Judge John Hodgman - Live from SF Sketchfest 2016
Episode Date: January 21, 2016"Beyond a Reasonable Drought" and "A Portrait of the Artist as a Weird Dad", taped in front of a live audience at SF Sketchfest 2016! Plus, Swift Justice and songs from special guest Thao Nguyen of Th...ao and the Get Down Stay Down. Look out for Thao's new record and tourdates at the band's site. A MAN ALIVE is out March 4th! Please note that this week's episode includes bleeped swearing.
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This week's Judge John Hodgman was recorded in front of a live audience at SF Sketch Fest.
Tonight, beyond a reasonable drought, Patricia files suit against her boyfriend Dave.
Patricia says Dave is drought conscious and has put together a
haphazard system to collect water
for his plants.
She admires his earth-friendly
attitude, but says his weird
water tubs are unhygienic
and gross.
Dave is proud of his homemade
system. Who's gross? Who's not?
Only one man can decide.
Please, rise, as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom.
You may be seated. You may not.
It's basically a micro-sandwich, a high-efficiency filter and heat exchange system.
The skin contact layer is porous.
Perspiration passes through it, having cooled the body.
The next two layers include heat exchange filaments and salt precipitators.
Salt is reclaimed.
Urine and feces are processed in the thigh pads.
Reclaimed water circulates to catch pockets from which you draw it through this tube right into your pie hole.
Now, bailiff Jesse Thorne, you may swear them in.
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?
Please address the microphones.
I do.
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact that he considers fresh water to be the world's most valuable resource,
because his only religious text is the film Waterworld starring Kevin Costner.
I do.
I do too.
Very well.
Judge Hodgman?
You may be seated.
Interesting.
I almost used a quote from Waterworld to introduce...
You know what?
But you know what?
There aren't that many of them
My dad and I went to see Waterworld in the theater
You know what I remember thinking about Waterworld?
Yes
I kind of like the movie Waterworld
Yeah
It's not terrible
You know what else is not terrible?
The Postman
But that's for another podcast.
John and Jesse's
Waterworld and Postman.
Kevin
Costner post-apocalyptic
one-two punch podcast.
But now, this is the judge
John Hodgkin. First of all, every year at the
holidays we talk about Tin Cup. That's true.
It's weird that that was a
post-apocalyptic movie not
a lot of people realize that that took place yeah after after there had been a horrible
nuclear war the only only movie star left was kevin costner so they had to make a movie with
him i love kevin costner you guys i feel terrible about. He might be here tonight. I invite him to every live
performance. As we do, boss gags. That's right. Now, just as a point of order, we only ever do
live Judge John Hodgman, with one exception that proves the rule. We only ever do them here
in San Francisco at SF Sketch Fest at Marines Memorial Theatre for you. And as you know,
we only do them at 10 o'clock at night. The perfect time for a podcast whose audience
consists entirely of 45 to 50 year old people and their incredibly eccentric 14 year old children.
and they're incredibly eccentric 14-year-old children.
So I am grateful to you all for staying up late.
We have a really great set of cases.
A lot of justice will be dispensed.
We have a brand-new screen here at Marines Memorial Theater,
which I'm not sure if you can smell it, but it is so new it is off-gassing some incredible fumes.
I feel like I just took a face dive in a brand new slip and slide in 1971.
I feel like Boz Skagg 78.
Yeah.
So as this wafts out into the theater, we're all going to have a really good time.
But now, for an immediate summary judgment in one
of yours favors Dave or Patricia can you name the obscure cultural reference that
I referenced as I stood here at the whatever this is as I entered the
courtroom Dave you are the one who was brought here against your will by
Patricia so you have the choice who was brought here against your will by Patricia,
so you have the choice to either guess or make Patricia guess first. Do you have a guess, Dave?
I'll go ahead and guess. The only thing I could think of is it sounds like something that they sell at REI, the instruction manual for some... Oh, well, I'm not going to say whether that's
right or wrong, but it's an intriguing guess. Patricia, do you have a guess?
I'll plead the fifth.
No, you have to guess.
Wait, you're pleading the fifth?
Yeah.
That means you know what it is.
Actually, if you did know this,
it would kind of incriminate you in a way.
I don't know. Kama Sutra? All kisses are wrong!
Although that also was kind of on on the money too in a way. Indeed it is from the
great Kama Sutra of science fiction literature, Frank Herbert's Dune. I am so relieved
neither one of you got that because
I would have been, if I had been in
your shoes, I would have been screaming it from the third
word because, of course, it is a
description of the still suit
which is the personal
bodily moisture reclamation
garment that is worn by the
Fremen on the desert planet of Dune
which has very little water
and speaks to the future
of California.
What's amazing
is how much more obscure
my repeated references to
Boz Skaggs are
in this context.
No one knows who Boz Skaggs is.
People know all about
the Thrennin
Is that what they were called?
No, Jesse
For someone who enjoyed Waterworld
So much
I feel that your education is somewhat lacking
When it comes to Desert Worlds
The first world
And the third world of that particular galaxy.
But anyway, it doesn't matter.
Dave, you are engaged in your own water reclamation project
in your own home here in the Bay Area.
Where do you live?
Oakland.
The Bay Area is Brooklyn.
The Bay Area is Brooklyn.
Oakland.
There is a drought happening throughout California, including here, I understand.
And what are you doing to reclaim water?
Well, I planted a garden a couple of years ago.
That just takes water.
Exactly.
How are you helping?
Well, I dug a ground in pool.
I thought about that. ground in pool. Ground in pool.
In ground pool.
Well, so I discovered that after I had planted this garden that I would need water to water it.
Sure.
You created an extra need for water in your life.
That's exactly what I did.
Okay.
And so I realized that a way that I could get the water out to my garden was that there was water that when I turned
a faucet on in my house and the initially the water was cold that was water that I was basically
just wasting because it was of no use to me right so I started collecting it and then moving it
outside to water my garden and how would you collect it in a in a in a in a shadow in a light
box well that's some of that's called. How are you collecting it?
In plastic containers.
In plastic containers?
In plastic containers.
Like buckets?
You could call them buckets.
Sure.
Once upon a time, they were...
You could call them buckets.
It would not be the right word.
Why would that even be an option?
I'm using them like buckets. What are they? They're
64 ounce and 32 ounce containers that were originally bulk yogurt containers.
You know that there's a specific recycling bin in Oakland that's only for bulk yogurt containers, right?
Second of all, I have no problem with yogurt, but I spent many years trying to figure out,
how can you make it sound more disgusting?
Right, bulk yogurt.
Doing what I can.
I'm glad you're here.
So, okay, double ecological conscientious action.
You are saving water that otherwise would have been wasted,
and you are using a potential landfill that otherwise would have been just thrown away.
So what is your problem with this, Patricia?
He doesn't only use the yogurt.
He does have a big white plastic bucket he uses in the kitchen.
We don't have to be bucket racist about this. Okay, okay, are you ready?
Don't know why you had to say that. It's just a bucket that happens in the kitchen. We don't have to be bucket racist about this. Okay, okay, you're right. Don't know why you had to say that.
It's a bucket that happens to be white.
It has to do part of
maybe with that he leaves the buckets
there so long they start
getting filmy. Wait, where does he leave them?
In the sink? In the sinks, in the
shower, on the edge of the...
You got buckets in your shower there, Dave?
I do. I had a bucket in my shower.
You had a bucket in your shower?
There's someone in the front row
who just applauded your shower bucket.
