Judge John Hodgman - Live From Portland Maine at the State Theatre
Episode Date: March 18, 2020This week's episode was recorded LIVE at the State Theatre in Portland, Maine. The first case up is "The Sole Truth and Nothing But the Truth, So Help Me Clog or Whatever." Lauren wears her slippers a...round the house. James complains that she wears them on the sofa. Who's right? Who's wrong? Later up is Swift Justice, with cases about watching TV with a partner, car seat warmers, and the pronunciation of "pecan pie." PLUS Summertime Producer Joel Mann and his Night and Day Jazz Trio!Thank you to Jonathan Schlieman for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, follow Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week's episode was recorded live in Portland, Maine, at the beautiful State Theater.
Yeah, not only were we recording in Portland, Maine, one of the great cities of Maine,
but we were also joined by a very special musical guest.
What a treat for me.
The Night and Day Jazz Trio. Summertime listeners
will know that when I'm recording the Judge John Hodgman podcast from Maine, Joel Mann is the
taciturn producer up there at WERU-FM in Orland, Maine. He also plays bass in the Night and Day
Trio, and he was joined by his two trio members, Chris Poulin and Steve Orlovsky,
Mr. O, of course, being the leader of the George Stevens Academy High School Jazz Band.
I was so thrilled to see these guys, and I had a really great time visiting with my friends
and neighbors in Portland.
So without further ado, what should we do, Jesse?
Return to a time when public gatherings were legal and appropriate.
Let's go to the stage.
Portland, you've come to us desperate for justice, and we're here at the State Theater to deliver it.
Let's bring out our first set of litigants.
Please welcome Lauren and James.
Tonight's case, the sole truth and nothing but the truth,
so help me clog or whatever.
Lauren files suit against her husband, James.
She has indoor slippers with hard soles that she likes to wear around the house.
James is bothered when she puts her feet up on the sofa while wearing the slippers.
He thinks they're too much like shoes.
Lauren says her feet get cold, and she wants to be cozy in her own home.
Who's right, who's wrong, only one can decide.
Please rise metaphorically as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and delivers an obscure cultural reference.
When Jane woke up in the middle of the night, she discovered she had been sleepwalking.
She was in the kitchen, but she couldn't recall getting out of bed and coming downstairs.
The kitchen was silent.
The only sound was from the softly purring refrigerator.
The only light was from the softly purring refrigerator. The only light was from the moon.
But because the moon was full,
and because the kitchen had quite a few windows,
there was enough light to see by.
Jane was standing at the counter near the sink.
She had opened one of the drawers
and had taken a butcher knife out of it.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear the men.
Lauren and James,
please raise your right hands. Do you swear
to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing
but the truth, so help you God
or whatever? I do.
I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge
John Hodgman's ruling, despite
the fact that he has no feet, only
a second set of legs below his
larger legs? I do.
I do. I do.
Judge Hodgman?
Lauren?
How did you... It's the last night.
We're getting weird.
What's even the premise of that joke?
I keep...
How did you know about my sub-legs?
Take off my shoes and other legs come out like that.
It's because we're on the road.
We're traveling.
We're sharing with each other.
We're seeing each other's feet,
which is something that Lauren and James don't like to do.
Lauren and James, you may be seated
for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours.
Favors, can either of you name the piece of culture
that I read as I entered the courtroom?
And I'm going to give you an advantage here.
Because this case is about slippers.
And not a lot of great movies, books, and songs
are written about slippers.
Really?
Really had a hard time figuring out
a slipper-themed quote.
Now I'm suddenly realizing you each have a pair of slippers, which I do not understand.
I thought this was about one pair of slippers.
So did I. But I feel like I turned
around and some elves came and made more.
At the end of this case, I feel
like this whole stage is going to be buried
in slippers.
The only thing that I could come up with
that was in any way interesting to me
was that there is
a style of men's
slipper called the
Prince Albert slipper, named for the Prince
Consort of Queen Victoria.
A black crushed velvet slipper
that is to be worn
as formal attire
by gentlemen
of the Victorian era giving dinner parties.
And I realized that was
very interesting to me,
but not to anyone else in the world.
And also brings out-
Well, John, I'm not here to contradict you,
but somebody on this stage, I won't say,
who just received in the mail a copy of the art book,
"'The Gentleman's Slipper'."
Oh, so-
It's exclusively photographs of such shoes.
They had to order it from England,
but I'm not saying who it was. Well, in any case,
Prince Albert himself said
nothing memorable in his lifetime for me to quote,
and the only quotes about Prince Albert
were by Sarah Ferguson. She wrote
a book about him, so I didn't want to do that.
So instead, I had
grasping at straws, I
noticed in the green room here at the
lovely State Theater in Portland a
wildly diverse array of reading material. Books left behind by traveling acts and bands
that reflected no single
bibliographic vision, just a bunch of old junk books.
So I grabbed at random a paragraph from one of these books. And to give you, since
you can't possibly guess, I will make it multiple choice for you. These are four books that are
upstairs right now. I have photographic evidence if you need to see it, doubters. That passage was
from one of these four books. And you may each make a choice, but you can't pick the same one was that passage from care care listen read by Elizabeth George the mask by
Dean Koontz the Corrections by Jonathan Franzen or letters to penthouse volume 15, which impossibly exists and was printed in print in the year 2015,
I checked.
People don't always have Wi-Fi.
So, let's see.
Lauren, why don't you guess first?
Letters to Penthouse. Letters to Penthouse is Lauren's see. Lauren, why don't you guess first? Letters to Penthouse.
Letters to Penthouse is Lauren's guess.
I'll make a note of it.
This is the Judge John Hodgman podcast after dark, after all.
That's right.
James, what is your guess, if you have one?
Do you remember the...
I'm just going to go with B.
Who knows?
The second one.
Well, since you can't name it, I can't give it to you.
Because it was B. The Mask by Dean Kunt dean coons well it's been good yeah no no no you didn't even bother to remember the names that i offered you lauren did though all right so who seeks justice
before this court i do lauren what is the nature of your dispute? So I have these very comfy slippers, as you can see.
