Finney's a beauty. Swims around in that little tank of his, shows off those fins.
Oh, is that why he's named Finney?
No, he's named after Albert Finney.
My son is just a really big Albert Finney fan.
Loves Cassavetes movies.
Let the record show, as great an editor as Jennifer Marmer is, there was no editing in
Jesse Thorne's response.
He went right to Albert Finney.
There was no, hang on, let me think of a good joke for this.
There was no, even a pause.
It's one of the greatest, fastest replies of all time.
Thank you, Jesse, for being so funny and great.
All right, Madagascar hissing cockroach this is something
that i would imagine could give some parents some pause because you got you got a couple of words
in there that are red flags for most people who live in the united states especially in cities
cockroach and hissing yeah uh i think most people have nothing but positive associations
with madagascar sure there's absolutely charming animated films right uh unique flora and fauna
of a beautiful island nation yeah and well known for their hissing cockroaches
you know like it's at least at least it's not trying to hide anything.
The Madagascar hissing cockroach, right?
It's right there in the name.
It's just doing its thing.
It's not like it's going to surprise you with the hissing.
Me?
I'm just a Madagascar cockroach.
Of course.
Adopt me.
I'm the best.
Yeah.
I'm one of those Madagascar silent cockroaches.
Yeah.
Whoa.
Curveball.
Right.
Exactly.
You know, at least it is not going to take you
by surprise when the hissing starts that's good it's good to know but i can understand why there's
some pause i happen to know someone who has not one not two but a couple dozen of madagascar hissing
cockroaches as you may know as you well know j, because you've been a guest on my very occasional
Instagram live show, Get Your Pets,
where I interview people's cats and dogs and other pets.
I have a guest, a frequent guest who comes on
from time to time named Danny.
She lives in Pittsburgh, what she calls hell with the lid off.
She has a job job which is incredible which is she and and a crew of other volunteers go out and clean up illegal dumping
sites where people just dumped trash illegally uh and then she gathers interesting stuff that
she finds from like just weird interesting antiques and junky things and signs and stuff that she finds in these illegal dumping sites.
And then she posts them on Twitter and you can buy them and the money goes to good social causes there in Pittsburgh.
I'll give you the link for that in a little bit.
But Danny does all of that.
Plus has a turtle named Hayden, a rabbit named Ampersand, and all of these hissing cockroaches.
And I asked Danny whether this, you know, it's like a hissing cockroach.
Is this a good pet for an 11 and a half year old based on your experience?
And here's what Danny wrote back.
Zola sounds like an awesome person with a great menagerie.
I'll remind you.
Two guinea pigs, two rats, tank full of fish.
Already sort of a William Randolph Hearst situation.
Yeah, it's a zoo in there. Danny goes on to say, I can confirm that Madagascar hissing cockroaches are excellent low maintenance pets. They're gentle, easy to care for, will not be a permanent part of your menagerie
if you get just one.
If you get more than one,
you will have cockroaches in your life forever and ever.
So fair warning.
I feed my roaches fish flakes, compost scraps,
and a product called Fluker's Orange Cube Complete Cricket Diet.
Okay, now we have to get one of these things.
Yeah, exactly.
Now we have a...
Because otherwise, this Fluker's Orange Cube
that I've already ordered is going to go to waste.
I ordered the moment I heard the phrase
Fluker's Orange Cube.
You ordered one?
You paid money for it?
My phone was out the second you got to Kers, and it was hitting checkout by the time you got to Cube.
I'm sorry that you spent the money on it because I'm going to make sure that there are sponsors going forward,
and we might get some free Flukers Orange Cube complete cricket diets in the mail.
Only a fool pays for their Flukers.
complete cricket diets in the mail.
Only a fool pays for their Flukers.
No, I think a smart person pays for the Flukers because it's obviously the best complete cricket diet there is.
The most complete and the best complete.
And it comes in the trademark Flukers orange cube.
See, I'm already practicing.
Get Kira on this immediately.
New sponsor for the podcast.
But I just want to point out that Danny concludes by saying,
if Zola's parents
are creeped out
by hissing cockroaches
maybe they should consider getting a giant
African millipede instead
laughter
laughter
laughter
thank you Danny so much
please check out Trash for
Danny's Trash for Treasures community
at DannyKramer14.
That's at D-A-N-I-K-R-A-M-E-R 14.