There you go.
So, let me just say,
if this
court case doesn't work out for you, Patricia,
and you guys break up, Dave,
you have someone...
A soul
mate. You have a possibility
there. Why are
you keeping a bucket in your shower?
To collect more water? That's correct.
When you first turn the shower on, the water's cold.
Right. So that's
water that ordinarily would go down the drain.
So I had something in there to collect that for
the same purpose. Patricia, why do you hate
the earth so much? What's the problem?
If you knew what it did to me, you'd understand.
Now, the first time he tries to throw a bucket,
the first time I took a shower at his place,
he grabs the bucket that the dirty dishes have been sitting in,
and he probably watered the plants with it,
but he throws it in there and there's like black bean goo
and olive oil
and red and...
Kombucha, yes.
We get it.
And as it fills up,
it's going to splash
on me.
Wheat germ, bulk yogurt residue.
And that's
when that fills up, it's going to
splash on me,
which is counterintuitive to the cleansing process.
So this is not in your home.
This is in Dave's home.
That's in Dave's home, yes.
But you go and spend the night there sometimes
because you're grown-ups and you have your own business.
Yes.
I understand.
So that was, no.
I made him take, no, get it out.
Right.
This is a dramatic reenactment.
It's either a dramatic reenactment or a flashback that she's having that was so traumatic.
And I don't blame you to feel a little bit traumatized by having to shower in a shower that has a bucket of food residue in it.
Dave.
Yeah.
How long has it been since you've had a girlfriend sleep
over?
How long have you guys
been together?
Oh, you're going to tease me.
I'm going to tease you no matter
what. So you might as well
answer the question. Five years,
but he didn't start the water thing until
about two and a half years ago.
No, see, I'm not going to tease you because that makes perfect sense.
Because that's exactly the time frame in which a guy has decided,
after about two and a half years, I no longer need to hide what an incredible monster I am
in order to get her to keep coming over.
No, no, no. Ashley, I got a year and a half is when the farting started.
For some reason before that.
I know you want me to be mad at Dave,
but a year and a half to hold off on farting,
that's a long time in a relationship.
Can I ask you guys a question?
Do you think it's possible that the farting
might have some relationship to the 64 ounce yogurts?
Bulk, bulk yogurt, I think may be
the culprit there.
No, you don't
look, I'm not gonna,
you guys are grown-ups like me,
you're not kids, but in today's hookup culture,
you know, farting is usually
on the first hookup.
That, yeah.
For a year and a half, he didn't
do it in front of me,
and then all of a sudden it was all hands on deck.
I don't understand.
What is all hands on deck farting?
I just mean it was just like it was open season. It was basically like, everyone, all hands on deck.
I'm about to fart.
Everyone in the house.
It's just a klaxon. Come immediately the house. It's just a klaxon.
Come immediately to...
Yeah.
Klaxon, klaxon.
Come immediately to my wheat germ pantry.
I'm about to fart in the garden.
I'm a little nervous.
I meddled my words.
No, you're fantastic.
Do you fart a lot, Dave?
Remember, sir, you are under oath.
You're under...
How would you define a lot?
Like...
Trying to think of farting by San Francisco standards or Oakland standards.
I can tell you I haven't yet tonight.
Well,
you've done me better, sir.
Because I'm...
But thanks for creating
a sense of anticipation.
Dave,
it's 10.30 p.m.
Do you know where your toots are?
So, do you still put the shower bucket in?
Do you want to answer this?
No, you know what?
I'll let Patricia answer this.
I got him a fresher one that would be easier to clean.
You got him a fresher bucket?
Yeah.
Tell him what it is.
Yeah, yeah.
Tell him what it is. Tell him what it is. Oh, my God. This is going to turn the tide for Yeah. Tell him what it is. Yeah, yeah. Tell him what it is.
Tell him what it is.
Oh, my God.
This is going to turn the tide for me.
Tell him.
Tell him.
Oh, my boy.
When you hear what kind of crazy bucket you got me.
It's a six-inch half hotel pan.
So nice and deep.
A six-inch what?
Half hotel pan.
Half hotel pan?
Yeah, it's metal.
Chafing dish.
Oh, okay.
Like a chafing dish?
Yeah.
I thought it would be easier to sanitize.
In the hotel business, we actually call that a fart bucket.
Why did you think
that was an important detail, Dave,
for me to hear?
At the end of the day,
you have a bucket in your shower
like is there really one that's worse than the other is there really one that
could possibly be worse than your recovered dishwashing tub and if I could
just interject a sub question here is there anything wrong with using a bucket as a bucket.
You know, I hadn't thought about that.
I think the point I was trying to make was that rather than just say this is the craziest thing I've had
and it's gross, she actually gave me something.
She actually presented me with something to use.
Sure. Well, I mean, she wants this relationship to work.
And she's at that point.
You're at that point where you've begun farting and
displaying your weird hobbies.
And she's at that point where she's like, I want this relationship to work.
I have to start enabling this weirdo
in order to make him think that his insanity
is okay.
Or else where this relationship go?
It'll have to end.
I just, yeah, I want it to be healthier
because at some point if we move in together...
Well, you actually had a germ...
I'm not going to say germophobic, but...
No, I'm not germophobic, but I...
You were concerned that there was a bacterial breeding pool in the shower.
Well, there is.
Well, besides a shower, there's also a bucket that lives in the bathroom sink.
I mean, it's not a bucket.
It's a plastic...
No, there's no buckets in this home.
There's no buckets.
No, you're right.
It's a flower bowl that's also plastic, and he always pulls the stopper, which you think
isn't a problem, but the water flows over, and then he leaves it in there,
and then different things collect.
The sink starts turning gray.
It's just the bowl is dirty, the sink gets dirty,
and then I'm supposed to wash my face over that?
Judge Hodgman, when you're dealing with this volume of yogurt,
you're going to have a lively biome.
Is there any basin in your home that does not have an extra water
collection unit? No. What do you grow in your
garden? And, sub-question, I presume it's
the type of garden I presume it is, why don't you just use
your bong water?
you use your bong water.
You're right, kids, I don't know what it means either.
But I'll allow it.
I'm sorry, which question am I answering? Is your garden, I guess I'm asking,
is your garden hydroponic?
What do you, what do you, so is it bubonic?
Well,
possibly so.
I grow,
in the summer,
I grow tomatoes,
peppers.
I actually,
at one,
I think the first year
I grew a cantaloupe.
A single cantaloupe?
I think I won
single cantaloupe.
And then,
currently,
I've got onions,
beets, carrots, winter crops here in California. And then currently I've got onions, beets, carrots,
winter crops
in California.
Patricia, do you enjoy the bounty
of this garden?
How do you enjoy eating a cantaloupe
that's been raised with bulk yogurt,
trash water? I didn't get that,
but the tomatoes were darn tasty.
The tomatoes were darn tasty.
What would you like me to order Dave to do?
I'd like him to wash, well, get some more proper things that are easier to clean.
You're deep enough into this that you're willing to accept this behavior.
I am.
You want practice to be more specific.
Wash it more often.
That's wasting water.
That is a conundrum. Yeah, I don't know.
Are you using the water for anything else other than watering your garden, Dave?
Well, actually I do use the water to rinse dishes off before I put them in the
dishwasher.
I don't know why that's an ew.
Why it's going into the dishwasher.
Why are you even using
a dishwasher?
To wash dishes.
Do you understand how much
electricity that uses?
Well, I'm not worried about...
