Judge John Hodgman - Live from SF Sketchfest
Episode Date: April 19, 2023This week’s episode was recorded live in front of an audience at the Sydney Goldstein Theater! Our first case is SCOTTISH RITE OF WAY: Nate brings the case against his partner Chan. The two live tog...ether in a building that once was a Masonic lodge. One of the rooms in their apartment has a strange door that opens onto a dark and mysterious hallway. Nate wants to investigate the hallway. Chan wants him to leave the mystery door alone!Thanks to reddit user u/acone419 for naming this week's main case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com!
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
This week's episode recorded live at the Sidney Goldstein Theater in San Francisco at SF Sketchfest.
This was the penultimate stop on our Frontier Justice Tour of the West.
But penultimate just means second to last. These were all epic shows.
Every single one of these was ultimate in that they took place in an alternate universe where we wore slightly different costumes.
Let's go to the stage at the beautiful Sidney Goldstein Theater in my hometown, San Francisco, California.
This time it's mine.
San Francisco, you've come to us desperate for justice.
We're here at the Sidney Goldstein Theater to deliver it.
Let's bring out our first set of litigants.
Please welcome to the stage Nate and Chan.
Nate brings the case against his partner, Chan.
Nate and Chan live together in a building that was once a Masonic Lodge.
One of the rooms in their apartment has a strange door that opens onto a dark and mysterious hallway.
Nate wants to investigate the hallway.
Chan wants him to leave that mystery door alone.
Who's right, who's wrong, only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and delivers an obscure cultural reference.
Incredible architecture.
Historic building.
Oldest fraternity in history.
Wisdom of the ages.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Nate and Chan, please rise and 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 the only fraternal organization that would have him
was the British novelty
fraternal organization,
the Ancient Order of the Frothblowers.
I do.
I do. Two can make obscure
cultural references, John.
Nate and Chan, you may be seated for an immediate summary
judgment, and one of your favors. Can either
of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered this courtroom?
Nate, why don't you go first?
Well, it sounds like something Masonic.
Sounds like something Masonic.
But I have no idea what that would be.
Sure.
So I'm going to go with something that just sounds like our case, which is the book The Secret Garden.
The book The Secret Garden. I'm writing that down. Chan, what is your guess? I don't know.
You have to make a guess. Oh, no. And it can't be The Secret Garden. No. And nor should it be.
I agree. I will say, Chan, if you're ever in need of a catchphrase, I don't know.
It's not bad.
It's not a bad option for you.
Just be honest, right?
What's your guess, Chan?
You still need to make a guess.
I'm sorry.
Doesn't have to be right.
Just has to be a guess.
I'll give you a hint.
It is something Masonic.
Okay.
And you live in a former Masonic lodge.
I mean, that's the whole premise of the case.
That's why it's something Masonic.
So maybe, I don't know, do you have books in your house?
I have quite a few.
You have quite a few? You have quite a few?
What's one of them?
Do you think it's possible that to prepare for this case,
I might have waited until you left your home
and went into it and found one of your favorite books
and picked a quote from it?
Which cookbook would that have been?
I don't know. What's your favorite cookbook would that have been? I don't know.
What's your favorite cookbook?
This is good.
I like this.
What's your favorite cookbook?
Right now, it's Brown Sugar Kitchen.
Brown Sugar Kitchen.
Mm-hmm.
Terrific.
And I actually made a meal for it today.
Oh, really?
What did you make?
It's fried chicken, homemade sweet mashed potatoes, and
homemade baked beans.
Wow. Well, Chan, guess what? You're
absolutely right. It is Brown Sugar Kitchen.
No,
it's not. I'm afraid
we have to hear the case. That, of course, I'm surprised
you didn't know, is the
whole of the five-star review
given by
Nicholas Robinson on Google Maps to the Masonic Lodge in the city where you live.
Reviewed the lodge.
I won't say the name of the city because this is about where you live.
I don't want to blow up your spot.
But I can tell you, you do need to check your security in your building because I was able to get in there quite easily.
It was almost as if there was a secret door into your apartment. Who seeks justice in this court?
I bring the case. And Nate, what is the nature of the justice you seek? Does it involve a secret
door in your apartment? Yes. Well, we recently, a few months ago, moved into what used to be a
Masonic lodge. We actually moved into what used to be the attic
of a Masonic Lodge. It's all been converted into a loft apartment. I didn't see this on Zillow
before you did. Sure, sure. That's skeleton country. Our converted Masonic Lodge is, of course,
Our converted Masonic Lodge is, of course, bolstered on one side by an even older Masonic Lodge that no longer is in action,
and a newer Masonic Lodge that is in action.
Wait a minute, you're saying that your immediate neighbor... Sandwiched in between them.
The immediate neighbor of your building on one side is an active Masonic Lodge,
and then on the other side is an even more haunted, derelict Masonic Lodge than the one whose
attic you live in currently.
I haven't gotten into that one yet either.
You haven't?
Okay.
And what do you have in your apartment that you want to explore?
Well, there is in the back of one of the bedrooms, there is a door that you kind of almost miss
it if you didn't pay attention because it's painted just the same color as the wall.
There is no handle on this door.
Uh-huh.
And we became aware of its existence,
but never had access to getting inside of it,
except for me thinking I was going to have to buy a crowbar
to find out the mystery of this door.
So it had no handle, and you could not open it?
No.
I see.
But you became, I love the passive construction of we became aware of its existence.
Like just one day you woke up with that in your mind.
Well, you clearly don't live in the attic of defunct Masonic Lodge.
Obviously, you are excited to live in this attic.
Yes.
Tell me about your fascination with living in derelict Masonic lodges.
What about it sparks your imagination?
Well, when we first came looking for a place, I like living in places that are odd in general.
And so we came there in the first, it was literally the first apartment we looked at.
It was literally the first Masonic Lodge we looked at, Your Honor.
The list was long, but we didn't even have to see the others.
We've seen a few Elks Lodges and a Moose Lodge, but...
We have standards.
Yeah, that's right. I do enjoy HGTV Lodge Hunters. I like Lodge Hunters International more.
Yes. They're all running from something. They're all running from something.
Yeah. So if the goal was a place that's, first off, it's a nice large apartment, and also it
is certainly one of a kind. Do you have a pre-existing fascination with the history of
the fraternal organization and center of worldwide conspiracy theories known as
the Freemasons?