I am. And
James thinks it's disgusting
when I put my feet up on the couch while
I'm wearing them. Put your feet up on
the couch? Yeah, if I'm lounging. Sure,
if you're lounging on the couch. Lauren, can you
describe the slippers in question? Thank you. Yes,
they have shearling inside, and they're
hard rubber on the bottom. They're an
L.L. Bean slipper.
Sure.
I'm sure half the people here have them.
You are required by law to buy them, I believe,
as a president of the state of Maine.
That's true.
When I immigrated, I had to.
They come with your Subaru.
Yeah.
Which we also have.
Does anyone here have the L.L. Bean edition Subaru?
It's a thing that exists. Right? I'm not making that up.
Does anyone have it? Interesting.
Too good for the L.L. Bean edition Subaru.
Okay, so you wear these in the house.
You live here in Maine.
Yeah.
Where do you live if I may ask?
We live in Westbrook.
In Westbrook.
Just over the line.
Just over the line.
That means something I suppose would be good.
In Portland, yeah.
And James, you don't like these slippers?
No.
Well, I think to clarify,
it's not just putting her feet up on the sofa wearing these.
Right.
She'll bring the trash out in these in winter,
in snow, in dirt.
They've also been worn in bed when she's cold.
Whoa. I submitted a photo
proof when she wore these in bed.
When you say worn in bed, do you mean
worn on bed or
worn under the covers?
Yes. Wow.
So that cold night, you roll over, you
touch off her foot. No, no, it's a rubber sole.
Oh.
Yeah.
Wow.
When you, I mean, you know.
You saw it, but comfort.
Yeah.
Can I clarify a little bit?
There's nothing more romantic in Maine than in the dead of winter reaching over betwixt
the flannel L.L. Bean sheets to touch your loved one's foot.
It writes itself.
Now, I notice you have an accent.
Based on your accent,
may I presume that you are from
Swans Island, Maine?
Close.
Very close.
Dublin, Ireland.
Dublin, Ireland.
How long have you lived in Maine?
And what brought you to this country?
My lovely wife.
Your lovely wife.
So, Lauren,
how do you respond to these accusations?
Because that's gross stuff.
Thank you. I agree. So, Lauren, how do you respond to these accusations? Because that's gross stuff. Thank you.
I agree. So, these are new slippers, and I have never worn them outside.
He is submitting
old evidence. I have changed
my ways. These are the oldies.
Those are the oldies. This is last minute
evidence. From the last eight years.
James, you are holding
a pair of slippers. These are the older
slippers. Lauren tried to deceive this court with a pair of slippers These are the older slippers Lauren tried to deceive this court
With a pair of fresh clean slippers
Correct
Because to me those fresh clean slippers
Look like perfectly good house shoes
Though not bed shoes
But James, you know better
And you brought the original pair
Lauren described her pair of slippers
How would you, using described her pair of slippers, how would you, using
the most colorful
Dublin slang possible,
no blarney,
describe these?
And you say it in your own words, whatever
comes to mind. Keeping it clean,
they're pretty mangy.
Pretty mangy. I'll keep it clean.
It's the exact same brand, but obviously
much older.
They look like the shearling was taken
from a very elderly
sheep.
And may I see the soles?
I see.
Careful.
That's fine. They actually look pretty clean,
these soles. I mean, they're a little darkened, obviously.
I wouldn't want to touch them in bed.
Lauren, why are you wearing them in bed. Lauren,
why are you wearing them in bed?
We're not going to shame anyone.
How dare you wear your
slippers in bed? It's cold.
It's not even a question.
It's cold like 10 months of the year here.
I understand.
Are you from this area originally?
I am.
You are, so you know.
Have you always, did you grow up?
Is it a cultural Maine Westbrook kind of just over the line thing
to wear the same footwear that you take the garbage out in into bed?
Well, we have a new house, and I have not worn those since we moved.
Don't dodge the question, Lauren.
How long have you been wearing your slippers
into bed? Oh, I still
wear these ones into bed because I'm cold.
They're clean. They're
house shoes.
Have you heard of
socks? Thank you.
They make my feet sweat.
These don't. What are you talking about?
How in Westbrook is it possible
that socks make your feet sweat,
but those shearling slippers do not?
Well, I can kick them off, too, if I get hot.
I can't kick socks off in the middle of the night. Have you
considered getting a
separate pair of slippers
to wear in bed?
No. No. James is shaking
his head. Don't give ideas.
So you
would not want her to wear, I mean
it's not a merely
a cleanliness issue.
It is you want her bare feet in bed with you.
No, I don't mind socks.
Socks is a compromise I'll work with.
Yeah, but she can't kick off the socks and take it from me.
If there's someone who sleeps in your bed with socks on
and they kick off their socks while they sleep,
then within three days, there are 45 pairs of socks.
So the photo I submitted for evidence
was myself making the bed,
finding multiple slippers in the bed.
Multiple slippers?
Because it's all piled up under the covers.
Wait, how many pairs do you have, Lauren?
It's the pair.
It's the pair.
So by multiple, do you mean two, James?
Four.
Four now.
Those were in the closet.
He dug those out tonight.
Yeah, but you still own them.
I forgot that I owned them.
Boy, it must be nice to live in...
They're in her floor drawer.
You know, in Maine,
you have different storage options
than in New York City.
You never forget that you have a pair of slippers.
You can't just throw them into your storage pod
or whatever and come and find them later.
You can't just throw them into your storage pod or whatever and come and find them later.
So, James, how does it make you feel when your foot seeks to find your beloved's foot and you feel the coarse, rough, hard L.L. Bean rubber with maybe just a soupçon of garbage on them.
It's pretty weird. It's uncomfortable. And have you ever asked Lauren to modify her behavior?
Oh, numerous occasions over the years, yeah. And why, what does she say when you ask her?
Yeah.
And why,
what does she say when you ask her?
I've made no inroads.
That's why we're here.
Right.
But she doesn't say,
she doesn't,
Lauren,
you don't say,
uh, I know it's wrong,
but I'm doing it anyway.
Right.