We don't have an electricity drought.
Enron days are over.
Get ready for Waterworld, man.
Get ready for the dystopia of Tin Cup World coming up soon.
Can I also add with that too?
Well, this is your chance to say what you want.
So tell me everything you want.
So yes, prettier bowls, clean bowls,
keep that damn stopper down so stuff goes down
and the sink doesn't get slimy and gray.
A new toilet would be great because...
What did he do to his toilet?
Letting the yellow mellow for too long has stained it.
Wow.
It's a nice way of putting it.
You're talking about the old principle of if it's yellow, let it mellow.
If it's brown, flush it down.
Yeah.
How long do you let it mellow?
Well, I'll admit, part of it, he used to have a roommate that also had two little boys
and all the boys let it mellow.
There was a lot of yellow. There was a lot of yellow, yeah.
So now the toilet is
ooky.
Have you tried cleaning it? Yes, he's tried
cleaning it. He also has
hired a house cleaner to clean and one day
I was there and I helped her bale the toilet
so you get the water out so you can get the cleanser
right on the gook.
And it just got a little bit off, but it's just still gooky.
So there needs to be a new toilet stained beyond belief
because of all the men who just let it mellow.
Yeah.
Apparently never produced a brown to flush it down.
Yes, I guess.
Or was that going into the garden as well?
Ew
Alright, I think I've heard everything I need to
To make my decision
I am going to now go
Into my chambers to bathe
In my own recovered sweat and urine
And I will be back in a moment
To make my decision
Ladies and gentlemen, please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
You may be seated.
Dave, does anyone else come to your house?
As a matter of fact, yes.
Who?
Actually, my parents visited last weekend.
What did they make of this?
They didn't make anything of it because I removed all evidence of it.
So you know you're saying it.
Can I also add, his dad has one glass eye too, so.
It affects his vision.
It affects his depth perception, not.
I don't think it has anything to do with.
So if you throw a bucket at him, he's less likely to be able to catch it.
I'm just saying.
By the way, Dave, that was a really cool impression
of your dad trying to catch a bucket.
Patricia, are you thinking about moving into this home?
Possibly, yes.
Look, I'm not trying to push you guys along.
But you might be getting to that point in your life yes um we could take some more bitchin trips if we actually combine resources that is a
really good point i wonder if the judges even considered the bitchin trips issue Patricia, do you feel like this is a home that you could invite people to?
Like, let's say Sally from work.
Overall, yeah.
It's a beautiful, it's a small little 1922 craftsman house.
So wood floors and, you know, need some girly touches.
But we'd like to get rid of the slimy
gray stuff. Get rid of the garbage
pockets.
And that would make it even more
presentable. Patricia, do you think
you're going to prevail in this case?
I did
my research. I did my research I did my studying
legionella, slime, funguses
all that kind of things that develop in standing water
even looking up
conservation actually can screw up your pipes
and create odors, it's creating odors in cities
that's why it's important not to conserve
it's important not to conserve.
It's important to find the balance
is what I like to say.
I'm not taking his water conservation away.
I just like to
clean it up, sanitize it a little bit.
Dave, why is your pee so yellow?
Because you're taking a multivitamin?
The reason I mention it is I started taking a multivitamin.
The transformation is astonishing
what was I not
eating before
I'm actually
the one
of us not
taking multivitamins
no you take
your hemp powder
oh No, you take your hemp powder. Oh.
Should I eat?
True.
I don't think that's making it,
I don't think that would make it yellow, though.
I mean, even more yellow.
Dave, you think you're going to win this thing?
I don't think I have a chance in hell.
You really sealed the deal with that hemp powder thing there.
Holy moly.
You can see why I love her.
You just never know where the conversation's going to go.
The next case they bring is Dave arguing that carob tastes just like chocolate.
Well, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom.
You may be seated.
I had a very clear sense of where my ruling was going to fall on this one, and there was almost no argument I could hear that would change my mind until I learned that Dave's
father has a glass eye. It was just that sort of non sequitur ad hominem attack
that made me appreciate the hostility
of a particular witness in this case.
Dave, I admire what you're doing.
I admire the intent of what you are doing.
You have created a need for extra water
in a state with a precipitous drought.
Ooh, that's a Nazi moron.
And perhaps out of guilt
or perhaps out of a lot of extra time,
you have come up with some plans
to alleviate the need that you created.
I could order you to stop gardening and no longer have the need for all the extra water,
but even so, collecting that water and reusing it is a noble thing to do. It is not noble to,
and the same woman in the front row just applauded again.
Let the record show that she also applauded
when I said the word carob.
That said, there is a difference between being responsible and being gross.
And one has an equal responsibility to the larger community
as to the community of two that you share.
You should be thoughtful to the larger community,
but not gross to your partner.
When you start to live,
cohabitate part-time together,
you are sharing more of yourself,
intimacy, farting proximity.
And it's important to take care
that your other person
see the very best side of you,
not the very worst side of you
that puts an old junk bucket of pinto beans in the shower
in order to throw it all over the garden later.
Or, for that matter, keep a bunch of standing water in your bathroom sink
all the live long day, because no one wants Legionnaire's disease.
There might be someone who does, but no one here does, I'm pretty sure.
I, in no way, am going to order you to stop your habits of collecting water,
but I am going to find in favor of Patricia that you should do so more responsibly.
You should have a basin in your sink that you rinse out with hot water once you've gotten it hot,
and make sure that it's really rinsed out well and dried no standing water in your house and in the shower use it use a watering can dumb dumb
like just put a watering can in there and then lift it out and take your shower and then
water your garden tend to your garden that's what candide said but why are you using
tubs of bulk yogurt?
Stop being gross.
And leave that thing in there
when your glass-eyed dad comes around.
See what old Pappy Popeye has to say about that.
Own up to your weirdness.
That is one order of this court. And the other order of this court
is get a watering can. This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Dave and Patricia, thank you so much.
We'll be back in just a minute with more of our show recorded live at SF Sketch Fest.
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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.
Bailiff Jesse, last year at SketchFest, we tried a new experiment in justice.
A thing called justice in 30 minutes or less.
We basically did a speed round, essentially, where I ruled on a whole bunch of disputes before a timer went off.
We set a 30-minute timer.
I'll explain it in terms that San Francisco audience can understand.
Sure.
We disrupted the justice industry.
We disrupted the justice industry And since we got
45 million dollars of seed money as a result
We just completed
Our series B
That we have already spent
We've decided to do it again
So angel investors listen up
Justice delayed is justice denied
30 minutes is too long
So we're going to do
20 minutes of swift justice here on stage this very moment.
How's it going to work, Jesse?
I think there are some folks out there who've brought disputes to this courtroom.
If you have a dispute, please line up in that aisle over there, right over there as I'm
indicating, emphatically line up,
and we will see how many disputes we can take care of
in the course of just 20 minutes.
No dispute too big or too small.
Well, there could be some that are too big for 20 minutes.
We'll judge them all.
All right, do we have our first pair of litigants ready?
Yeah.
All right, I'm starting the timer.
20 minutes of swift justice begins now.
State your name.
My name is Sarah.
Sarah.
And I'm bringing this case against Joe.
Joe, what is the case?
Your Honor, I have just begun a three-week New Year's cleanse
with a group of friends.
We have eliminated...
A friend's cleanse?
A friend's cleanse.
We've eliminated... Actually, I'm A friends cleanse. We've eliminated...
I actually, I'm in the middle of a 20-year friends cleanse.
