Judge John Hodgman - Live From SF Sketchfest 2017
Episode Date: June 7, 2017"Hieronymous Quash" and "Property Bothers" recorded in front of a live audience at San Francisco Sketchfest 2017! Plus, Swift Justice and songs from special guest Sara Watkins! Sara's on tour this sum...mer! Check out her dates and music at SaraWatkins.com! Thank you to Julia Skochko and Jenn MacGillivray for suggesting this week's title! To suggest a title for a future episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week's episode recorded live at San Francisco Sketch Fest in San Francisco, California,
with the brilliant musical guest, Sarah Watkins.
Let's go to the stage. Tonight's case, Hieronymus Quash.
Tierney brings the case against her husband, Zach.
Zach's grandmother made a print that he'd like to hang in their home.
Tierney thinks it looks too dark and unsettling.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man
can decide. Please
rise, but not literally,
as
Judge John Hodgman
enters the courtroom.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Greetings, New England.
No? All right.
Here is the obscure cultural reference. It's not bad enough to have Friday the 13th.
We got to have a full moon, too. We keep statistics. We have more accidents, more robberies,
more homicides, more comedy festivals, and more podcasts. More of everything when there's a full moon.
It upsets people.
It makes them nuts.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Please rise and raise your right hands.
Continue to address the microphones.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,
so help you God, or whatever?
Yes.
Yeah, or whatever.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he has a passion for the dark and disturbing?
Yes.
Wasn't really a joke, just wanted to do that voice.
Very well, Judge Hodgman.
Zach and Tierney, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of your
favors.
Can either of you name the piece of culture that I paraphrased as I entered the courtroom?
Zach, you are the defendant in this case, so you may guess first or force Tierney to
guess first, but you will both get to guess.
So what will it be?
You will guess first or she will guess first?
I'll guess first. Oh, very bold.
What is your guess, sir? I have no idea. Oh!
You must guess. But I'm very excited that you have no idea.
Because you were coming at it hard and I thought you thought you had it down.
I thought it was going to be a Ferris Bueller's Day Off situation
where you're going to guess it right off the bat
and my head explodes and I go home.
Take a guess.
Was it Judge John Hodgman?
Was it Judge John Hodgman?
Enter that into the guest book, Judge John Hodgman, the podcast.
Do you know what? There's precedent for it.
I've quoted myself in the past because I love myself.
Now, Tierney, it is now your turn to guess. It is a piece of
culture that I paraphrased as I entered the courtroom. I'm going to guess it's from Judy
Bloom. Is it from Judy Bloom? Any particular work? Oh, gosh.
All of it? Her anthology. Her anthology.
The Judy Blume omnibus.
Put that, please, into the... Dearly noted.
Now let me look over these guesses.
You're in the guess book, and...
All guesses are wrong!
You are both incorrect.
It was, of course, from the movie Friday the 13th.
Has nothing to do with your case.
Has everything to do with the fact that we're here in the beautiful Curran Theater in San Francisco on Friday the 13th.
And is it a full moon? No.
But it was last night.
Tonight it is merely a 96.8% full moon.
Which is pretty good.
So, since you are both, I mean, that's close.
I mean, I'd take it.
Of course, if that were a math test that I had in ninth grade,
I would not be proud of myself.
It's got to be 100.
Got to be 100!
How else is everyone in the world going to love me?
It's good enough for me, Judge Hodgman.
I'm 96.8% werewolf.
Oh!
Like a great, great, great grandmother
who was not a werewolf.
It's true that...
She was a Frankenstein.
It's true that when we did the rehearsal,
Jesse was clean-shaven.
All right, so Zach and Tierney, we have to hear your case.
This is a dispute about a painting.
Is that correct? A piece of art.
About a print.
A print.
And boy, you know, I only got a 96.8% in art class.
So tell me what the difference is.
What is a print?
A print is made with inks
and paintings made with paint.
But it is an original piece of art.
It is. It's an artist proof.
And it was created by someone related
to Zach, is that correct?
Correct.
You can go ahead and take the cue.
My grandmother.
Thank you very much.
Feel free to elaborate
and speak more than monosyllabically.
Okay.
That counts.
So there is a difference of opinion
regarding the quality of this painting and where it should be and if it should be in your home.
Do I understand the dispute more or less correctly?
Yes?
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
So they said yes.
So Tierney, you have some expertise in the world of art.
What are your credentials, if I may ask?
Can I interject?
She's wearing a black turtleneck.
That's true.
In fact,
I would argue that her current
outfit is sufficient qualifications
to be
an artist, an art
gallerist, or
international art thief.
That's right.
or international art thief?
That's right.
I would certainly prefer the latter.