You just say,
Oh yeah.
So you just say,
no,
I'm not going to change.
Well,
it's mostly his approach.
Cause he just scoffs or it's like,
that's disgusting.
Oh,
that's not asking. No, I've asked you. Okay. I've scoffs, or it's like, that's disgusting. Oh, that's not asking.
I've asked too, but it becomes, when you've asked often enough, you don't get that far.
Then it just becomes scoffing.
Yes.
Have you ever, as my character in Parks and Recreation, as scripted by Megan Amram,
said to her, simply, scoff.
I'm not there yet.
Okay.
Getting there.
All right.
Obviously, this disgusts your husband.
I presume you care about him.
Yes.
Why not seek a common ground?
Because they're clean shoes.
Or not shoes.
They're shoes!
Let the record show let the record show
she admitted they were shoes
house shoes perhaps but shoes to be sure
can I say that
I think the mental barrier for James is that we've seen many a teen and college student
wear these as shoes in public in Maine.
Sure.
Are you in a college?
Is Westbrook a college town?
No.
But if we're going to the movies or something, there's always someone wearing these.
Look, I have no doubt.
And it's gross. That when you drive 13 hours to go to the movies,
that you are seeing
young college students in Maine
wearing all manner of
non-shoe shoes.
I have no doubt that you are seeing many
grown and happy adults
wearing slippers into the movies
in Maine. That's what Maine is all
about.
There's some cultural things all about. Yeah.
There's some cultural things here, I think.
How would you explain the cultural difference to James?
Well.
Like, you know, once it's winter and it's Maine,
we basically just f***ing give up.
Right.
Yeah.
Ultimately, here in Maine, we nasty.
Yeah.
Well, I think it started when he moved over.
We went to a friend's wedding like two weeks later
at a nice wedding,
and someone was wearing cargo shorts.
I was better dressed than you.
He didn't know what he was getting himself into.
Have you, I mean, coming from Ireland,
there is obviously, I think, a somewhat different standard of casual versus formal dress in the United States in general.
Yes.
And in Maine specifically.
It's a new level.
This is a pretty cash place.
Definitely, yes.
And how would you describe what you're seeing?
By the first adjustment was people not taking a hat off at a restaurant.
That took me a couple of years to adjust.
Yeah.
That's a...
That was a weird one.
I'm with you.
Nobody should ever, ever, ever...
There's no circumstance where you should wear a hat indoors.
No, of course not.
Essentially, you're signaling to the establishment that you don't trust them to keep the rain
out.
Yes. Yes.
Yes.
But cargo shorts at a Maine wedding is pretty down the middle.
Yeah, no one was shocked by that. I had a nice three-piece suit, I polished my shoes. Cleaned up.
James, I'm sure when you... Did they all ask you for hors d'oeuvres and stuff?
They probably thought I was officiating.
James, I'm sure when you moved from Dublin to the United States,
you were confident that you could find a place
with worse weather than Dublin.
That was my goal.
The one place on earth.
How
does weather factor
into your feelings about this? Because
while
Ireland is
in a constant state of
bone-chilling damp,
it doesn't get
nearly as cold there as it does here.
That's true.
And I do understand that with slippers in the house, cold feet, that's fine.
We still turn up the heat.
You can still put on socks.
Come on.
It's not that hot in the house.
Ireland's rain and cold somehow gets into your bones.
That's a colder weather
than the snow
and it transforms your personality
same here
but we have these shoes
that you wear outdoors
if you have to deal with the snow
you take them off
and you can put on these kind of shoes
you still take them off before you go to bed
these kinds of slippers
in Ireland when it's very very cold shoes. You still take them off before you go to bed. These kinds of slippers, right? In Ireland,
when it's very, very cold,
what does
one wear
to bed on their feet, if anything?
I've never worn anything
in bed on my feet. Because he's a furnace.
Right? It's just called Irish nude feet.
Yes.
What did you say? He's like a human
furnace. Oh, he runs hot?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, interesting.
And I'm freezing all the time.
Yeah, well, there's that as well.
So if I were to rule in your favor, James, how would you have me rule?
I actually want a pretty middle ground.
I'm willing to purchase wool socks or something warm for her feet.
Socks will not work, James.
No?
Then she'll have to deal bare feet.
I'll sleep happy then.
Bare feet or...
Nothing.
Right.
Bare feet or nothing is kind of redundant to say.
Okay.
James, everyone knows wool socks make your feet sweat.
Wearing an entire sheep on your feet doesn't.
That's right.
Sheerling breathes. To be fair, a sheep that's been. Doesn't. That's right. Sheerling breathes.
To be fair, a sheep that's been
turned inside out.
I can arrange
that. Yeah, and also,
wool socks won't do it. What you need is to wear
shearling slippers with your feet wrapped up
in saran wrap as well. Yes.
Lauren, if I were to rule in your favor,
how would you have me rule?
I would like to continue wearing my slippers on the couch.
I will compromise and not wear them in bed.
And are you going to wear these new slippers out to take out the garbage and such?
No, I never have.
Not so far.
Not so far.
But history shows you're able to do it.
Yes.
I won't.
I won't.
Let the record show that Lauren is giving me a suspicious look
that I don't fully trust.
Fully trust she's not going to go out there sometime.
I promise.
Just take that garbage out real quick.
James is looking.
Just tip, tip, tip, tip, toe on little cat slipper feet.
Take out the recycling.
Well, I'm going to have to believe you
because you're under fake oath.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go into my chambers.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Lauren, how do you feel about your chances in this case?
I felt really good going into it.
Now I'm not so sure.
On what basis did you feel good going into it. Now I'm not so sure. On what basis did you feel good going into it?
I guess just like my point is, you know what you did.
I just felt righteous, you know.
Is this like something you've checked in with other people about?
Like you wear shoes inside the bed, right?
And they're like, yeah, girlfriend, I do.
Yes.
the bed, right? And they're like,
yeah, girlfriend, I do.
Yes.
James,
how are you feeling about your chances in the case
slash chances of continuing
to live in America?
So, part A, confident.
Part B, not so much.