It's where I don't watch Friends.
Yeah.
Just watch Seinfeld.
Yeah, yeah.
I cleansed all my friends when I turned 40.
Bye-bye, dudes.
I'm staying home to watch television alone
for the rest of my life.
All right, go on with your cleanse.
What's your cleanse involved?
We have eliminated gluten, soy, dairy,
alcohol, caffeine, and refined sugar.
So, bulk yogurt.
No dairy.
No dairy, right.
I guess even bulk?
Bulk quinoa.
So, just carob.
This is the nothing but carob cleanse.
Raw cacao.
Yeah. What do you eat?
I eat quinoa, chicken, vegetables,
except for nightshade vegetables.
For what, what?
Except for what?
No tomatoes.
Oh, no fruit of the deadly nightshade?
All right, I understand.
Sure, that's poison.
That's Italian ethnic poison food.
Yes.
I understand.
All right, good.
This book is,
this cleanse is based on a book
written by a doctor.
Okay.
And it's supposed to...
Let it show for the record
that Joe pulled out
a pair of the most derisive air quotes i've ever seen
with regard to a doctor we'll get to you in a moment joe
this cleanse is meant to eliminate toxins and reduce inflammation from the body and i do it
every january to make up for my year of eating pizza. And how do you evaluate how many toxins you've eliminated?
Um, there... Okay.
Joe, what's your problem with the
fact that Sarah wants to better her life by only eating
quinoa? Your Honor, I don't have any problem
with the diet
itself. My problem is with the cult-like
devotion with which the
adherents of the diet like
to talk about the diet. How does the...
Well you have the crowd. You have the mob. Everything to lose. How does the cult-like devotion express itself?
Do they wear jumpsuits?
Do they...
If only.
They wear red hats made of quinoa.
Yes.
Well, I would like to comment that I am
a professional scientist and doctor.
Yeah, no, no, no.
And doctor, and... no, no. And doctor.
And... So is she.
And I am a resident expert on inflammation.
Is that your area of expertise?
Inflammation?
It is my area of expertise.
You're an inflammation doc?
I have a PhD in immunology, and I direct an inflammation research group at a local biotechnology
company when you say an inflammation research group yes do you just mean a
weekly pizza party he's saying garbage and the adherence of this diet often will have a banquet to celebrate the end of the cleanse,
in which they proclaim the benefits of the cleanse and the pseudoscience behind it.
And I feel obligated as a scientist to weigh in
on the scientific merit of the claims made by those who congregate that I...
Do you feel obligated to weigh in as a scientist
or just as a white dude?
As a pedant.
Ah!
What, Sarah, what does the banquet consist of?
Tomato, tomato, they're all deadly nightshade.
Sarah, what does the banquet consist of, the celebratory banquet?
Is it just bulk yogurt and bacon?
Stinging nettles.
Yeah.
A lot of kale.
Oh, so it's still a cleanse banquet?
No, the celebration banquet at the end of the cleanse is a potluck, but it's not cleanse dinner.
We go back to eating pizza and garbage, and our spouses are invited.
And I'm asking you for an injunction against Joe lecturing my friends and myself on pseudoscience.
But he's an inflammation doc.
That is true. And look, But he's an inflammation doc. That is true.
And look, I'm not an inflammation doc.
But if you want to win this case, Joe,
you have to turn to Sarah right now, your beloved,
and say, baby, you're still pretty inflamed.
No problem.
Baby, you're still pretty inflamed.
I fall in fine favor of Joe.
Next case, please.
Come on out, next case.
Let's do this.
This is Kristen and Brett.
Is that correct?
That's correct.
Hi, Kristen and Brett.
Kristen, you bring this case to this court.
Brett is doing something wrong in your mind.
What is Brett doing wrong?
Address that microphone directly, please.
My husband, Brett, respects no boundaries
when it comes to his family members' food and beverage items.
I will often wake in the middle of the night,
reach for my night water, and find it missing.
Brett has helped himself and left me...
Night water.
Sexy.
Has left me high and dry.
That, by the way, is Boz Skag's signature cologne.
Night water.
Okay, he drinks your night water, and then what else?
He will also eat my children's leftover burritos
on a regular basis, causing much distress the next day
when they were expecting a special, delicious lunch.
They were just trying to marinate the stump.
I know about that. I'm from the Bay.
You can't eat the whole burrito in one sitting.
You've got to marinate the stump and eat the rest later.
Thank you, Jesse Thorne.
Marinate the stump?
Yeah, my boy Petey Fraunfelder came up with that s***.
You're talking about the burrito stump?
That's some deep mission wisdom right there.
It's gotta sit.
You gotta marinate that stump.
He knows.
Ask Carlos Santana, he knows.
I think I understand.
Brett, let me ask you a question.
Why is it okay to steal from your children
and eat their marinated stumps?
to steal from your children and eat their marinated stumps?
This is the one area in our household where suddenly somebody's carved out
something that they believe is their own.
Everything else is shared in the house.
And suddenly, I make dinner for everybody,
everybody sits on a couch which is shared,
everybody enjoys a home which is shared.
Right.
Everybody swaps clothes back and forth.
If they fit.
We all switch beds all the time.
My wife and I, just to be
fair, we switch the side of the bed we sleep on
every night.
Clothes.
I would like a culture in the household
where the kids' immediate
reaction to a lot of things,
toys included, whatever it might be,
is a, meh, meh, meh, meh, meh, that kind of thing.
And so this is one thing where...
And you want to reinforce, make sure to reinforce that.
No, I don't.
Because I think that when we say,
well, this is a bit, this is your specific burrito,
so how dare you eat the burrito?
They took bites out of it.
How dare you eat the burrito, Brett? They took bites out of it. How dare you eat the burrito, Brett?
They took bites out of it.
That's encouraging that entire house.
How old are your children?
Eight and 11.
Yeah, and you want to explain to them
that they live in a socialist burrito paradise.
Are you now or have you ever been a member
of the San Francisco Communist Party?
The house is one special place
that I think is one place where we can share
things. It's a haven for
Bolshevism, I follow.
Yeah, the only place it works
maybe. Did you want to make a
slippery slope argument?
Definitely not. No? Okay, good.
Because I could have made a burrito joke then. But that's fine.
And what would you want then,
Kristen, you want him to stop eating
leftovers? Yes, I would like you to order him
to leave my children's burritos alone.
And to stop drinking my night water.
Anything else? That's it.
No more night water, no more leftovers.
Look, I understand, Brett, your impulse
because it is every
dad's desire
and usually prerogative
to eat the food that has been abandoned by children.
Because it's a scientific fat
that food that has been abandoned by children
has no calories.
Magically, somehow.
But that actually is, in fact, pseudoscience.
It should not be used to cover up
your greed any more
than your weird leftist Billy Bragg song
that you sung about
every burrito is a common treasury.
You should stop eating
your children's burritos
because those stumps
need to marinate.
There's a reason
why you're doing that.
Even before I heard
marinate the stump,
I'm like, yeah,
those burritos taste better
the next day.
And you're taking advantage
of your children's patience.
You didn't even put in
the work of eating
the first
Unmarinated
Trash half of the burrito
And you're reaping
All the benefit
Now look
I understand
You contribute
You cook all the food
It sounds like
And you obviously
You know you probably
Both have careers
Well whatever
The point is
Your kids aren't
Your kids aren't contributing anything.
And it is okay
for you to steal from them.
And if you had said,
they didn't buy these burritos,
I eat them,
then I might be on your side.