I think you pretty much summed up my previous knowledge of it.
Okay, good.
But you want to, in the tradition of the Freemasons, expand your knowledge.
You are a seeker and a learner, and you want to get into that secret door.
Who wouldn't?
Well, I would venture to say your partner, Chan, does not want to go through the door, nor does Chan want you to go through the door.
Chan, what is the nature of your feelings on this matter?
Well, the evidence that we provided for you, Nate even told me,
go get those pictures, and I didn't even feel comfortable doing that.
You did send in some evidence, and you're telling me that just taking the pictures...
It did make me feel uneasy.
It made you feel uneasy. Let's
take a look at the pictures. Family Feud style,
show me the evidence!
I have not let the record show
I have not yet turned around, and already the audience
has given me a hint
to how terrifying this might be.
Let the record show that if anyone doubted
the authenticity of this photograph
as coming from a Judge John Hodgman listener,
the giant bookshelf full of board games.
That's you, Jan?
That's me.
That's you?
Yeah, this is taken in what I call my playroom,
my craft room,
and sometimes it's known as the laughing room.
Except the laughing room?
Yeah, we have a neighbor down below
who laughs very hysterically, very often,
and very all throughout the night.
By the way, we only assume it's from down below.
You're saying that the...
The attic room in the haunted Masonic Lodge
that has the secret door in it
is plagued by maniacal laughter from unknown sources.
Is that what you're saying?
That's correct, Your Honor.
I can't believe I missed out on this real estate opportunity.
This is my kind of place.
It's the tale of as old as time.
All right, so yes, I can see how this door,
and obviously the photos will all be available online
on our Instagram and so forth,
but I can see how this door might come to your attention
when you enter the room.
Was that bookshelf full of board games in front of it prior to that,
as though, like Rosemary's Baby style,
they're trying to keep someone out?
No, that's my personal effects.
Okay, so yes, that's a very creepy-looking door.
If I may point out,
to the left of the middle of the door,
that is a light switch
that affects absolutely nothing,
at least on our side.
Your side of the spectral divide?
I also noticed that there is
one of those hotel door style
manual
locks on top of the door there.
Well, what's that for?
I asked
him to install that after
coming home from work one day,
and he mentions about a nightmare he may or may not have had.
Well, what was the nightmare that you may or may not have had, Nate?
Well, I'd fallen asleep on the couch, as is my want.
Is this happening inside the nightmare?
You're dreaming of a dream of a dream?
Well, it's complicated.
Not really.
Give it a second.
Oh, all right.
So I fell asleep on the couch.
I have a direct eyeline from that couch
to the secret door to nowhere
in the next room.
While I'm on the couch,
I start to have a dream that I am sleeping on that same couch, but I wake up from the couch in the next room. While I'm on the couch, I start to have a dream that I
am sleeping on that same couch, but I
wake up from the couch in the dream
to look at the door to see
it slowly opening in somebody's head
looking in at me.
And then it's slowly closing
again as the head
peeks back behind the door.
We need a little campfire up here,
Nate.
These are scary tales. And I woke up from that... We need a little campfire up here, Nate. These are scary tales. And I woke up from that dream, what I think is a dream, to find myself
sleeping on the couch I was sleeping on in the dream, staring at the door. So you're suggesting
that maybe, you suspect that maybe it wasn't a dream at all. I don't think, I think it was just
very spooky. Yeah. But it was certainly But it certainly came with feelings in the middle of the night.
What did the head of the peering through the door look like?
It was not someone you recognized.
It's not like a podcast looking for a good book.
It kind of felt like, and it's hard to describe what it looked like,
because, you know, dream logic,
but it kind of felt like if somebody did that in a David Lynch movie to you.
Right. Right.
It looked like Bob from Twin Peaks, maybe.
Sure. Any number of characters from Mulholland Drive.
So then you decided to put a lock on there
to prevent your dream from coming true.
By her request.
Well, you know, I get home from work, he's
sharing this disturbing story,
and I tell him, well,
that settles it, I would like for you to put a
lock on it. But, before we got
the lock... So, I'm
playing in my playroom... Listen to these two
mystery storytellers.
This is fantastic, you got this, go on.
Well,
so, I'm playing in my playroom, and off the corner of my eye, the door just seemed different.
Let me ask you, playing in your playroom, were you playing with like a Ouija board?
I actually don't own one of those yet.
Oh, okay. Interesting. Good suggestion for the holidays.
Up until we bring this case to you, we weren't able to actually open this door.
But this one day, shortly after this dream, it looked different.
No.
Stop it, Chan.
Stop.
It just looked a little different off the corner of my eye.
No.
No.
So I did what any rational person would do.
Chan, no.
No.
No.
Shut it down.
Everyone go home. Take care of your
children. Goodbye. This is the end of the
podcast. Forever.
After the nightmare,
the door changed appearance
or seemed to be...
It looked like it's ajar and it was.
It looked...
So this door that you couldn't open,
I remember Nate was telling me about two years ago
that he was going to get a crowbar to open the door,
and now you're telling me after he dreamed
that a spooky bob from Twin Peaks had poked his head out at him,
that now it was left ajar.
John, I have a riddle for you.
When is the one door that protects you
from the horrors of the spectral realm
not the one door that protects you
from the horrors of the spectral realm?
When it's ajar.
Oh!
I have an architectural note about this photograph.
Something that is fascinating me here
is that this door has no door handle,
which we've addressed,
but it does have a ramp,
which suggests that they're concerned
about mobility impairment in the ghost community.
That's true.
Yeah, that's true. ADA compliance is very important in the ghost community. That's true. Yeah, that's true.
ADA compliance is very important in the Twilight Realm.
Yeah.
Okay, so then you got the door open, I believe.
We have a photo of that, too.
Show me door open!
Now, oh, no, please.
That was a genuine shriek from the audience.
First of all, nice dragon painting
up in the upper right corner of that.
Thank you.
Did you do that yourself, Chan?
That's mine.
That's really nice work.
I really like that.
Charcoal, pencil, what are we talking about there?
Mixed media.
Mixed media, yeah, which I should have known.
Of course.
Sorry about that.
I still got it.
This is a steel door, it looks like to me,
or some kind of insulated door.
How would you describe it?
Yeah, if you knock on it,
it feels like some sort of metal,
and you can see it obviously looks...
Why are you knocking on this f***ing door?
It's knocked first.
Whoa.
Okay.