Jesse, you will love the stuff
that Danny finds in the garbage in Pittsburgh.
Only the fact that I had two children in the car
and one of them was going to be late for school
kept me from pulling over to the side of the road and pulling a piece of furniture out of one of those illegal dumping sites just this very morning, John.
And all the proceeds from Trash Treasures for Community, of course, go to a whole bunch of really good social programs in Pittsburgh.
I love the suggestion of getting a giant African millipede
because that is a great negotiation tactic, Zola.
You should take that right away.
Zola, if your parents are like,
I don't know that I can have a hissing cockroach in my life,
say, it's fine.
Judge John Hodgman ordered me to get a giant millipede instead.
Yeah.
All of a sudden you got yourself free cockroach.
You know what my therapist convinced me the other day?
My process in therapy over the past decade or so has primarily been my therapist convincing me that certain parts of my childhood that I thought were fun independence were actually maybe a little neglectful.
And something that had not come up in therapy in the many years that I had been therapized
was the fact that for quite a long time I lived in the basement of my father and stepmother's house when I was with them.
My parents had split custody.
and stepmother's house when I was with them.
My parents had split custody.
And there was a crevice under the back door of the basement.
And my door to my bedroom would get left open because it was the only way to get from the basement door
to the upstairs was to go through my room.
So people would just go through my room
whenever they needed to do that and leave the door open.
And at night, I started noticing there were like weird,
whitish, translucent marks on my carpet.
And it took me about six months or a year to figure out
that every night slugs would slug their way through my room,
then slug on out like nothing happened.
And you know how I figured that out, John?
No.
Yeah, that's how I figured it out.
It was dark in there, and that's how I figured it out.
Oh.
Yeah.
Well, I'm sorry I stepped on your gerbil.
It's a callback, folks.
John, didn't you say we also had a letter from rooney we do have a letter
from rooney i had asked rooney to write in to say because i didn't know how rooney wanted to
prepare i i had made a joke that rooney wanted to fill the little hollow in the avocado left by the
pit with human blood and i made a joke that rooney was a Dracula. So I wanted to verify how does Rooney want to make their avocado?
And Rooney writes,
I want to peel the skin off the avocados and make slices,
but dad thinks he should cut it into small pieces with a spoon and scoop it
out. Dad doesn't like knives,
but my mom gave me my knife license.
knives, but my mom gave me my knife license.
Rooney, you got your knife license.
Here's the thing.
If you can get your own email address and mom has given you a knife license, I think you should go ahead and cut that avocado into slices.
But I want to see a copy of that knife license, Rooney.
Rooney and Rooney's parents,
I need to see a paper knife license signed by mom.
And a real knife license,
not one of the ones that you get at Legoland.
Yeah, not a knife license you get in a basement in Times Square in 1981.
Work up a real
good knife license. I want to see it
laminated. Please send it in
to Hodgman at MaximumFun.org so we can
post it online.
Is Rooney really peeling avocados
with a knife?
Because I support that. I think that's
amazing.
Look, I mean, it's not the way I would,
for me, I would scoop out the whole half of the avocado
with a spoon before slicing it.
And you know what I'd probably do
is throw it into my avocado,
my special avocado slash spam slicer
that I got at the last San Francisco Sketch Fest
when we were staying in Japantown.
It's this great oversized, it's like, you know, those hard-boiled egg slicers?
They're like little harps where you can go bling on them?
It's a bigger one, and it's just for avocados and spam, if you're going to make misabi.
Wow, and you got this at the Japanese hardware store?
Yeah, you know that place.
You know what I'm talking about.
Oh, I love that Japanese hardware store.
I've loved that Japanese hardware store since Yeah, you know that place. You know what I'm talking about. Oh, I love that Japanese hardware store. I've loved that Japanese hardware store since I
was a child. Jesse,
we're going to go to Sketchfest.
We're going to go stand
in front of Sousa phones on a
live stage. We're going to go to hardware stores.
There's no end to what we're
going to be able to do as
a people once we are through this. And we're
going to get through it and make a new and better normal.
But until then, Rooney's got their knife license.
Go forth and do what you want to the avocados.
The docket is clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our producer, the ever-capable Jennifer Marmer.
Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman. We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman. Make sure to hashtag your Judge
John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO, and check out the Maximum Fund subreddit to discuss this episode.