But you're covering it up
with all this bogus ideology.
I can't find in your favor
on that.
And in terms of drinking
night water,
that is among the most heinous
husbandly crimes.
I mean, dude, pour yourself a glass
of water before you go to bed.
She did the work.
When you wake up in the middle of the night
and you need that glass of water, you need
the glass of water immediately. You're suddenly
on the desert planet of Arrakis.
Not just Dune.
Thank you.
You would have gotten it.
I know.
I was looking.
I was like, oh my God, wait a minute.
Is that the guy who's going to get the Dune reference?
Yeah, he is.
But luckily, wrong case.
So in any case, don't eat those burritos.
And Kristen, bring two glasses of water to dad.
One for him to drink,
and the other one for you to throw in his face when he does it.
Time for justice is running out.
Who's next on my Thunderdome?
What is your name, young woman?
My name's Deborah, and I'm bringing a case against my boyfrienddome. What is your name, young woman? My name's Deborah,
and I'm bringing a case against my boyfriend,
Martin. Martin, how are you?
I'm well, how are you?
The case is, I would like you to... What part of Oakland are you from, Martin?
I'd like you to ask Martin to
refrain from incessantly
talking about how
much better his home country of Australia is than the U.S.
Martin, you are Australian?
I am Australian.
All right.
I've never known an Australian person to be vocal at an inappropriate time.
Seriously, though, folks,
how about a hand for Yahoo Sirius joining us tonight?
Yahoo Sirius is here tonight, folks.
Where in Australia are you from?
A couple of hours south of Brisbane.
A couple of hours south of Brisbane.
Near Byron Bay on the coast.
Okay, and you like it better than San Francisco?
Yes.
And the United States?
Yes. So the United States?
Yes.
So, go home.
Problem solved.
What horrible curse is keeping you here?
Oh, well, Deborah's keeping me here.
My job.
How did you guys meet?
In grad school.
Where did you go to grad school?
At University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona.
Oh, you went to the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona?
Yes.
Did you ever go to the Rialto Theater in Tucson, Arizona?
Yes.
Great theater.
Me too.
Okay, that was fun.
Anyway, what did you study there?
I studied biology and Martin studied math.
Maths, do you say in Australia?
Yes, math. Another reason your country is so great. And so you guys are not married.
No. Right. And so what brought you to the San Francisco Bay Area? My work to start with and then Debra got a job here as well. Oh, okay. So you are stuck here because of maths and Deborah.
You said your degree is in math?
Yes.
So you're a toll collector or...?
I'm a data scientist.
Very nice.
So based on the data that you've collected, what is better in Australia than here?
I have a list of, I think, seven points.
Okay.
Well, I think you're gonna find
a very welcoming crowd here, so.
Let's see what you've got.
Okay, the beaches are better.
The toilets are better.
Wait, did you say the are better?
Oh, you know the bae got the best?
Football is better.
The voting system is better.
Right.
Okay, I mean, it's really weird
that I want to fight with you about sports.
But it is a different sport.
Yes. So Australian rules football, rugby league, rugby union, soccer, even all of the different things that are called football over there.
Yeah. Oh, there's like five different footballs in Australia and they're all better than American football. And they're all better than the NFL.
The crazy
part about this particular complaint
is that Martin's specific problem
with American football is that it stops
too much, which
is insane because
his favorite sport is cricket, which
stops for...
Which never starts.
So I don't understand
why he's honing in on that
difference. Okay, football stops
too much. How many did we get there? I'm not... I don't have
a degree in math, so I wasn't counting.
Okay,
the voting system is better in
Australia. What's better? They have
preferential voting, which allows third parties
to grow up.
Okay, I accept that.
That's true.
The physical money is better.
Better sizes and colors.
We get it. You listen to 99% Invisible.
Radio joke.
Right, because the money there is made of plastic, you can go surfing with it.
That's right, go on.
There's more countries of origins for TV shows,
which leads to a higher quality on average.
I would have to see your data analysis on that.
I'd like to see your scatter graph on that.
And my final one is that McDonald's is better in Australia.
Given that that entire corporation is based on uniform grossness,
how is it better, how is McDonald's better than in the United States?
It's just cleaner and got happier people, better food. It's just overall better.
I saw an article a few years ago when Oprah
visited Australia where she commented on this
and I thought, oh yeah, I agree with Oprah.
Can I ask you a question? How's the Oprah
in Australia?
Stone cold.
Jesse wins again.
Well, of course, you're entitled to your opinions,
but, Deborah, you want me to institute a gag order?
Well, I accept when I hear a particular comment one time,
but I feel that I've heard kind of repeated instances
of the same complaints against our beaches, etc., all these things on the list.
So I think one time's enough, and then...
Once it's registered, the data point has been established.
And Judge, I can offer you this again, just from my perspective as a native of San Francisco.
I think people who are from San Francisco are well known for traveling to other places and being completely magnanimous
about those places' merits relative to San Francisco?
Well, generally speaking,
I would never rule to restrain someone's freedom of opinion
and freedom of expression.
And obviously, Martin, you miss your homeland,
and you feel very sad that you can never go back as much as we may encourage you to.
You're stuck here with a woman that you love and a job in maths
that you statistically appreciate.
That said, you've got to stop eating at McDonald's, dude.
The fact that you're comparing McDonald's
means you have no taste,
and therefore I find in Deborah's favor.
Which is to say Martin
You may continue to have your opinions
And express them
But just take it easy dude
You understand?
Alright good
He gave me a traditional Australian hand signal
That indicated yes
Klaxon
Klaxon
The timer is done That is it 20 minutes of justice There are just a couple of verdicts signal that indicated yes. Klaxon, klaxon, klaxon.
The timer is done. That is it.
20 minutes of justice. There were just a couple of verdicts.
For those who didn't get up here in time, you know who you are.
Yes, you need to brush your teeth twice a day.
You're a grown-up. Yes, grilled cheese can have meat in it and still be a grilled
cheese with, say, bacon or grilled cheese
and tomato. It doesn't become a different sandwich
unless it's a tuna melt. You should keep
your rent-controlled department in San Francisco
And not move to Sausalito, come on
And yes, obviously
Hobos have to ride trains
If they're not riding trains, they're bums
Thus concludes Swift Justice
What a thrill that was, Judge Hodgman.
I particularly enjoyed the part where the bailiff brought up Oprah.
It seems like this might be a good time for you to take a rest.
Do you feel like you need to take a rest?
I do. I need to take a nap.
Well, I've got good news.
We've got a musical guest here tonight.
Yes, that's right.
We're going to introduce a friend of this court,
a musician who has a new album due out on March 4th called what, Jesse?
A Man Alive.
A Man Alive.
She's going to be playing right here at the Fillmore in San Francisco.
Maybe you've heard of it on April 30th.
I'm deferring back to you. I thought that was an applause line for April 30th. I'm deferring back to you.
I thought that was
an applause line
for April 30th.
Maybe you've heard of it.
April 30th.
Ladies and gentlemen,
from Tao and the Get Down,
Stay Down,
Tao Nguyen.
Yes!
Tao, thank you for being here.
John, it's my pleasure.
I'm just adding a little patter while you plug in your beautiful guitar.
Thank you so much.
Would you mind singing a song
and then you'll sit down with us for a while
and we'll talk and render some justice?
It would be an honor to render justice with you.
Oh, it's a little courtroom humor and honor, get it?
Right?