You can tell it's metal,
because if you look into a mirror and say
its name three times,
and it's got a slide bolt on it
on the other side,
there seems to be a certain amount of mutual distress
between you
and the denizens of the dark hallway.
It's as though the other people
on the other side have had the same wariness
about us.
And then it's also full of caulk and paint, which is fairly mundane but also fairly creepy.
But I don't see the hallway that's being discussed or the corridor or the passage.
If you have that in your evidence, we did submit it.
All right, show me the passage!
Nope, that's a close-up of the lock.
We wanted to make sure that was noticed.
But there's another photo over here as well.
But then there is the passage with weird brick walls
that I can narrowly slide down if I had the permission to.
Right.
Okay, so now I see.
Go back to the previous slide for a second so I can get my bearings.
So if you take a left.
You take a left.
Mm-hmm.
So what you're suggesting happen, Nate,
is that you move those cans of paint and caulk I can step over them. Okay, that's good
It's even easier. Yeah
They they built that passage in a Masonic Lodge, but they didn't remove the cans of paint
I don't want to move somebody else's stuff. Yeah, I know especially ghost stuff
So, okay, if you mean you're saying you can maneuver around those cans of paint
to work your way into a crawl space.
Which, despite with flashlights, we cannot see how it ends or where it ends.
It does look like it turns in another direction.
Say the words, despite flashlights again.
Did you shine a light down that passage?
Yes, and you cannot see where it ends.
Chan? true story.
Are you just trying to scare me?
All right, let's go back to that next slide.
I'm fascinated by the idea that he could just barely slide through the brick passageway,
which sounds to me almost certainly like what they call a self-Casco
Montagnato.
Are there any other photos,
or can we move on from this nightmare?
Oh, that's okay.
That's the lock that I installed
afterwards to compete with their lock.
And has it ever been tested?
Like, do you ever see the door rattling, the lock being pushed?
Not yet, which is why it needs to be explored.
Housekeeping, housekeeping, no, none of that?
Okay.
And that's the final slide.
Well, that's a terrifying journey into a dread nightmare
of undeniable cosmic proportions.
You want to go in there?
I think it's a moral imperative that I do.
All right, Immanuel Kant, tell me why it's a moral imperative.
Okay, first off, I think the very common dream
that over people dream that there's a secret door
or something in their house has something to do with,
I don't know, I'm not sure why, I'm not a psychiatrist or psychologist, but I know it's
a common dream. We have one. I think everyone would say that it would be a terrible choice
not to be somebody who rarely has a secret door and you actually get to explore it in the real
world. I think that that's very interesting. It's true. I've often had the dream that there
is a secret door in my home
that I discover a lot more square footage in.
What do you think is going to be in there?
Maybe it's like a cool extra bedroom?
Or maybe you can make an office in there?
The Masonic treasure room?
That's been hidden for years?
The Masonic treasure room?
Could be a treasure room.
There is one person who does not want you to go in there.
Chan, why not?
I think it's mostly my apprehension of I don't know the sturdiness or the safety.
And should he fall through the floor, we're not talking 10 feet. We're talking a whole level, which could be 20 feet.
What's below you, aside from the maniacal laughing
ghost? Pit of snakes.
I do know
neighbor below me lives in the ballroom
and I've seen the ballroom
and those are very high ceilings and that would be
a very fall far for him. At the very least
it would be an awkward
moment for you to fall into
your neighbor's living room. But
at least the fire department is right across the street
if I needed to call EMS.
I mean, honestly, I would be a little concerned too, Chan,
that Nate might get stuck in there,
like physically stuck and unable to get out.
Right, and that's also my other concern.
The way I was showing off at my uncle's house in Vermont that time
and I lowered myself into the laundry chute
and I got stuck in there.
Well, that just sounds irresponsible.
I thought it was a moral imperative, personally.
But I'll be the judge.
Chan, have either of you made inquiries to whoever is responsible for this building to know what this access space, to guess at what the space might be?
I'm glad you asked that.
The answer is no, because then there'd be no mystery or friction.
I'm also afraid they'll take it away from us.
We need conflict in our lives, and this is conflict.
We need conflict in our lives, and this is conflict.
You're afraid that they're going to take your apartment away from you, or that the door will just disappear?
They'll drywall it up, and then we'll never know.
It'll be straight-up drywall next time you walk in there and it's gone.
I'm pretty sure through that hallway I'm going to end up finding an entrance into one of the other Masonic lodges to explore them.
It's just thin drywall separating us from them.
It looks to me a little bit, Nate, and I hate to say this,
it looked to me to be a little bit just like a storage area,
just like an extra space.
That's where they put the paint cans, but that's just,
they just don't want you to know.
Any other conspiracy theories you subscribe to before we go? Thanks for asking.
Since we are live streaming throughout the world, I just want to make sure.
So, Nate, obviously you would like me to rule that you are allowed to go in there as soon as possible.
that you are allowed to go in there as soon as possible?
I would have an objection to one of her points,
which is I think despite the fact of what it looks like,
I think the floor is going to be as safe as any floor in a building.
It's just a very strange-looking area. So I don't think safety, from my opinion, is really a concern.
Flashlights will not penetrate the darkness
of this
corridor into another realm.
Your words, not mine.
Though I did punch them up.
Thank you. John, it's
completely safe. The fire department
is across the street.
Their alarm goes off. They have a special alarm
for a Monteiato wing.
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rules and restrictions apply chan would you want me to rule that he's just not allowed to and just live in perpetual curiosity
forever i've been enjoying the curiosity you you do you feel that it will be sad if he finds the
answer at the end of that tunnel yeah and then i'll be sad because he'll be sad. And then we don't have this conflict anymore.
I know what would make me sadder.
Not finding out at all.
I don't know if we have any more secret doors,
Your Honor. We just have the
one. We don't want to lose it.
Nate, aren't you afraid that you will go in there
and you will find that it is not anything particularly scary
or frightening or interesting or treasure-filled?
I don't think there's a bad solution to this.
Obviously, you know, whatever ideas one might have in their head
are going to be...
I think there's a bad solution.
...are going to be...
...ricked in and devoured by rats.
That's the one that I just thought of right then.
I could write a dozen more scenarios.
That's more of a result than a solution.
You could step on a rusty spike and then die of tetanus alone.
Well, I'll wear the nice shoes.
Could be gators, too.
Could be gators.
Could be some of those Bay Area wall gators.