It's been a good run.
We'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about it.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
You may be seated.
James, I am also a stranger to Maine.
I grew up in Massachusetts.
Thank you very much.
I have lived and continue to live very happily most of
the time in Brooklyn, New York. And sure, that is a borough that needs no cheering. We're fine.
underdog.
But Maine is the place that has been selected
for me by my wife
as the place I will die.
The hole's been dug.
Pretty much.
And we
spend a big chunk of the summer
up here because my wife teaches high school and I do this.
And more and more often we have been coming
during the colder months, during the darker months,
where it is more appropriate for my rehearsal of death.
And I enjoy it tremendously.
But it is hard.
I mean, you know, while the climate change
is causing the winters to veer back and forth
between extremely cold and extremely weirdly mild
and unnervingly warm, you know,
it wasn't a couple of years ago that we were up here
for a week when the temperature did not get above 15 degrees.
And that is, that gets into your bones
and gets really into your mind.
When you're just like, the furnace is on all the way, and you're wearing all your clothes.
Yeah, I was definitely going to bed with several pairs of shoes on at that time.
As you've noticed about Maine, not only do you have this mind-warping, sort of traumatic climate that even in the best of times wants you to die, you know, but also you have, and I think
appropriately, a culture of people leaving each other alone about their choices. And I think that
that is one of the things
that makes Maine really very special
because it reminds you particularly,
I mean, Portland's a big city.
Yeah.
But most of Maine, of course, is small communities
that suffer through long, dark periods of time
where everyone is just doing the best they can.
And they have to just let each other be to some degree.
And so it is not surprising to me that,
Lauren, you're a native of Maine?
Yes.
Yeah, it's not surprising to me that,
well, wait a minute, your parents are from Maine?
Yes.
Your grandparents are from Maine?
Yes.
Oh, so you are a native of Maine.
I'm technically from Maine.
It's not surprising to me that Lauren has benefited
from a generational genetic disfigurement
that causes her not to think twice
about wearing her garbage shoes into the bed.
about wearing her garbage shoes into the bed.
Because most of what we do in Maine is done under the cover of cold winter darkness.
Who the hell is watching?
Now you are here to peer in with your civilized Irish eyes.
That are not smiling.
What's that?
That are not smiling. That are not smiling. What's that? That are not smiling. That are not smiling.
That's right. When Irish eyes are glaring with disgusting contempt.
Now, most people who enter into a marriage and someone sees them, you know, because that's what
is interesting about marriage, right? Is you're joining the most intimate parts of your lives. You're letting your spouse see parts of you physically and emotionally and psychologically
that you would never let the rest of the world see. And a lot of the time what happens when
couples join and they see themselves through the lens of their partner's Irish eyes, for example,
they're like, oh, right, I can't be wearing shoes to bed. That's terrible, right? But Lauren is just too main to do that. It's like, I don't understand. You see what I'm
doing, right? This is on purpose. So this is all to say, Lauren, I sympathize with you. I admire your spirit.
Honestly, as an aspirational non-native Maine resident,
I really should just leave you alone
and let you pull down the window shade
and just let you do whatever you're gonna do in your house.
But you do share your house with James.
And it is undeniable that wearing your house shoes,
which are necessary in Maine, right?
Because out there, there's all kinds of raccoon poop
and things to walk through.
It's messy out there, particularly, you know,
mud season and everything else.
You do need a pair of house shoes
if you're not just going to wear socks
or bare feet in the house, right?
So it's good that you have those house shoes, but those house shoes have to be house shoes.
And that means you cannot go outside in them. I know. I do it too. I do it all the time.
I wear my slippers outside. I know you all do too. But for the purposes of people listening
to this podcast elsewhere, we have to pretend to be civilized. You understand? I definitely wear my slippers
and bring out the garbage when I'm in there.
For sure I do.
For sure I do.
I do it, but I don't wear them in bed.
I have no doubt.
I have no doubt
that if you were to go to your favorite Maine-based mandatory retailer...
Vermont Country Store.
Yes.
Vermont Country Store sells old shampoos from the 70s.
Vermont Country Store sells old shampoos from the 70s.
In my own house in Maine,
I have a couple of bottles of Gee, Your Hair Smells Terrific that I got.
I bet if you were to go to that retailer,
not the Vermont Country Store,
they'd probably have not one, not two,
but maybe five different
varieties of shoes that may be even specifically to be worn in bed.
Different slippers for your bed.
Sorry, James.
Her feet are cold.
You're a human furnace.
You're a throbbing, flaming heart of passion.
Just like all Irishmen.
You're a burning chunk of
bog moss.
Just get some
bed shoes. That's what
we all deserve in life. Some
decent bed shoes.
You already have, like you're already keeping in your house
not one, but two pairs
of these shearling slippers.
Throw those garbage ones away and replace them
with bed shoes this is the sound of a gavel judge john hodgman rules that is all lauren and james
thank you for joining us on the judge john hodgman podcast
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Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast,
The JV Club with Janet Varney,
is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie,
Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience.
One you have no choice but to embrace.
Because yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I-R.
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If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
John, that was a lot of fun. I think we should have some more music.
Yeah, can't we hear some more music, please, from Joel Mann, Chris Poulin, and Steve Orlovsky, the Night and Day Trio.
We'll talk to them a little bit after they play another song for you.
But it looks like you guys are ready to go.
Alright, let's hear some jazz, Castine style. so
so If you have a plane to Moana West
Take a highway, drive my way
Cause it's the best
Get your kicks on Route 66
Cause it was from Chicago to LA
More than 2,000 miles it's all the way
Get your kicks
All Route 66
Cause it winds to St. Louis
Chopper, Missouri
Oklahoma City looks so darn pretty
You see
El Reno
The Gala, New Mexico
Blackstaff, Arizona
Don't forget Renona Kingstow, San Bernardino, won't you get into your time with him?
If you make the California agent, get your kicks on Route 166 Thank you. I'm going to go ahead and play it. Thank you. You came in barstow sand, and he now wants you Get him to the top of the deck
If you make the casting trip
Get your kicks on Route 166
Get your kicks on Route 166
Get your kicks on Route 166
Let's hear it for the Night and Day Jazz Trio!