Talonwen, ladies and gentlemen. Help me heart
I'll do like this
Set me clear
Of all I do If by a third degree you feel the guilt for me, then I've been a villain
all my life. And if by a melody you stay and sway with me, then I've been a salesman on the side. Kindness be conceived. When we wake in the California light
there is a concrete stuck between how we breathe, why we die, why we breathe and why we die Who wouldn't hold a wounded bird
With anger stuck in time
Well I told you I would hold no more.
It weighed too much like mine.
You and I, then I alone.
You and I, then I alone.
You and I, then I alone.
You and I, then I alone. You and I, then I alone.
Oh, kindness we conceived.
When we wake in the California light,
there is a concrete stuck between how we breathe,
why we die, why we breathe, and Why we die Why we breathe
And why we die Hold me hard
I've been let loose
Set me clear
Of all I do
Kindness be conceived
When we wake
In the California light
There is a concrete
Stuck between
How we breathe Why we die how we breathe, why we die, why we breathe and why we die.
How about we bring our next litigants onto the stage?
Please welcome George and Tom.
George and Tom.
Tonight, a portrait of the artist as a weird dad.
George brings the case against his dad, Tom Several years ago, Tom began leaving random photos taped to the underside of George's bunk bed
The images surprise George when he gets into bed at night
George thinks the images are weird
and wants his dad to cease and desist
Tom says that the images are beautiful
and allow him to show his affection for his son.
Who's right? Who's wrong?
Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
enters the courtroom.
Thank you.
I've always been a proud man.
Always wanted to make you proud of me.
You know you made me feel like a giant,
and that's how I want you to remember me.
I want everyone to know that I love them.
Bailiff Jesse Swertham.
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,
and address those microphones directly, please.
I do.
I do.
Do you swear to abide
by Judge John Hodgman's ruling
despite the fact that
while he has a triple bunk bed,
he chooses to sleep on the floor below the bottom bunk?
I do.
I do.
Have you noticed that my friend Adam Katz from middle school
is leading a weird insurrection of people who won't stand up right over here?
Probably not. Thank you over here. Probably not.
Thank you, Adam.
Very well.
Adam, George and Tom, you may be seated.
Thank you for being here.
George, for our listeners at home who can't see you,
how old are you?
I'm 15.
15 years old.
And Tom, you're his father, I hope.
Yes.
Okay, good.
And when I learned that there was going to be a 15-year-old in this show, I thought, well, the show starts at 10.
Let's make sure we put him on last.
For an immediate summary judgment, in one of your favors can either of you um name the person that
i was quoting uh as i entered the courtroom tom you were brought to this court against your will
uh so you have first guess or you can make your son guess first which which will it be um i will
take a wild guess all right and i'll say it's a character from the film Giant. Interesting guess.
Because it had giant in it.
Sure.
All right, fair enough.
I won't say whether that's right or wrong.
George, do you have a guess?
No.
Baller move, George.
Thank you.
Baller move, George.
Normally at this point,
I would bully the litigant into making a guess anyway,
but given the amount of sullen heat coming off of your 15-year-old person,
I'm starting to feel a little scared,
so I'll simply say the guess was wrong.
The answer, for reasons that will become clear
as we discuss this case,
that was spoken by actor Hervé Villachez.
It's actually from his suicide note.
Sorry to use a suicide note as the cultural reference,
especially with a 15-year-old,
but there aren't many good quotes about bunk beds, it turns out.
But we'll talk more about Herve Villachez later,
and hopefully the context will become clearer.
Speaking of the context, the point of this case, George,
is that your father, Tom, is putting unwanted visual aids
into your bunk bed as you fall asleep,
things that you find startling and weird.
You know that this court has many precedents
for letting weird dads do whatever they want.
What is it about these photos that you find disturbing,
such that you want me to prohibit them from being there?
They're just really creepy.
For example, there's overly made-up circus clowns.
Sounds beautiful so far.
Mm-hmm.
And many, many ventriloquist dummies.
Did you say ventriloquist dummies?
Did I hear you correctly? Ventriloquist dummies?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, the universal symbol of affection.
I propose to my wife with a ventriloquist dummy.
Tom, why are you leaving pictures of ventriloquist dummies?
Now, let me see if I understand this.
These photos and illustrations and images are being left for you, George.
You sleep on the bottom bunk?
Yeah, that's correct.
Is there anyone in the top bunk
or are you a weird only child
like I was?
No.
Who had a bunk bed
just to show off?
I have an older brother.
An older brother.
Yeah.
So you're down there
on the bottom bunk
and your dad puts these images
on the underside of the top bunk
so you have to stare at them
as you fall asleep.
Yeah.
Okay.
Why are you doing this
to your son?
Okay.
I'm not trying to be weird or different
or weirdly different.
I'm just like, oh, here's a cool photo.
I bet George would like it.
Where are you finding
all these photos
of ventriloquist dummies, sir?
He's probably just going...
Special catalogs
that you've ordered?
One assumes he just goes
to paternal affection,
paternalaffectionpics.com.
Where do you find the images
that you want to share
with your son?
Okay, that's an excellent question.
The only kind I ask.
These are images that I just happened to encounter
for whatever reason, and I'm like, ooh, that's cool.
Yeah, that's what you just said.
I asked a specific, and I dare say, excellent question.
Where are you sourcing these images?
On the internet?
Stand by.
I'll allow it.
Standing by.
Okay.
Judge Hodgman, are we accepting arguments
in the form of ham radio transmissions?
Copy that.
10-4, good buddy.
I work for an airline as a flight attendant,
and sometimes I'm gone for a
long time sometimes these flights are very long go to Australia it's about 14
hour flight longer I read a lot of newspapers and I'm like that's kind of
cool and I might clip that out mm-hmm and I'm like when I shut when I get home
I'm learning the circus clown pick a you up there in the air he's all coming out
of the complimentary USA Today?
No, that's just in Australia today.
It's the eighth reason Australia is better.
We have more circus clowns
in our papers.
I have a whole binder here full of photos.
Oh, don't think I haven't clocked the binder you're holding.
And it's not just overly made up clowns or ventriloquist dummies, but wait till you see these dummies?
Good night.
I feel like I could walk out of that stage door into the wilderness and never be seen again
knowing that my great contribution to culture was
facilitating you saying,
but wait till you see these dummies.
One of my most favorite moments of reality.
And the fact is, sir,
we don't have to wait any longer
because evidence was submitted,
which we are going to put up on this screen.
These are all images that you have placed
in George's bed.
First image, please.
Tom, obviously we're recording this for podcast purposes,
so Tom, either you or I are going to have to describe for the listener what we're looking at.
Your Honor, I think the issue here is
how do I view it versus how does my son view it?
Can we just say for the record what it is?
Because I'm looking at it and even I'm not sure.
Your Honor, it is a helmeted hornbill.
A helmeted hornbill.
Yes.
And this is a...
That's science for nightmare bird.
Right.
And this is a photo of an actual animal, not a monstrous puppet.
I'm sorry.
You're a great ventriloquist dummy, by the way.
I am sorry if nature's glory offends you.
It does not offend me.
It does not...
It does not offend me. It does not...
It does not offend me. There are many hideous creatures in nature
that I appreciate.
And it's not a hideous creature.
It's a beautifully ferocious monster.
And why did you choose this to show to your son directly before he falls asleep?
Stand by.
Stand by.
That's another excellent question.
It's kind of my thing.