Sure.
I've seen enough Mr. Magoo episodes.
I know how that works.
Some kid a few years ago got an alligator as a pet and got tired of it and flushed it into the walls.
True story.
There you go.
True story.
That alligator eats light.
Eats flashlight light.
Sure.
So it lives on.
Scary.
Nate, what would it be like for you if you went
into the wall and you found that it was just a storage closet? I think that would be, I'd be
fine with it because I would, I mean, obviously it would be way cooler to find other things in other
passageways or whatever, but I'd be fine just knowing the answer. The thing I would be least happy with is having a secret door that never gets
explored. That would make you unhappy to have a secret door that never gets explored.
Yeah, I think it would make almost everyone unhappy. Okay, I understand.
Chan, what would be the ideal ruling? Okay, you can applaud that.
Chan, what would be the ideal ruling that you would offer?
Or ask me to rule in this case?
Obviously no, but should you decide in his favor,
I would like to stipulate that I should be home for this.
Right.
Just in case.
Because if he tries to call me at work,
I don't think he's going to reach me.
If he falls in anywhere.
Do you have any problem with that, Nate, or do you need to be home alone and it has to be 2 a.m.? Well, that would kind of make it spookier,
but I assumed she would be there standing a safe distance away from the scary door
while I can call back to her my reports on what I found.
I have no problem with doing it safely. How are you going to equip yourself? from the scary door. While I can call back to her my reports on what I found,
I have no problem with doing it safely.
How are you going to equip yourself?
I assume a rope around the waist when I fall down into the ballroom.
Who's going to belay for you as you...
That's when the fire department gets called.
What else are you going to get?
Like a little lantern for your head?
That sounds like a good idea, so I can have both hands free.
He can borrow my headlamp.
Oh, do you do some caving?
No, it's mostly for working on engines, and sometimes it's dark.
You know, I don't think, Nate, you should be going into this hole.
She should.
Chan should.
She has the Chan should. She has the
practical skills.
Chan,
what do you think about Nate's
proposed gear setup?
A rope around his waist
and your head lantern.
Is there anything else
that you, I mean,
let's say that you were in my position
and you were advising him.
Let's say you were, I don't know, the manager of a hole exploring company and you were trying to help him out.
What would make you feel better if you were to go in there?
Man, how else can he look ridiculous?
Put on a hard hat.
You can have me wear your coveralls from work.
He can wear my coveralls.
Protect me from nails and such.
What about
work boots?
He can't fit in my work boots, so no.
No one can fill your work boots, Jan.
No one. I think I've heard everything I need to in order
to make my decision. I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits
the courtroom.
Thank you.
Is that our cue?
Shan, how are you feeling
about the chances that you have in this case?
I'm really
glad that we had this opportunity to be
heard at a very fair platform.
And
you know, I'll be
happy with it either way.
Nate, how are you feeling?
I've been surprised by some rulings before, but I think I've got the weight of justice
in history and human nature on my side.
Nate, how are we supposed to trust your judgment about anything?
When I'm looking at your outfit and you can't even decide whether it's hot or cold?
I like your outfit, too.
You look great, Nick.
You look great. We'll see what Judge Hodgman
has to say about this. Please rise
as Judge John Hodgman re-enters
the courtroom and presents his verdict.
Nate, there's nothing in there.
There's nothing in there.
It's just a simple storage space.
There's nothing in there.
It's just a simple storage space.
And the Freemasons are not the center of a worldwide conspiracy designed to create a one-world government
and control us and all of our thoughts.
They're not lizard people.
Sure, many of them are powerful figures in their community,
politicians, world leaders, and so forth,
but they're just a simple fraternal order
for people to get together
and hold swords at each other's throats
and say things about a supreme being
that only they can define for themselves
and wear interesting aprons and have fun.
It's just, it's nothing as that.
Nothing that you've read about them is true.
And that's just a storage closet.
Now you try to make up a fun, scary story for old Judge John Hodgman,
talking about your nightmare that may not be a nightmare,
a door that becomes mysteriously ajar.
And did you scare me? Yeah, you scared me.
The two of you are incredible storytellers.
There's nothing there, Nate. There's nothing there.
How does that make you feel?
I have 100% confidence that you're going to Geraldo Rivera this if you go back there. There's nothing there. How does that make you feel? I have 100% confidence that you're going to
Geraldo Rivera this if you go back there.
There's nothing.
That one's for Gen X.
That one's for Gen X.
It's for Gen X.
Walker Percy,
the novelist, wrote, it's better to know
than not to know.
And honestly, wrong.
I can think of many situations in my life where it would have been much better that I never knew.
There is something, I think, beguiling about the question mark that is right there in your
apartment, staring at you, making you wonder.
that is right there in your apartment,
staring at you, making you wonder.
Wonderment is something that is in short supply in this world because right now, s*** is very real.
It's not as wonderful as it might be.
I really do sympathize with Chan's feeling that, like,
why would you want to find out the boring, mundane truth
about this thing that is obviously not a secret passage
to the secret world government headquarters.
And I am therefore ordering
that you move out of that apartment immediately.
You've gotten too close to the truth,
and you need to be relocated.
Various graduates of Yale University
are waiting outside for you
in a van painted with skulls and bones
to take you to a new life
where I guarantee you there will be no surprises.
Nate, there's nothing back there,
but you're going in that hole.
Because you're absolutely right.
This is the stuff of dreams.
An apartment that has a secret door.
You might find a swimming pool in there.
You might find a cat cafe.
You might find a hotel where you are always the caretaker in your apartment.
You have to go through a secret locked door in your apartment, even though that story you told was very scary,
and even though I actually am fairly confident that it's just going to be a bunch of rusty nails and you're going to end up in the hospital.
I'm fairly confident that it's just going to be a bunch of rusty nails and you're going to end up in the hospital.
So to counteract that bad outcome, I further order not only that you go into the hole, but that, Chan, you have to outfit Nate.
And I really appreciated what you said.
How can I make him look as ridiculous as possible? Look, you're a talented artist.
Start doing some sketches of some of his exploring outfits.
Do you know what I mean?
I want to see like Ghostbusters type stuff times a thousand.
There needs to be a very special branded coveralls.
Some kind of proton pack has got to be a part of this thing.