That's Steve Orlovsky on winds,
Chris Poulin on guitar,
and our own guest producer, Joel Mann,
laying down the bass.
So I was so excited when I saw Mr. O when I came in
because I'm a huge fan of the GSA jazz band.
They play every summer, or every Labor Day, I should say,
at the Blue Hill Fair. It's such a delight. They're such a great band. And I every summer, or every Labor Day, I should say, at the Blue Hill Fair.
It's such a delight. They're such a great band. And I saw them two summers ago, and I really
enjoyed it. And the energy that you bring leading the band is so great. And then this summer, I
promised everyone who follows me on Instagram that I would live Instagram the whole show.
And so during the Blue Hill Fair, in the afternoon at the grandstand, I stood on the racetrack down from the stands to get close to them. And I was filming them the entire time. And after a period of time, I was beginning to feel like a weird creep. Because I didn't ask anyone if I could do this. The band is all teenagers. You know, it's like weird that this mustache man is like filming the whole thing thing putting it on Instagram live right now
and at one point I sense out of the corner of my eye a mainstay trooper walking towards me
and I'm like I'm like I don't want to get in trouble just keep walking dude just keep walking
I'm just trying to film this and he and he walks and then he doesn't keep walking he stops and he stops and he stands right
here I'm like oh god here I go gotta go to jail and I turn to him I go yes and he goes oh can I
get by he didn't want to walk in front of my camera the main stage trooper goes
it was the greatest and Joel of course
W-E-R-U spins the platters
and moves the knobs and dials around
and teaches me about psychedelic rock
Joe Bird and the Field Hippies
is your band right? I mean that's your fave
that's right
any other wackadoo band names
you need me to know about Joel?
no
Joel you may notice is somewhat taciturn. He's famous
for it on the podcast. We're going to move into a new segment
here called Swift Justice, where
we hear three cases in quick succession.
Joel, would you mind standing around
to lob a syllable
from time to time into the conversation?
Okay. Alright, good.
Another round of applause
for the nine-day trio.
Jesse Thorne, will you please bring the first litigants out?
Please welcome to the stage Jacinda and Lewis.
Jacinda and Lewis, everybody.
That was their walk-on music. Fantastic.
Thank you.
So who...
This isn't your show, guys!
Easy there, Joel.
So who here seeks justice before this court?
And you are Jacinda?
Yes.
And what is the nature of your dispute?
Okay, the nature of the dispute is,
Lewis and I have our own shows on TV.
Right.
Our shows, and then movies we watch together.
Right.
And the dispute is,
Lewis just takes a really long time.
This is all we have in life anymore, right?
I know.
Our shows.
In Maine.
Our shows in Maine in the dark.
I was your only Brooklyn woo,
because I'm from Brooklyn.
Oh, you are?
Yes.
Where are you from in Brooklyn?
Bay Ridge.
Bay Ridge.
Yeah.
How did you come to be here?
I actually, funny, Lauren,
I moved to Maine to farm sheep. Really?
Yes. Right in Brunswick. In Brunswick? You farm sheep in Brunswick? And I'm wearing a
pair of wool socks I knitted. My feet don't sweat. Take off your shoes. Are you going
to touch your feet? No, I'm not going to touch your feet. I just want to see your socks.
Now I'm going to touch your feet.
Want me to touch your feet too, sir?
No, thank you.
All right.
What's the verdict, John?
Wet or dry?
Nice!
Jacinda is on stage.
She's not a performer by nature. She's under a certain amount of stress.
So I'm just a little damp on the bottom.
I mean, I wouldn't say sweaty.
Just naturally.
Anyone's feet would feel the same way.
I'm sure if Lewis let me feel his feet,
they'd also be damp.
Well, that's awesome.
So you raise sheep.
Yep, for two years.
Oh, and then you no longer do it.
That doesn't seem like a full-
I full-time farmed for seven years.
You full-time farmed in Brunswick for seven years?
In New Jersey, England, Maine.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
But now you don't do it anymore?
No, I run my own garden design business now.
Oh, that's great.
Cool.
Has an edible emphasis to it.
An edible emphasis to it. Yes. So you can't eat those socks, that's great. Cool. Has an edible emphasis to it. An edible emphasis to it.
So you can't eat those socks, though.
All right. Anyway, so
you have your own, and what do you do here in Maine?
I'm a real estate broker in Maine. A real estate broker
in Maine. That must be
difficult.
It's busy
and then it's dark and quiet.
Exactly. So during the
unbusy season,
you have your shows to keep you warm.
And what are the shows that you have?
You have individual shows and then shows together.
So name one individual show each and what's the together show?
Well, I just started Downton Abbey because...
That's a great one.
Classic.
Gonna give you a little warning though.
Yes.
You're gonna see a lot of dog butt in that down now.
Dog butt?
Every episode opens with a close-up of the butt of a dog walking.
It gets a little tiresome after a while.
I'll have to keep my eyes open.
I haven't noticed yet.
I think our together show is Game of Thrones, like many.
Yes.
What's your individual show, Bruce?
Always Sunny in Philadelphia. Always Sunny. Classic. Classic's your individual show? Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Always Sunny, classic.
Classic FX show.
And your Together show.
Our Together show, yes, Game of Thrones.
But the real nature of the dispute
is I can be a binge
watcher, as I feel like
most people are in the streaming
era. Yeah, you're young.
Yeah.
And Lewis will watch 20 minutes of a show
and then shut it off.
Right.
And then days later,
maybe we'll finish it or not or ever.
And it's the same thing with movies.
So we'll get like halfway through a riveting movie
and then it's like, okay, it's time to go to bed.
I'm like, yeah.
So almost seven years of this.
Well, you know, but Lewis has to get up early
to sling those houses.
Yes!
I think it's very appropriate to stop a movie
partway through and circle back around to it.
That's the point of streaming.
That's the point of streaming.