However, in August, I graduated with my master's degree in art and curatorial practice in the public sphere.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
So from a master of art curation
and other words that you said,
how would you describe this print that Zach's grandma made?
It's not to my taste.
Well, what does it portray?
We're going to look at it in a moment
using the power of podcast and non-visual media.
But before that, I would like to hear your description of it,
both in terms of what it represents,
although I realize it's a very pedestrian way to talk about art,
and what it means symbolically.
And then, Zach,
you're going to say your dumb words about it, too.
What are you a master of, Zach?
Not a whole lot.
I have a fancy degree
in making video games, which I
do not use.
You don't use the degree, or you don't use the video games, which I do not use. You don't use the degree,
or you don't use the video games you make?
Either.
Oh, okay.
Mostly because the games don't exist.
Right.
Theoretical video games.
Correct.
Yeah, all right.
That's like me and my degree in literary theory.
I don't like books so much as the idea of books.
All right, now, Tierney,
I've given you enough time to collect your thoughts.
Let's hear it.
Sure.
My understanding about the piece
is that Zach's grandmother created it when Dr. Seuss died,
and that was a profoundly sad thing for her,
as I'm sure it was for everybody.
a profoundly sad thing for her, as I'm sure it was for everybody.
And it's sort of a depiction of a vulture that has sort of cartoonishly large feet and sort of big sad eyes.
So it sort of exists in this weird space
between kind of cute and cartoony and kind of sad and mournful
and a little bit frightening because vultures are evocative of death.
Yeah, they're carrion eaters.
Yeah.
They're creatures that eat the dead bodies of other things.
As an homage to Dr. Seuss at Children's Office.
How would you characterize the aesthetic style or artistic style of the prince?
Good question, werewolf. Answer.
I don't think it fits into a particular style.
It looks like a lot of her other work.
Was she an artist by training?
Yes.
And by profession?
Yes.
Okay, so this is real art.
This is real.
I mean, you have to acknowledge.
Let the record reflect that the litigant made an eh face.
No, no, no, no.
I personally disagree with anybody declaring whether or not something is art.
If somebody tells you something is their art, it is, and you can't really argue with that.
It's art.
I just said it.
Zach, is that description accurate?
It is.
What is the name of this painting?
It's called the Frigogolite.
Gesundheit.
I know that you both brought evidence,
so I'm going to step back to my viewing area
and instruct our audiovisual person
to bring forth the fragogolite.
Let the podcast-listening audience
know that the in-person audience gasped in horror.
Zach, could you describe what we're seeing here on the screen?
Kind of a terrifying vulture creature with large feet.
The feet are almost as large as its body.
Correct.
May I see the next slide, please?
A close-up detail of its dead doll's eye.
And its incredibly sharp beak.
Next one, please.
What is this that I'm looking at?
This is another piece of art.
This is another example for artwork that we do hang in our house
that I have not objected to.
You have not objected.
Let me describe what I see here.
I see two silhouettes of two scuba divers about to be consumed by a terrifying monster of the deep.
A fish that has wings of some kind.
But it has a Rorschach quality
so it might just be a pretty flower.
I don't know.
You like this one, Tierney?
Zach likes it
and I don't find it upsetting.
Okay.
Alright.
And the next
slide we're going to see is...
Okay.
This is an image from what looks like Google Street View
of another dimension where everything is backwards.
No, it's backwards because I'm looking from the back.
Sorry.
What is this that I'm looking at right now?
That's a sign in front of a theater
that my grandmother and I painted.
We painted the sign, not the theater.
Oh, so you guys painted the...
So it's a theater.
Where's the theater?
Lafayette.
All right.
And it is the classic comedy and drama masks
surrounded by falling autumn leaves and
it's a very beautiful painting
and you and your grandma painted it together.
Yes. Very nice. What is this
evidence of?
Your love?
I had no idea this was even going to be displayed.
Tierney, did you enter this into evidence?
I did. I wanted to show examples
of her work that
didn't frighten me.
Okay. Although wanted to show examples of her work that didn't frighten me.
Although, to be frank, although this represents the comedy and drama masks,
for a painting on the front of a theater in Lafayette, California that represents those things,
it is relatively frightening, is it not?
Yeah, I mean, drama looks like it's about to eat me and comedy is
clearly laughing at me.
We have one final slide.
I didn't think it could get
more horrific.
I don't
begin to describe
this. Did you enter this one
into evidence as well, Tierney?
My husband entered it into evidence.
Please, Zach, will you describe what we are seeing here?
I was told that this is a family-friendly show.
I'm not sure how to describe it in...
Well, now the podcast listening audience's imaginations
are running wild.