So long as it doesn't get him stuck. I'm thinking because it could, because there is sticking in there, that he needs to have like that character in Damon Lindelof's Watchmen, the two bottles of
oil that he can squirt on himself in case he gets into a tight spot. And he needs to get lubricated, needs to lube himself out of there or whatever.
I need you to think, because obviously Nate is a dreamer.
Keep dreaming, Nate.
You're the practical one with the boots and the knowledge and the skills.
I need you to think of every eventuality, every tight corner, every bad outcome,
and create something that not only will help him be safe,
but also will make him look dumb.
I'll get him an Indiana Jones hat to top it off.
Sure.
Whatever it is, do you know what I mean?
Like, I urge you to sketch it.
You don't have to submit it to me for your approval.
Whatever you decide is fine,
but if you have different options, A or B,
I mean, Jesse's a menswear expert,
so he probably has a good idea of what will work.
And then once that outfit is all set and ready to go,
and you absolutely have to have a rope around your waist,
and Chan has to be feeding it to you
as you go into the other dimension or whatever,
you need to have a GoPro on your head
and film it for our show.
This could be a live streaming event as well.
You know what I mean?
Not for you, Camera A.
Camera C, I love you.
Camera A, you know what you did.
The point is, you're going to go into that hole,
you're going to look like a fool,
and you're going to have the time of your life.
Is this the sound of a gavel?
Judge John Hodgman rules, That is all. Nate and Chan,
thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast,
The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about
the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more
is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to embrace because yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney
is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
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
and you're on the go we're taking a break from the theater the the Sidney Goldstein Theater, that is, at San Francisco Sketch Fest.
You have two television programs available for viewing, John.
I'm not taking a break from the theater. I was born for the theater.
The musical theater of television, that is.
The television show Up Here on Hulu.
That is the one I'm talking about.
the television show up here on Hulu.
That is the one I'm talking about.
I play Tom, the weird dad in Bobby Lopez and Kristen Anderson Lopez's brand new musical
romantic comedy up here.
If you haven't watched it yet, please check it out.
It's a real toe-tapper, a real heart warmer.
It's a lot of fun.
And of course, while you're over at Hulu,
why not do a little rewatch of Dicktown?
It's probably been a day or two
since you watched that great cartoon that David Reese
made and I helped.
Jesse Thorne, what do you have going on with you in your life, though?
Of course, you can shop from me in the Put This On shop at putthisonshop.com or on Instagram
at put.this.on.
And there's a really cool interview this week on Bullseye, my NPR interview show with Delroy Lindo, one of the most wonderful actors in America and just a brilliant, sincere, powerful dude.
Just a really remarkable man.
I love Delroy Lindo.
And just a few weeks ago on the podcast, I was like, what's going on with Delroy Lindo?
I haven't heard from him in a while.
Now I get to hear from him on the great interview show Bullseye with Jesse Thorne.
Thank you, Jesse, for interviewing Delroy Lindo.
Let's get back to the Sidney Goldstein Theater.
Please welcome to the stage, Julie and John.
Julie and John.
What's going on with Julie and John?
Julie brings the case against her partner, John. What's going on with Julie and John? Julie brings the case against her partner, John.
John made a recording of himself
beeping every 20 seconds
to help with his stretching routine.
He calls it a stretching app.
Julie says, that's not an app.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Julie says, that's not an app.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Julie, John, you may be seated.
What?
You recorded yourself beeping, John?
Yes, so... Yeah, okay.
Well, so it wasn't like on regular intervals,
so it couldn't just be 20 seconds over.
It was 10 seconds and 20, so I had to manually beep.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
You're explaining the wrong part.
You recorded yourself saying beep?
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah, and he's getting his Series C funding right now.
He certainly does have the glasses and the evening shorts.
Yeah.
I still do.
To be a tech pioneer.
He's an app inventor.
John, do you know what an app is?
Because this sounds to me like a voice memo.
Julie, would you agree?
I would 100% agree.
Thank you for agreeing.
Tell me about John and what's going on in your lives.
So much.
Have you met before?
We have.
You live together.
We do.
We cohabitate with two children.
Cohabitate with two children.
Yes, mated successfully twice.
Oh, well done.
Thank you.
Mated successfully twice. Oh, well done. Thank you. Made it successfully twice.
Yeah.
Me too.
Is that what this show is now?
I don't know.
Relationship status is a hard thing to say.
Three times, baby.
Sorry, Mom.
So John's an exercise guy, and he decided he was going to make this recording to help him with his stretching, which is fine.
But he keeps referring to it as his exercise or stretching app.
And I'm like, words have meaning, and it's a recording.
There are apps that exist that will beep at you
and they offer the opportunity to buy things within the app
and then they drain you dry.
Why don't you use one of those?
Well, it was getting that frequency I wanted.
I couldn't find it quick.
The 20 seconds, 10 seconds, 20 seconds, 10 seconds.
Right.
So I made my recording into an app icon
that I just touch it.
It's just like a regular app from the iStore.
From the iStore.
It's just like a regular app from the iStore.
The initial public offering next month on NASDAQ.
John?
Yes.
What is the name of your app?
Six Minute Stretch.
They're running buses down Valencia Street
to John's house to bring all the tech workers.
Not a very zippy name.
It gets to the point.
Yeah, that's true.
And you've reached your target audience of one.
John, Julie points
out that you've made it successfully twice. Your genetic
material is out there. What do you care about stretching?
You're done.
It's over. It's over for you. It's over for all
of us. Why do you need
to be in shape?
I just have poor work ergonomics,
so it's nice to be flexible.
What does exercise do for you? What does this
stretching routine do for you?
Does it recenter you?
Is it meditative?
Does it help you feel limber and help you show off your legs?
It does help me feel limber,
and it definitely makes me feel less stiff.
Yeah.
And I appreciate both those things.
And step by step, what is the stretching routine exactly?
Quad stretch.
For how long?
20 seconds.
Okay.
Each side.
Then one stretch, toe touch.
Right.
But how long for that?
20 seconds.
10 seconds off.
10 seconds.
Okay.
I'm having difficulty visualizing.
Can you just do it?
Well, I could.
I could.
Can you just do it for us?
Judge Hodren.
I want to see this app.
Well, I could.
I could.
Can you just do it for us?
Judge Hodren.
I want to see this app.
If we were going to make him do it,
we would have to have the app installed into this theater.
Well, as it so happens,
the app is free for download.
If you know Julie.
John, would you mind doing the routine so we can see the app and process?
I could, yeah.