I've got an idea that'll entertain
that'll revolutionize the entertainment industry
John
We'll stream movies directly into people's homes
so they can stop them
and then start them later
Unlike on every other home
entertainment technology since
broadcast television
VHS tapes, laser discs, DVDs Blu-rays, etc Unlike on every other home entertainment technology since broadcast television.
VHS tapes, laser discs, DVDs, Blu-rays, etc.
All of which could not be stopped and started later.
Technological crankiness aside,
movies were not made to be watched for a little bit,
then stopped, then started over.
I won't agree with you that it's appropriate,
but I will agree with you, as an older person who falls asleep very easily,
it is sometimes totally inevitable.
I mean, my version of binge watching is watching the same episode of Watchmen over and over again.
Because even though there have only been four episodes,
I don't remember which ones I watched.
And therein lies part of the problem.
I won't fall asleep in front of a TV, but she will.
And then she wakes up and asks what has happened for the last 20 minutes.
So perfect time to stop.
Yeah.
20 minutes ago.
Right.
So this sounds like a perfect marriage.
You fall asleep in the middle of a Game of Thrones or whatever.
And that's a good time, as Lewis says, to stop it and pick it up again like the next day, right?
Yeah, turn the lights off slowly and slowly turn the
volume down, and then just disappear
for the night.
You're almost literally
describing the plot of the movie Gaslight.
Like, when you're
watching a Game of Thrones when you're watching a Game of Thrones,
and you're, and you, how does it happen that Jacinda will fall asleep?
Do you notice that she's falling asleep and say,
hey, should we shut it off and pick this up later?
I just notice she's asleep and then slowly shut it off.
I don't even ask.
And then you just leave her sleeping there on the couch and go to bed by herself?
She'll usually spring awake surprised and ask what happened.
Oh, I see.
Oh, the reason that you're doing the slow turn off...
Keep her asleep.
Right, is because if you just turn it off,
then Jacinda, you'll jump up and go,
no, we're going to keep watching!
Yes.
Yes, like the addict I am.
I see.
Well, okay, so the real, real nature of the dispute is...
Oh, right, sorry.
The real, real nature is that now I started watching Rhythm and Flow.
Anyone? Hey, ho.
You know, let the record reflect that Jacinda attempted to instigate a hip-hop call and response
during a main humor's show in Portland.
Where my ball is at, Portland, Maine?
I'm just like, there's so many shows.
I don't know that one.
It's the rap version of American Idol.
And it's amazing.
It's a competition show.
It's a competition show.
So he came in and was like, oh, can this be our show? And all of a sudden I was like, oh, no.
This means we're going to finish it in six months.
And so then I said, okay, it can be our show,
but really I watched it and then would re-watch it with him
when he came home.
Thank you.
He knew I was doing it.
You weren't hiding the fact that you knew all the outcomes.
And I will say I've been so loyal.
Even with our shows, I don't do the whole watch it rewind it
i will wait until we're ready to sit down together and watch it right but then i started watching the
dark crystal puppets anyone yeah that's a judge john hodgman hey where my skeptics at Skeksisad! And then he was like... Gelfling!
And then he was like,
can this be our show?
And I said, oh, this is starting to become a pattern.
So... You're trying to take Jacinda's shows?
Take my shows.
I get very excited at the beginning,
and I want to watch them all,
and then maybe 30 minutes in I get uncomfortable
because the Skeksis are abusing the other Muppets.
Sure.
And I have to turn it off. I have to turn it off because I didn't
believe the Gelflings would ever be the Skeksis
enforcers. That's crazy.
You watch
The Dark Crystal? I don't.
Yeah, alright, good.
Hey, Joel
man, you watch The Dark Crystal? No.
Okay.
Joel, what are you watching these days?
Schitt's Creek.
Yeah.
Look, I don't know what to say.
You're in your 30s or something, right?
Yeah, this is how it's going to be for the rest of your life.
Like, in your 20s, when you cared about impressing each other, you'd stay awake for the other
person's thing, you'd be like, yeah, I'm invested, let's do this together, baby, forever.
But now, you know, it's the same deal.
It's cold, it's dark in Maine, you get tired, everyone's wearing fleece, it's soporific,
and you want to turn off the thing, and you want to turn off the thing and you want to keep the thing going.
You want to have shows together, but
you've got to...
It's all going to be compromised for the rest
of your lives.
What do you want me to rule?
I don't understand.
My rule is...
This is like a palimpsest of a million
Judge John Hodgman disputes that we've had.
And I
don't see what the solution is.
The rule for me is, it was actually two things.
It was when we start a movie, we finish it at that night.
Yeah.
Or at least maybe a cap, like five days or something.
We can't go beyond that.
Five day cap on finishing a movie?
Yeah.
What movie are you working on now?
I think Seven.
I had to take a pause for Seven.
Yeah, we started watching Seven.
Seven?
Because it was around Halloween.
A little graphic, a little violent.
That's one of those movies you really want to live with for a while.
I like to reflect on it for a little while.
And then also that if I start watching a show,
if he wants to come in on it, he can't.
If he wants to come in on the show, he can't.
Like a show I've claimed, like The Dark Crystal.
So as soon as he claimed it, I was pumping through.
I was three episodes in.
I'm like, oh, yeah, I'm loving this.
We haven't watched it in a month.
Right, because you're waiting on him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what? It's fine. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You know what?
It's fine.
It's fine.
Okay.
And what do you want, Lewis?
You want to be able to claim any show you want and then set your own time scale?
I should have claimed three shows, and the rest can be hers,
and I get to break them up how my sleep patterns see fit.
Three shows over what period of time?
Seven years?
Because it's going to take you that long to finish anything.
We started watching Stranger Things in July
and we were on the last episode.
I'm like, I don't know.
I'm savoring it.
Season which?
Season one?
Season three.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, it's fine.
It's like a Reese's.
You don't eat it all at once.
You're savoring it.
You nibble it.
Yeah, but maybe that's your show.
Maybe that's not the show you watch together.
We should have some.
Then I should step in on her shows and claim it.
You don't step in on her shows.
Here's the deal.
Louis grew up in Maine
and was only allowed.
Up the coast in Camden. Pretty close to that witch shop.