It's kind of my thing. This animal, as you can see from its helmeted hornbill, is unfortunately hunted for its
bill and it's actually more precious, more valuable than ivory.
And it's becoming on the brink of extinction.
It's indigenous to Malaysia and Borneo, I believe.
So, of course, it's bizarre.
And I thought, well, let me put that up there.
And then...
Stand by.
Instead of him, my ideal is instead of him coming and saying, as he always does,
what is this?
Don't put this in my bed.
I would prefer that he would say, oh, wow.
Dad, tell me more about this curious bird.
Did you know that about the hornbill, George?
No, I had no idea.
Not until this moment?
No, they never told me. But George, just to clarify,
this big fella's flapped through a few nightmares, right?
Let's go to the next image.
Now, for the viewer at home,
for the listener at home,
this is a photo, it looks like from the late 60s, early 70s, of a man with a unibrow and
a very short bow tie smoking a cigarette in front of a Christmas tree.
Is this a relative of some kind?
That is a Greek tailor.
For those listening at home, we did not edit anything out.
The silence that you heard after that is a Greek tailor, full stop, was intentional.
Apparently, Tom believes that's the only context I need.
George, did you know this was a Greek tailor when you saw it in your bed?
Nope.
Okay, next image.
Next image, please.
George, just to clarify.
Now, this is a great work of art.
This is Jean-Michel Basquiat.
Right.
Yes.
So I can, you know...
Would you characterize it as one of his more
nightmarish works?
Yes. Well...
The point, anyhow, as you said,
it's a beautiful work of art.
And I wanted to show him that.
That I understand. Can we get back to Greek Taylor
for a second?
What was the Greek Taylor?
It's kind of a long story, but you asked...
It doesn't have to be, I bet.
Once upon a time in Greece, there was a boy whose father was a tailor.
You asked where do you get these images from?
Sometimes magazines, newspapers.
Sometimes from the internet.
Now, I used to live in a town,
and I knew this guy.
He was a Greek tailor.
Is that a picture of him?
That is a picture of him.
Oh, okay, phew.
Anyhow, somehow, I looked him up, and there was a whole photo album of his photos.
And I went back and back and back, and I'm like, wow, this guy is like the quintessential 1974 Greek tailor at Christmas time.
You're right.
Thank you.
Thank you.
That old stereotype.
Judge Hodgman, I think that more than anything else,
this speaks to the deficiencies of the common core.
They're like, when are children learning about
prototypical Greek tailors?
You know what, Jesse?
Your tie is shorter than a Greek tailor Christmas tie.
Sorry, sorry.
I simply don't understand the reference.
I don't understand the say anymore.
Yeah.
All right, next image.
For those of you listening at home,
this is a publicity still
from the television show Fantasy Island
featuring Ricardo Montalban
as the mysterious Mr. Rourke
and his assistant Tatu
played by Hervé Villachez.
But in this case,
he's wearing a bald wig
and his whole head has been painted green
and he looks like an alien.
This needs no explanation.
I would put this in my own son's bedroom, of course. Next image.
Now, correct me if I'm wrong, Tom.
This image to me looks like'm wrong, Tom.
This image to me looks like me on my birthday.
What's up?
A hairless rodent of some kind.
I don't know if it's a, it's not a naked mole rat, is it? I think that's what it is, yes.
Yeah, okay.
It's reclining on what looks like
a little naked mole rat-sized armchair
in a rec room,
and it's covered by an Afghan.
He's got kind of a self-satisfied grin.
Yeah, I mean, Judge Hodgman,
I think it's fair to characterize
this naked mole rat as cheesin'.
Your boy's definitely cheesin'.
Tal of Tal on the Get Down, Stay Down,
you're still here with us,
and I've noticed you've been appropriately speechless
this entire time.
Standing by.
I have one question to clarify.
From my angle, I can't tell.
Is that a cigar in the Hairless Rodent's mouth?
Do you see what I'm seeing, Jesse?
Is there a cigar in the Naked Mole Rat's mouth?
No, I think that's a...
What is that?
That's just how their faces be.
You might be confused by the Naked Mole Rat's terrifying long fingernails
that are brown with dirt from digging.
I don't think it's smoking a cigar,
but why not
after all?
He definitely subscribes
to Cigar Aficionado.
The thought behind
this one, Tom?
Just looks cool.
Yeah!
Do we have any more? Do we have any more?
Do we have any more?
That is so metal.
Yeah.
So this is an image of...
It looks like some kind of figurine of a small Asian...
Well, I want to say boy,
but he's smoking a cigarette.
It looks like a Jeff Koontz sculpture
of Kim Jong-un.
Yeah.
And also a post-it message
from father to son saying,
George, you look good.
You do look good, George.
You do look good, George.
Thank you.
Yeah.
But don't smoke. So, anything you want to say about this one tom yeah two things yeah sure um i believe this is a piece of artwork from
taiwan and sometimes i just like to stuff beans up george's nose and that's what this is like hey
check it out it's a classic example of him stuffing beans
up george's nose so you're just teasing your son uh good stuff and beans up his nose judge
hodman are you even listening i ended i understand weird dad talk as do you but i'm trying to explain
for a listener at home who may not understand what stuff beans up your nose means tell that's rock and roll slang right
say it all the time yeah uh did you have any thoughts about this one george
um when you saw this did you feel like you think my nose was stuffed with beans. I just saw a picture of a shiny boy
and a note that says, you look good.
And I do not appreciate that.
Next image.
So this is an artist I don't know.
This is an image, it looks like Dean Martin
reaching out to hug you, George.
Tom, can you tell me what I'm seeing here?
Yeah, same sort of thing.
I'm like, oh man, that's cool.
And it's green, I like the color green,
and he looks, you know, welcoming.
There's no threat to this.
Is this an artist that I should know?
No, I just happened to find it in a newspaper.
When you're at a point when you're actually evaluating each one,
is there any threat to this one?
And is there another image, or are we at the end?
Next image.
This is one of those clowns.
This is, again, a clown smoking a cigarette.
Third image, smoking a cigarette.
And the next image.
And this is, it looks like a comic book
featuring micro-mysterio,
el ventriloquio.
I can't say it.
Ventriloquio.
And this is apparently a comic book
about evil ventriloquist dummies
Italian?
Spanish
I believe it's from Mexico
Okay, very good
Is that a representative sampling?
Not enough Hervé Villachez
Have you done more Hervé Villachez?
A couple more
What is your interest in Hervé Villachez that you want to share with George? Because I'm going to say this right now, Tom. Yeah. You have a lot of messages
you're trying to convey to yourself. And I like that a lot. And I like a lot of the messages that
you're conveying. But I'm not sure George is getting the message. Right, exactly. Because
he's just seeing the photo he didn't know about the story of the hornbill.
Right, so hey,
come on, talk to me
about the hornbill
or Hervevla Chats.
If you're ever disturbed
by anything you see,
please come talk to me.
And if you're not disturbed,
let me help you.
Right.
If you never see
something disturbing,
I'm going to be there for you.
Right now I'm imagining like George's certitude that these are gonna lead to conversations.
Like he takes a picture of a clown crying blood or whatever, and he tapes it to his
boy's bunk bed.
And then he just goes back into the living room room turns a chair backwards and sits astride it
like let's rap like you and me are gonna connect george why do you have a problem with this
honestly because you you you know your dad right yeah yeah look i know you're 15 years old and
you're a dude but you love your dad, right?
Yeah, of course.
So, you know, he's clearly trying to share something with you.