Why don't you step over here to camera A.
And before we do this, just so you know, Julie,
obviously I find it in your favor.
But let's see how it goes before we let you go, okay?
Let's do it.
Can we hear the act?
In 10, quad stretch one.
Ha ha!
Whee!
He's doing, so for the listener at home,
he's got one hand on the top of his foot,
and then he's doing a ridiculous hop that can't be part of the routine.
Oh, there it is.
that can't be part of the routine.
For the listener at home,
the look on Julie's face of disgust and defeat is priceless.
But indeed, Julie,
you are not defeated. You are victorious, I find,
in your favor. Julie
and John, thank you.
Julie, you may leave.
John, you stay there.
Bring out the next litigants.
Let's welcome Rebecca and Saroos.
Rebecca and Saroos to the stage, please.
Rebecca brings the case against her husband, Saroos.
Dang it!
Saroos calls himself a digital native. Rebecca says, thatoos. Dang it! Saroos calls himself
a digital native.
Rebecca says, that's wrong.
She says digital natives
are much younger.
Who's right? Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Saroos, Rebecca, welcome
to the courtroom. Rebecca, state your case.
He was born in 1982.
1982.
But says he was a digital native.
And clearly he is not.
Yes.
And so...
Ceruse, what does it mean to be a digital native?
I would argue it means growing up with digital technology.
Indeed, I was born in January 1982.
Sure.
Two years before I got an Apple Macintosh 128K.
Yes.
I was fortunate enough to grow up in a household with this very same Macintosh.
Pardon me, Ceruse.
I'm hearing some voices on your app.
What's going on?
Well, that's announcing the next thing.
Okay, I understand.
Continue.
I was fortunate enough to grow up
in a household with the very same Macintosh
128K in 1984. You lived in my house?
I think
we lived in a cross-dimensional
time warp. Through that door that we saw earlier?
Absolutely.
Very exciting.
Why do you...
Rebecca, why do you say that Ceruse is not a digital native,
and why does it matter?
Right, well...
First of all, yes, I don't dispute that he had a computer really early.
I don't dispute that he had access to anything early.
But it was really, really like in his house.
It wasn't the whole culture.
So we have two children, as the previous litigants.
You've made it successful.
Yes, twice.
And just seeing how they interact with technology,
it's so different than us.
Yes.
Actually, John, I think I heard your child on the recording.
Is that true? Oh, I see.
I think you still have some, your app is still in beta. Just be kindest about it. When you say they
interact with technology completely differently, you mean they don't ever write a little program
to make a turtle draw a picture of a sailboat? Well, exactly. And they don't know Oregon Trail
and it's not, you know, a touchstone for them because it's just part of their life.
Like today, my daughter, I was driving her home.
She asked me, how do you spell abracadabra backwards?
And I said, gosh, I don't know.
She's like, I'll ask Siri.
That's how they live in a completely digital world.
Exactly.
All of information is at digital world. Exactly.
All of information is at their fingertips.
Exactly.
All 608 episodes of Judge John Hodgman are being played for them.
And she has listened to some.
She has opinions, exactly.
John, how much longer does this go on?
What's that?
Last two stretches?
I'll allow it.
Okay, so Ceruse...
You're doing... John, you got this. Okay, so Ceruse... You're doing...
John, you got this.
You got this, John.
What's happening?
Okay.
Like, they know what an app is, for real.
Sure.
So, you know.
All I've ever wanted myself as a parent
is to raise my children well enough
that they could eventually replace me.
That's the job.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes.
I mean, I appreciate, Saroos, that you may feel erased by your children
who are genuine digital natives because you hold on to this status
with the death grip of a dying man, but it's time to let go eventually.
And whether it's being the parent of actual human children
or the co-parent with your friend of a podcast in live entertainment,
I'm really glad to know that, Jesse, we're apparently no longer necessary
because, frankly, John's killing it.
And Rebecca made the funniest joke of the night.
So... And Rebecca made the funniest joke of the night.
Why is it important to you that you be a digital native?
I'm a tech journalist.
I report on this stuff.
I have been involved in, as you mentioned, the Mac 128K.
I have with me a piece of firsthand evidence.
Shouldn't it be more... Oh, a piece of firsthand evidence.
Yes.
All right, I'll allow it.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
John, John, come back out here and take a take a bow friends the star of the show
what was that the sound that was indicating that the routine was over?
All right, we're going to end our show that way from now on.
Ceruse, I apologize.
You came here with a bribe for the judge.
I did.
So let me see what it is.
I have with me a brochure that came with this original 1984 128K Macintosh
that has been saved in my childhood home and I framed some
years ago along with this autograph of Steve Wozniak.
Yeah, it says, to Ceruse from Woz.
From Woz, yeah.
Exactly.
That's pretty intense.
In addition, my other evidence is that you may know from the... So my hometown is Santa
Monica, California, which was fortunate enough to have-
It's amazing that he was able to sign it so clearly, given he was surely writing a segue at the time.
It's true.
Santa Monica, California has the world's first BBS, bulletin board system.
This was an archaic, now archaic, 1980s era online message board system that I used in elementary school.
Right.
And I feel like I'm the only person who remembers that it even existed.
Rebecca?
Uh-oh.
And that's the exact point.
Can you stipulate to what an incredible accomplishment it is to have been born and lived in a period of time?
I don't want to take anything away from that.
Right.
And so that's my exact point, is that that's amazing how special,
how unique, how novel, how not part of the entire culture that was.
First of all, this BBS story, universally relatable. Everyone here, not just me and Saroos,
would go to the coffee shop, get a copy of Microtimes, look in the
back, find some phone numbers, use our mom's computer to dial in, and then, hopefully,
fingers crossed, get to play an R-rated text game.
When I went to college, a very pale man came to my dorm room and said,
do you want the internet?
And I said, sure.
And he brought a wire in and connected it to what was then my Mac SE.
I had moved on in time.
Time does move on.
And I opened up a BBS,
and there were two conversations happening.
One conversation was a debate over whether or not the character Deckard in Blade Runner
was a replicant or not.
And the other conversation was just prose erotica.
And it's exactly the same now.
Ceruse, did you have an answering machine growing up?
Yes.
Right.
Did you have a landline?
Yes.
Did you have a touchtone or even a rotary phone?
I used a rotary phone at my grandparents' house.
Did you have a fax machine?
Yes.
Did you ever see a zine?
Yes.