I was there this weekend. Yeah, fantastic. Does Camden allowed. Where in Maine? Up the coast in Camden. Pretty close to that witch shop. I was there this weekend.
Yeah, fantastic.
Yeah.
Does Camden have its own witch shop?
Oh, God, no.
No.
It has a psychic shop, though.
All of a sudden, right on Main Street.
That's pretty good.
Somewhere for the witches.
Exactly.
He was only allowed 30 minutes a week of an educational show.
There's a deep history there.
What did you? Yeah. Reading Rainbow. I would think, since you were only allowed 30, 30 minutes a week of an educational show. There's a deep history there.
Reading Rainbow.
What did you watch in your 30 minutes of education? Reading Rainbow.
Sure, why not? That's the greatest.
Past Judge John Hodgman guest
LeVar Burton. That's right.
You ever watch The Voyage of the Mimi with
child Ben Affleck? Yes.
That show's dope, right?
Rarely do people remember that movie.
They got the water by making a tent out of a tarpaulin
and collecting the condensation, John.
That's how I get my water to this day.
Get a fling!
That's the Chamberlain.
Who can name all the Skeksis?
Don't do it.
So I would think that someone who had been forced to limit your television watching 30 minutes per day,
now in this era of overabundance of programming,
you'd want to be mainlining as much as possible.
John, this is the first of three cases in ten minutes!
Is this the first one?
Yeah!
Oh, okay, never mind.
Uh, if you fall asleep, it's over, you go to bed.
That's ruling one.
Ruling two is, if you can't watch a movie in one sitting, you don't deserve to watch
movies, all right?
Number three is, you're welcome to watch whatever show each other claims,
but if you claim the show, you watch it at your own pace,
and the other person just has to deal with it.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Jacinda and Lewis, please welcome Lorien and Steve.
Lorian and Steve.
Lorian, you have like a Middle Earthy sounding name.
It is.
It's from Lord of the Rings.
It is.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Your parents gave you that name or did you choose it for yourself?
My dad said it was the only book he ever read So he wanted to choose a name from it
So I'm just glad I'm not Galadriel
Galadriel's pretty hot
You could be Balrog
That would be no good
Steve, what fantasy novel is your name from?
Not sure
Silver Hawk, The Trials of Steve, Book One.
What is the nature of your dispute?
You have crossed me for the last time, Steve.
Who comes to my court to see justice?
I do.
And Lorian, what is the justice you see?
So we have one of those standard issue cars that most people in Maine have.
Sure.
An LLB in addition Subaru.
Close.
What kind of Subaru do you have?
A Forester.
Forester?
People are applauding.
Is there like beef between Forester people and Outback people?
Yes.
Really?
Someone was like, yes.
Who here is Team Outback?
Who here is Team Forrester?
Anybody out there still rocking a Legacy?
You know, I always wanted one of the Subaru Brats.
Oh, I'd love a Subaru Brat.
That would be so cool, those little tiny trucks.
Those little teeny tiny trucks.
Joel Mann, do you know what a Subaru Brat is?
Yes.
Right, thank you.
You ever have one?
No.
Do you drive a Subaru?
What do you drive?
Kia.
No.
Do you drive a Subaru? What do you drive?
Kia.
Folks, we have a new ringtone.
All right. Oh, you're still here. Sorry.
Lorian, so Lorian, you have a Forester, which is obviously the best.
Right.
And so one of the features of our particular Forester is that it has heated seats. Sure. Which in Maine of course is a useful tool but Sure. If you want if you want to feel like you pooped yourself. So we play a
game. I'm just concerned because I'm driving and obviously conditions are bad
I want to be able to concentrate so I need to feel as though I'm driving and obviously conditions are bad. I want to be able to concentrate, so I need to feel as though I'm driving around in a pool of my own poop.
Let me turn on the seat warmer.
Well, it's kind of part of the game is that we try to trick the other person
and turn their seat warmer on when they're not looking.
Oh, sneaky!
Yeah.
So you try to get the other person's seat warmer on without their looking.
Correct.
Right. That. Right.
That's awesome.
Thank you.
My son used to do that to me all the time.
So the dispute is over the rules of this. I drive a Volkswagen.
Whatever.
It's fine.
The rules are.
Well, that's what we need your help with.
Okay.
Because my husband was driving the car one time without me in it,
and he knew I'd be the next one to drive it.
And so he left the seat warmer on when he left the car.
Right.
Knowing that when I got in and turned the car on, it would get me.
It would explode.
No, sorry.
Like about ten minutes after driving it, it would get me, right?
And so I think that was cheating.
Why?
Because part of the game is.
You say that's a sneaky cheat?
Because it wasn't in the car when he put it on.
So what do you...
Steve?
So you think this whole game is basically close-up magic-based?
Yes.
Right.
It has to...
You can't...
Your point of view is the rule should be you can't just leave it on.
You've got to sneak that heat while the other person is in the car.
That both players have to be in the car.
There's got to be a measure of sleight of hand and, dare I say, distraction.
This sounds safe.
Sure.
Steve, aside from this disputed one, what's the best sneak heat gotcha you ever got?
What's your technique?
Are you driving?
Yeah, like on the way down here.
This is a perfect night to be playing distracting games in the car.
It's dark at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, freezing rain.
I was changing the radio while driving and just moved over and slowly...
But how did you pick that moment, how'd you pick that moment?
Did you notice that Lorian was looking out the window at the utter darkness or
something?
I just figured she wasn't paying attention.
And did it work?
Yeah,
it did.
Yeah.
That's a good catch.
Who's better at it?
I'd say we're about equal.
I don't know.
We've been playing it for years.
Are you keeping score?
Not really.
Then what's the,
for the moment, the gotcha moment. Are you married? Yes. And you Are you keeping score? Not really. Then what's the... For the moment.
The gotcha moment. Are you married?
Yes. And you're not keeping score?
How will you know
who's winning the marriage?
She is.
Steve, you're cool.
So basically you would like me to invalidate this absentee gotcha.
Yeah, and make it a rule for the game that both players have to be in the car.