And your dad's got pretty eclectic and weird and deep taste.
And yet you want this to stop.
Do I understand that?
Yeah, because they're not, like, I can see how he might think they're interesting, but I have my own opinion, too.
So I don't want to crawl into bed, like, when I'm really tired, and just look up and see something like creepy birds staring at me when I'm trying to fall asleep.
What would you prefer to have up there? A Cheryl Teaks poster, perhaps?
Because I bet your dad has that too.
Would you prefer there to be nothing there?
Maybe like a poster of my choice of something I like.
Like what?
What do you like?
The Golden State Warriors.
Yeah, that's what's up.
Dubs.
Are they like the Power Rangers?
I've never heard of that show.
Is that a good one?
Look, guys, I'm from the Bay.
I know about the Warriors.
Who would you choose?
Probably Sharunis Marshalonis, right?
No.
No.
John, does it
terrify you to imagine that your son
might look at a sports poster instead of
a poster of obscure
ventriloquist dummies
and clowns?
That does not terrify me. He has
a lot of
Golden State Warriors
paraphernalia all over his wall.
Right.
The other walls and the door, that's cool, so let's just leave that space above the bunk
bed for me.
That's Daddy's special place.
I beseech you.
All right.
George, do you have anything else you would like to say
before I render my decision?
No, I think I'm done with this case.
Tom?
I guess I would say that, you know,
it's my job to educate my son.
And if you go out to a restaurant with him,
with your child, and you're like,
hey, try this, try these Brussels sprouts.
Well, I don't want to try them.
It's like, just try them.
It's the same, my same approach with these images
and with artwork.
It's the equivalent of basically putting
a cooked Brussels sprout in his bunk bed
so that it falls into his mouth while he
sleeps.
I heard everything I need to in order to make
my decision. I'm going to go over
in my chambers and sit in my chair made
of beautiful hornbill tusk.
And I'll be back in a moment
with my decision. Please rise as Judge Sean
Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Tal, this is some shit, right?
This is...
Can we say that in your podcast?
No, but I just did because I'm overwhelmed.
This is some shit.
This is a fire hose of dad.
I wish I was a little bit younger
and then that Tom could adopt me.
Because I think that's really sweet.
As someone who travels a lot
for work, I understand that you want
something there in your stead, especially
for your son to
remember you fondly by
or be terrified by at night.
But George, do you see
your dad's point in that?
Yeah, I don't take down everything.
Some stuff I keep.
What's the best thing you got, George, from your dad
that he taped up to give you nightmares?
The best thing?
Probably the mole rat.
It is really.
All right, fair enough.
Well, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman reenters the courtroom.
You may be seated.
Herve Villachez was an interesting dude,
wouldn't you say, Tom?
Yes.
He, a very conflicted, very tortured man.
He was born under Nazi occupation in Paris,
moved to New York by himself when he was 21 not
speaking english he had already studied to be a painter and was an accomplished painter and
photographer before he fell into acting he acted off-broadway plays with sam shepard and then he
co-starred in movies with william s burroughs all before he got this job in uh the james bond movie
and then obviously fantasy island which made him this international superstar, but an object of some ridicule occasionally used on the show to portray a weird alien, among other things.
But he was a painter, and then of course he killed himself in 1993, when he was 50 years old.
But before that, he continued to paint,
and he also gave art to people.
He gave a painting to Greta Garbo,
which was just sold by her estate in 2012.
Here it is, it's the next image.
There it is.
That's a painting that Hervé Villachez gave to Greta Garbo.
I don't know if he put it on her bunk bed.
And I don't know if he put it on her bunk bed. And I don't know if she liked it, but she kept it because it was a work of personal expression
as much as it was a gift. You know, as I travel around the country, I'm often very
happy to receive works of personal expression from fans, people who have
knitted for me hot dogs
that say, this is not a hot dog on it
and that sort of thing.
And illustrations and so forth
and sometimes profoundly unflattering
illustrations of me.
And yet I keep
and they're sometimes intense
and hard to deal with because
they sometimes express feelings that you don't quite know how to process and but
there are gifts that mean that someone else is thinking about you now George
you're at a time in your life when you don't want your dad to be thinking about
you all the time you're 15 years old you're trying to create a private space
in your life and investigate your own weird interests that may or may not
include ventriloquist dummies dead and so I appreciate why you want to clear
out this space particularly as you go into the most private space that any
human can occupy the falling asleep time and the waking up time you know but in
your petition you asked to be able to throw these things away instead of put
them on your
dad's desk as he asked you to do and I'm going to say to you you don't want to
throw these things away they're weird they're scary they're intense just like
your dad who's those of you listening can't see, he's really giving me a stare right now.
These are things that you will want to have
later in your life,
even if right now they're terrifying and weird to you.
So I, first of all, I'm ordering you to keep these things.
It sounds as though I'm going to order you
to also tolerate your dad putting these things
under your bunk bed anymore,
but I can't allow that anymore, sir.
That's a private space for George.
That bunk bed, that's an inner sanctum for him.
And as much as it's fun for weird dads to shove beans up their kids' noses, especially as they're getting older and more independent and you want to really just remind them, I'm
the boss.
I'm going to eat your burrito,
and I'm going to show you a picture of Hervé Villachez,
just like I did when you were a baby.
What you need to do is you need to take
one Golden State Warrior poster off your wall
and get a bulletin board for your dad to put up his weird pictures,
and then you have to go to your dad and say why
this now why this weird thing and you can't be coy about it you have to say to him this is why
i put this up there maybe even write him a note and don't stuff beans up his nose if you're going
to do this take it seriously i find in favor sort of of george and sort of of tom and all the way
in favor of herve villachez rest in peace this is the, of George, and sort of, of Tom, and all the way in favor of Hervé Villachez.
Rest in peace.
This is the sound of the gavel.
Judge Shahab, you will be satisfied.
George and Tom, ladies and gentlemen.
Thank you, George and Tom.
I think we have time for one more song from Tao.
Are you prepared to play and sing one?
Tao says yes.
Ladies and gentlemen, San Francisco's number one rock star,
Tao Wen of Tao and the Get Down, Stay Down.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. With an arrow or two free of hands Without device
Slowly we all lay down
Slowly we all lay down
What of all the stone I invented
To coat my hands and face
I was made of machine and gasoline filled up full on just a taste
No, no, I wasn't born to break such vows
Never would I prepare the leap
No, no, I wouldn't dare ever love you more
More than you would dare believe
Slowly we all lay down
Slowly we all lay down Slowly we all lay down
Slowly we all lay down
Slowly we all lay down
Lay down, lay down It takes a fine imagination and sound technology
to let loose the cold amnesia over all the blood that beats.
that beats slowly we all lay down slowly we all lay down slowly we all lay down slowly we all lay down lay down lay down, lay down, lay down.
Upon my return from the age of ice, I supposed I would survive.
Thank you. T-H-A-O. She is so cool. Her music is so cool. She is just the greatest.
You should really go to tauandthegitdownstaydown.com
and find out more about her.
Seriously, she's the best.
And her records are so great.
Thanks to Arlen Golden
and Sean Hickson
for suggesting our case names
this week.
And thanks to everyone
who came out to our show
this year.
And to all of our litigants,
the staff at the
Marines Memorial Theater,
the organizers of
SF Sketch Fest, and Michelle Mitchell and Julia Smith for making this possible. The show is edited by Mark McConville. You can submit your own disputes and you should submit your own disputes at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO. We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Maximumfund.org.
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