Yes.
You lived in a special time.
I don't know why. Your. You lived in a special time.
I don't know why.
Your children are creatures of the digital era.
You are a crossover event between the analog and the digital world.
You should be celebrating that.
I know you don't want to.
Because it means you're old.
You're old. You're 10 years younger than me. And you're old. You're old. You're ten years younger than me,
and you're old.
Look at me, your future.
I find it in Rebecca's favor.
Sorry, Saroosh.
Rebecca and Saroosh,
please welcome Sam and Laura.
Sam brings the case against their partner, Laura.
Sam and Laura share a table while they work from home.
Laura likes to tell Sam to look at their pets
when the pets do something cute.
Sam would like Laura to stop doing this
because it's too distracting.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
First of all, welcome to the courtroom.
You may be seated.
And if you are more comfortable, you don't have to sit on, you know, I also choose not to sit on stools.
Because I'm going to fall over.
Sam and Laura, welcome.
What do you think Ceruse should call himself if he's not?
I, like, you know, I'm just trying to give this podcast up to people who can make better jokes than me.
And this is kind of a Willy Wonka type situation.
And you have a suggestion for, like, he's analog and digital, like, dig analog?
I don't know.
You all workshop it.
Come up, when you come to open court, let me know.
Meanwhile, let's get to your case.
You deserve to be heard.
Who brings the case?
I do, Judge.
And Sam, you and Laura work at home near to each other?
Yes, most of the time we work in our living room together.
And Laura is distracting you?
Yeah, you could say that, yeah.
Laura, what do you do?
I work at a nonprofit.
Oh, okay.
But I mean, when you're not working at a non-profit and distracting Sam, he's claiming that you're distracting him.
How is this happening?
Oh, how am I distracting?
Yes.
I see the pets do something cute.
We have three animals, and I just can't help myself.
I have to get Sam to look, especially when they do something that's time sensitive, like rolling and showing their belly or, you know, they have their tongue sticking out or they got something stuck in their
face, on their nose. Or when our dog and the cats are starting to get closer, if they're cuddling
for the first time or closer than they've been, I don't want to miss that moment or have Sam miss
that moment. And I presume that you sent in some evidence.
Oh, of course.
Richard Robey, show me the pets.
No.
I don't know.
Should I look?
I don't want to look.
I'm really busy right now hosting this show, but all right.
Oh, come on.
Who are they?
What are their names, if I may ask?
The one with the white belly is Soba,
and the black one is Rolaren.
Any Star Trek fans out there?
No, there are no Star Trek fans here.
No Star Trek fans, no tabletop gamers.
Not here.
They're very adorable.
Do you have another piece of evidence to submit?
I think so.
What is the name of this dog?
This is Cowboy.
Cowboy the dog.
Follow-up question.
Can I eat him?
What does
cowboy have on his nose?
It's a little leaf.
Why did you answer, Sam?
What do you care?
Why do you hate looking at these pets so much, Sam?
I promise I'm not a monster.
I look at them so much.
Cowboys, he's my best friend.
Sure.
And I do throughout the day.
I love being able to work from home with my partner and our pets.
But I think I've just gotten so used to how cute they are,
it's like I don't need to see every single time they're cute.
Oh, you've gotten so used to how cute they are, it's like I don't need to see every single time they're cute. Oh, you've gotten so used to how cute they are...
LAUGHTER
..that you've stopped seeing how cute...
You've stopped appreciating them.
You spend so much time in the same room
with creatures that you love
that you no longer appreciate or even see them, basically.
Is that right, Laura?
It kind of feels like that.
Something like that?
How often does Laura ask you to look at the pets?
I think it depends on the day, how distracted they are.
I would say at max, maybe like ten times.
Ten times a day.
Ten times a work day or...
Just the work day. A waking day. In a work day. Well times a work day or? Just the work day.
A waking day.
In a work day.
Well, that is quite a bit, Laura.
Wouldn't you agree?
Yeah, but they're pretty cute.
I mean, I have to say that we have a very dumb cat in our house.
And I say that only because I love that cat.
And it's very true.
It's a dumb dumb dumb cat this I have seen this cat sleeping under a coffee table and then
stand up and hit her head least amount of field awareness I've ever seen an
animal especially a cat I have just like boonk sobo would do that yeah right and
and that's a fun thing to see when you catch it.
But it's definitely the case in our family
because she just is so dumb
and is often just staring off into space
in the middle of a hallway.
She's walking in and you see her go,
ah!
And it's just a cat staring off into space,
which maybe isn't worth the interruption.
I'm trying to say is maybe not all of,
I mean, I appreciate the time
sensitive cuteness, definitely a tongue sticking out of the mouth and a leaf on the nose for
heaven's sake, grab your camera. But don't you think Laura, it might be too much from time to
time? Yeah, especially Sam's job requires a lot of focus and mine requires a lot less focus.
So I do want to be respectful of their need to
actually focus on work. What is the work that requires so much focus that you do?
I'm a transportation engineer for a city. For a city? For this city. The city of San Francisco?
Yes.
Holy moly, we really do have some infrastructure nerds in the house.
I mean, that sounds good, but I would never think to applaud it until I knew more.
What does that involve exactly?
I specifically do a lot of traffic signal timing work. Oh.
Thank you. The judge is hugging the litigant.
And that's sincere, because you know I'm a former traffic counter.
That was my job.
I did.
I wrote in about it, actually.
Yeah, I sat.
Oh, you wrote in about it?
Yeah, yeah. Well, we've corresponded? in about it. Oh, you wrote in about it?
We've corresponded?
Laura, you want to take a break?
Let's talk about traffic counting just for a sec.
Just a millisecond.
What did you write when you wrote in?
I regret that I don't remember.
I think you had mentioned on an episode that you were hired to count traffic
and you didn't really know why.
So I wrote in about why that data is needed and what we do with it yeah no you explained now I remember
you explained a deep mystery to me because I would go out at 7 a.m to an intersection in New Haven
Connecticut with five different clickers and count which cars go straight which cars goes left which
cars go right and so on and I never knew why I was doing it.
I mean, I got paid $12 an hour in 1990, which is $1,000 a minute now.
You know, that bought a lot of bourbon in comic books, I'll tell you what.
The ad in the newspaper just said,
traffic company seeks Yale graduate to count.
I was a student at the time.
I'm not that old.