Yeah, I think I'm going to rule that.
And here's why.
Because anyone can pull that kind of amateur s***, Steve.
However, I will say, because it's a cheap get,
because anyone can do it at any time,
and now she's alerted, it will never work again.
You're going to check it every time you get into the car.
That is now no longer a good get,
but I'm going to allow you one point for it,
because you did it first.
You changed the game.
But now you can't
and you're
entitled to one reprisal if you can try
it that way. His car doesn't have
heated seats.
Well, but I mean, you could
what? Show some creativity.
He's a bike commuter
so I'd have to put like a hot water
bottle on his seat or something.
No, but the whole point is you're driving together, right? So you're the driver, right?
And you're Subaru Forester. So you know, next time you park the car,
bump up his seat. And then when you get in the car together,
now I just had to spoil it for you. I mean, maybe you don't deserve to
play Steve. You're not exactly playing three-dimensional chess
here. What I'm saying is, it's a good get for Steve. You're not exactly playing three-dimensional chess here.
What I'm saying is, it's a good get for Steve.
You get one get like that if you can get it.
But that stands for one point, and from
now on, you
keep score.
And you keep us posted as to who's
winning every month
throughout the winter.
Lorian and Steve,
please welcome Alicia
and Mike.
All right. Alexa and Meek,
which one of you... I'm sorry.
Good enough for me.
Which of you seeks justice in this court?
I do. Alicia, I presume. And of you seeks justice in this court? I do.
Alicia, I presume. Yes, yes.
And what is the justice you seek?
So we've had a longstanding dispute over,
it's a sweet sugar pie with nuts in it.
I pronounce it a pecan pie.
And Mike says pecan.
It's a pecan pie.
I can feel the mob getting restless.
Yes.
And I'm originally from Kansas, and so it's like pecan, man. I can feel the mob getting restless. Yes. And I'm originally from Kansas, and so it's like pecan.
Like, it's just pecan.
In Kansas, everyone says pecan.
Yeah.
Pecan.
Pecan.
I'm originally from Central Mass, where we say pecan.
Right.
Where in Central Mass are you from?
Where?
That's what I'm asking.
Where in Central Mass are you from?
Where?
Third base. For those of you who have never left the state of Maine, there is a town in Massachusetts
called Where.
W-A-R, actually, I should have done this.
There's a town in Massachusetts called Ware
It's spelled W-O-R-C-E-S-T-E-R
And you are not Mainers
You have driven here from Massachusetts
To be here, right?
Thank you very much for taking your lives in your hands
It was a convenient part of our vacation And your vacation is to go north in the winter? Yes. And are you celebrating?
Seeking slush. And are you celebrating something? Yeah, so we met on this day in 2012. Oh,
wonderful. Yeah, it's our meet-a-versary. Your meet-a-versary.
Yeah. Where did you meet?
Well, on the internet
technically. Oh.
I usually like to tell people
it was at Jurassic Park, but
that's not true.
It's a more dramatic story.
Wait, when you tell people that you met at Jurassic Park,
not at a screening of the film Jurassic Park,
but at the tropical island full of dinosaurs known as Jurassic Park?
That we were on an amusement park ride,
and then all of a sudden it broke down,
and we were there next to each other,
but then the fences went down,
and some of the animals started to get loose. And wait no it was okay cupid that's a good story mike thank you
it's why i'm married i mean you you understand that you're both adorable i'd like to learn more
about you and i'm just yeah i'm teasing it out a little bit longer because this is a nothing
burger case that we're going to decide very quickly.
Well, and I don't want to change the way that Mike says pecan.
It's totally fine to keep calling like the nuts pecan and pies generally.
Right.
Pecan pies is just specifically when I make a pecan pie, I would like it to be called a pecan pie.
Oh.
So.
called a pecan pie.
Oh.
So.
I know it's nitpicky,
but, like,
there's a certain, like,
sweetness to pecan versus pecan.
Right.
And when I'm, like,
sitting there gingerly
flipping the pecans over
so it's not the brain side,
but, like,
the pretty ridged side.
Not the brain side.
Like, I want it to be called,
it's a pecan pie. The pie that you
make. Yeah, just specifically mine.
So, just out of sense
of regionalism and understanding,
I mean, this is a true
regionalism, whether you say pecan
or pecan. Yes. And I'm like,
who here would say
pecan?
And who here would say pecan? And who here would say pecan?
Wow.
So outback people say pecan
and forester people say pecan.
Got it.
Maybe it's not as regional as I thought.
But in any case,
you are a person of Kansas
and you say pecan.
Yes. And I have always say pecan. Yes.
And I have always said pecan, because I am also from Massachusetts.
But I think that the request is entirely appropriate.
You can call any pecan pie a pecan pie, except for a pecan pie made by your bride, Alicia.
So it's just like if the...
I don't want to talk about the president.
I was going to say,
if the president's on an airplane,
it automatically becomes Air Force One.
We're not going to talk about that.
If the president is on a spaceship,
it's automatically Colonial One.
So it is that a pie made by Alicia
using the non-brain-sided pecans,
it is always going to be referred to by you, Mike, and all, a pecan pie.
So say we all.
Alicia and Mike.
This week's episode of the Judge John Hodgman podcast recorded live on stage in Portland, Maine, at the State Theater with our musical guests, the Night and Day Jazz Trio.
This week's case was named by Jonathan Schleiman or possibly Schleeman, recorded by our friend Jeff Bird, produced by the wonderful Hannah Smith
and edited by Jennifer Marmer.
If we sound different,
I am recording from home
and we will be for the coming weeks.
We'll see for how long.
Things might be a little different,
but we've got a few episodes in the can.
We've got some live shows still to come
and we'll record some docket shows from home
as well.
Uh, that's about all we need to say, right, John?
Yeah, that's all we have to say.
Thanks for letting us keep your, uh, untouched faces and well-scrubbed hands company during
this time.
Be well out there, everybody.
Yeah, we're thinking of everybody out there.
Uh, it's, it's been tough for everybody.
And, uh, so we're, we're grateful you're spending some time with us.