Submit your cases at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFund.org.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Please don't sue me, Marvel, for using that. This is the secret post-credit sequence,
an idea that I came up with. And weirdly, Marvel also came up with the idea of dropping in extra content after the credits. Just like Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz
invented the calculus at the same time.
It was just a coincidence.
Simultaneous discovery, they call it.
So don't sue me, Marvel.
Just here dropping some more content,
giving people a little extra stuff.
Hey, everybody, welcome to the post-credit sequence.
Some of you may know, not many, I would guess,
that I do a Judge John Hodgman column in the New York Times Magazine
every week for the past five years. And I do not think people who listen to the podcast know that
this column exists. And I know that people who read the New York Times magazine in print do not know that podcasts exist at all.
So there's not a lot of overlap.
But I wanted to share something with you.
By the time you hear this, it will have just come out or will be about to come out.
I don't know when they have it scheduled for.
A little short column in which, spoiler alert perhaps, I rule against a woman named Krissa who had texted her friend Ken that she could not join Ken for dinner.
But Ken went to the restaurant anyway because he claimed that Chrissa's text was unclear.
And it was.
But when I let her know that I was ruling in the magazine, she was upset because she wouldn't get to share a piece of audio visual
evidence with you, which was her video apology to Ken after the fact. And while my ruling stands,
Krissa, this evidence is so compelling, I have to share it with you, the listeners,
because this evidence is not Krissa speaking. It's, well, let's just say it comes from a little website
called Cameo. Hey, Ken, it's James Cosmo here, Lord Commander Mormont of the Night Watch.
Your good friend Krissa got in touch with me and asked me to send a message to you.
send a message to you. Now, she tells me to send you absolutely abject apologies and so she
should. That's the thing with texts, you don't know if people are going to get them, you know.
Should have phoned. Anyway, she has taken the time and the expense to send this message. So she is obviously very contrite.
So please forgive her
and you guys go out and have dinner together.
Anyway, that's my message from the Lord Commander.
You take care, Ken.
All the very best and God bless you.
Bye-bye.
So there you have it.
Lord Commander of the Night's Watch uh jorah moramont
has forgiven chrissa and who am i to speak against uh the the brothers of the night's watch
so even though i have found against you chrissa in none other than the magazine of the paper of
record the new york times magazine where judge Judge John Hodgman appears every week.
But I will also absolve you.
But why should I absolve you when instead I could get Naz from Love Island to do it?
Here's Naz.
Hello to all the Judge John Hodgman listeners.
It's Naz Majeed here from Love Island.
I hope everyone is doing well.
Now I just want to give a special shout out
to one listener in particular
who goes by the name of Chrissa.
Even though Judge John Hodgman ruled against you getting James Cosmo off a Game of Thrones to apologise to Ken on Cameo was amazing.
I'm a massive fan of Game of Thrones and I've seen the Cameo.
I've seen the apology on your behalf and it is absolutely brilliant.
I love it. Apologising is an essential life skill.
And by the looks of it, Chrissa, you're absolutely killing it.
However, despite me saying all this, I've reviewed the case and I'm very much so team christa sorry to go against you on this
one judge but i feel like ken why if you felt like there's any form of vagueness any lack of clarity
why would you turn up to that restaurant without double checking or triple checking before leaving
hopefully you can use this as a learning curve going forward christa i feel like on another day
in another courtroom you might have gotten away with it, but I digress. Lastly, I just want to give a massive shout out to the
Judge John Hodgman podcast. All the listeners, gear yourself up, strap yourself in for Max Fun
Drive in May. But yeah, thank you so much, guys. Everyone take care and enjoy the rest of the
podcast. Well, thank you, Naz, my hero of Cameo, for coming through again.
You've sent some wonderful messages to my family, now to the whole Judge John Hodgman listenership.
Thank you for undermining my ruling, I guess. Wow. That was all right. I guess you got your
own judge show now. You're going to have your own judge show on Cameo. It's probably going to go
very, very far. Naz, I wish you the best. I wish you only
well, Nas. And as I said to you over the text feature of Cameo, anytime you want to be on Judge
John Hodgman as a guest bailiff or friend of the court or anything, the door is always open. And I
look forward to your replying to my text, Nas. All right, end of post-credits sequence i why did i make myself do this extra homework every week
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