I was a first-year student, and I wanted to make a little extra money,
and it was a great way to get to know the Paris of southern Connecticut, New Haven.
But I had no idea why I was doing it.
And as I mentioned, and I'll say it again,
I would have to go and meet my handler
once a week in a
different location every time. She was
the one who told me where to go and I would turn in my
numbers for that day and one time I said
to her why am I doing this?
And she said I don't know.
John are you 100% that you weren't
working for the CIA?
I honestly thought that it might be like a psychological experiment
to see just how far we can push him.
How big of a rule follower is he?
Because there was no one checking up on me.
I had no idea whether I could have just put in any numbers I wanted.
I thought maybe it was a psych experiment,
but now I realize it was a recruiting experiment
and I failed, apparently.
Your handler is looking at the piece of paper like,
69 cars again?
Oh, no, no, no.
Saturday there were 420.
Laura, you mentioned you work for a non-profit.
I think it's only fair to ask what your non-profit does.
They work with the LGBTQ community. Thank you very much. Almost as important as the timing
of traffic signals. I'd say they're equally important. So what would you have me rule if
I were to rule in your favor, Sam? I think like a limit to how many times or some kind of like...
What's the limit? What's the limit? Set a limit. Maybe like three times a day.
Three times a day.
So you're telling me, Sam,
that if Laura
points out three cute things
and then all of a sudden
those two cats are riding cowboy
like a horse,
you don't want to know
about it?
What if there's an emergency cuteness situation?
Yeah, I would want to know. You would want to know about it? What if there's an emergency cuteness situation? Yeah, I would want to know.
You would want to know, wouldn't you?
Laura, do you feel sometimes that the issue is not so much Sam won't look at the cats,
but that you would like his attention and you're not getting it?
A little bit.
Like I said, I don't have to focus as much.
He doesn't need to focus as much. And so any point that I...
He doesn't need to focus that much.
You should see.
He's not timing...
You should see.
It's insane.
He's not turning...
He's not manning the stoplights himself.
He's not like looking at a camera going,
okay, this is going to be red in five, four, three, two.
Go for yellow.
All right.
Standby for red.
Standby for red. Do we have the walk sign
going? Okay, let's see it. Five,
four, three, solid hand
on zero. Go. Okay.
Go for solid hand.
Standby for red. Standby for red. Here we go.
Red. It's hard work.
It's not what's happening. I don't know what he's telling
you. He's playing a video game.
But, you know, how do you feel when Sam says,
I don't want to look at the cats.
I don't want to enjoy this with you.
Well, for me, the hardest part is that they just don't respond.
He doesn't respond?
Oh, they, excuse me, they don't respond?
Yeah, they just, they're so focused.
That's what I'm saying.
Their focus is unbreakable.
And I will say, oh, look at the cat. And's what I'm saying. Their focus is unbreakable. And I will say,
oh, look at the cat. And they'll just keep working. And then like three minutes later,
maybe turn around and go, oh, and then they miss it. And that's why I get so frustrated. Because
I'm like, if you looked right away, you would see the cute thing and it would be over in a second.
Right. First of all, I apologize for misgendering you. Did I do it any other time? Are either of you vegetarians or vegans?
I mean, it's great if you are.
If you were, then you probably had never been to a Brazilian barbecue restaurant.
There's a chain of them around where they just keep bringing food to your table.
I've seen the sign on the freeway.
Yeah. It's gross. It's gross. Even as an omnivore, I find it to be a little bit gross. But they have
one thing there that I think you could take advantage of, which is you get, when you sit down,
they just start bringing you food on skewers and they will keep going. But you have some control
because you get a little, a little, a little disc with a green light you like this
On one side it's a green light
Meaning bring me more and on the other side. It's a red light meaning. I'm taking a break right now
I think you should get go out to dinner. You don't have to eat there. Just steal one of those things.
Bring it home and have it
in a place where Laura can see it
and when you need to focus
because you don't want cars
to crash and such, you can
put it on red.
Laura, do you think you could respect that?
I could, but we already have something like that.
Oh no!
And it's actually a traffic signal light that you can put each one.
Laura, that's even better.
See, Jesse, this is the last episode of the podcast ever.
We're done.
They're all doing it better than me.
It's for the best.
They got this.
So this isn't helping?
We haven't used it for that purpose yet.
Oh, well, what purpose?
Well, never mind.
None of my business.
If it is reasonable
to repurpose
your home traffic light
and it won't send mixed messages
or cause hilarious misunderstandings.
Then I would suggest, Sam, that you put the red light on.
But be thoughtful about it.
You know what I mean?
Don't forget to put the green light on.
You have a great opportunity.
It's wonderful to be able to be at home and work from home with both the person and the animals that you love.
And you want to take advantage of that. So make sure that there's a certain amount of green light. But I
think it's reasonable to indicate to your partner, I just need a little bit of focus time here.
And, you know, I basically, I would say to you, Laura, is just, you know,
rig up cameras throughout your apartment so that you capture everything.
We have one watching our dog right now.
Do you have a live camera that one watching our dog right now. Really?
Do you have a live camera that I can look at right now?
Yeah, I might take a sec to load, though.
Yeah, I'll look at it in a little bit.
Okay.
It has night vision.
Get loaded up because Jesse's going to sing a song in a second.
I'll come take a look for you.
With you.
All right.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Thank you.
Judge John Hodgman will have his own.
That's it for this week's episode of Judge John Hodgman, who is that aside? That's it for this week's episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our thanks to all of those litigants who joined us on stage at the Sidney Goldstein Theater.
A very special thank you to the fine people at SF Sketch Fest for employing me when I was indigent out of college in 2006 and 2007, I'm going to say.
2008, maybe?
Something like that.
Sorry, Jesse.
I'm doing my stretching routine.
Evidence and photos from our show are posted on our Instagram account at
instagram.com slash judgejohnhodgman.
Follow us there.
You can also find the photos at maximumfund.org on the Judge John Hodgman page for this episode.
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Join
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MaximumFun.reddit.com.
Thank you to Redditor
Akone419 for
naming this week's main case
and for being, I'm going to say,
a pioneering graffiti artist in
New York in the late 1970s.
That's what that sounds like to me.
Acone 419.
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Hang on, Jesse.
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Time to do my hammies.
Dadgummit.
Judge John Hodgman, created by Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman.
This episode recorded by Matthew Barnart, produced by Valerie Moffat, Richard Roby, and Jennifer Marmer.
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