So, it's kind of a
glowworm rabbit
demon offspring.
It's kind of a,
it's almost a sort of
Kewpie doll
with a vivid yellow,
a vivid yellow pelt.
Yeah.
And it's got sort of
rabbit ears.
But it looks like a sculpture.
Is this something you have in your home?
This is a lamp that was given to my wife by her sister.
Shipped it all the way from England.
So, and the point of the evidence is that your wife's sister has terrible taste, just like your grandma?
Correct.
Or I should say terrifying, not terrible.
No, this is an item that my wife would very much like
to be in the house next to our bed.
Oh.
I do not want my grandmother's artwork
right next to my bed.
I would just like it indoors
where it won't get ruined by the wet weather outside.
Where is the Fregogo light currently stored?
It was in the garage.
I brought it in before the show.
My wife actually brought it in, I believe.
So your grandmother is no longer living, I presume.
Is that correct?
And this was passed down to you as a family heirloom?
Yes.
The art was done by my grandmother,
and then my grandfather framed it and he passed
away a couple months ago so what does this piece of art mean to you Zach what is its significance
to you it was an it was a memory I have specifically of my grandmother creating a
piece of art and telling me why she did it so I remember it really fondly as a child as she
I was probably about 10 or so when she made it.
And did she wait until you were 18 to show it to you?
Or have you been scarred since the age of 10?
You have to admit, Zach, that's a scary painting.
It's terrifying, I agree.
It's a terrifying, scary painting.
Was that typical of her work, would you say?
I don't think most of her work is terrifying.
And
Tierney, are you as scared
of the Fergogo light, or do you
take issue with it on other
aesthetic grounds? It's
purely on a matter of creepiness.
It's just too creepy to have.
And that's
from someone who's wearing all black.
It's slimming.
Plus it helps you get through those crisscross laser beams.
You're also wearing some sort of skull pendant around your neck as well.
Is that right? Yeah.
So you've got a Tuesday Addams thing going on.
Is it Tuesday or Wednesday? I forget.
Wednesday?
Oh my god.
Real time pet
entry.
Live
from the Curran Theater. Judge Hodgman,
if I could just clarify, his name
is The Doctor. Doctor Who is
the name of the show.
Thank you very much, Jesse. I appreciate that.
So, all right, so you're just creeped out by it.
And you would like it out of the house?
I'd like to offer it back to another family member.
You'd like to foist it off on another family member?
And, Zach, how do you feel when you consider handing this thing over to someone else?
Mostly sad. Sincerely sad or just because you want to win sad? A little bit of each.
Try to say more words than sad so that I can judge your sincerity.
I feel like I should be able to bring some things into the house that
maybe she doesn't like so much and she should be able to bring in some things that I don't like so
much. Such as this terrifying doll lamp. Or a sister wife. Yes, as long as the terrifying lamp.
I'm sorry, a sister wife? Do you live in a single room?
Is there not a place that you could put it
that would be out of the way?
Like a den or a creepy basement?
If I were to find in your favor,
where would you have me order that you put it?
In the guest bedroom next to the terrifying lamp
that sits above you.
In the guest bedroom next to the terrifying lamp that sits above you. In the guest bedroom next to this terrifying lamp?
Yes.
They could be friends.
But Tierney wants that in your bedroom.
Tierney wants the terrifying Kewpie doll in your bedroom.
Is that not right, Tierney?
Because it's a lamp and I like to read.
Yeah.
Because it's a lamp and she likes to read
and no other lamps exist.
All right, I think I've heard enough
to make my decision.
I'm going to retire.
My chambers will be back in a moment
with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman,
metaphorically,
as Judge John Hodgman
retires to his chambers.
Tierney,
you've just told us that if someone
creates art and they say it's
art, then it's art.
You've presented this non-judgmental
face to the world. Yet when it
comes to your own
husband's grandmother,
you want to throw it out on the
rubbish pile.
No, I do want to give it back to a family member.
You want to make it more fun to visit your in-laws?
No, I don't want to see it go to a thrift store
or anything like that.
I want it to go somewhere
where the entire household will appreciate it.
Zach, why can't you just find things for your home
that the two of you agree on?
That's a good question.
Have you guys thought about getting a divorce?
We'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say about all of this.
Please rise metaphorically
as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom.
You may be seated.
Zach, I didn't give you a chance to answer the question.
Do you have a basement?
Unfortunately not.
I have a crawl space, but it's not quite tall enough to put...
First of all, I want to tell you something about the Fregogolite.
It is the title of a screenplay that I just wrote.
It's a little babadookie.
It's about a terrifying vulture painting
that a man inherits from his grandma
that he hangs with pride in his house,
slowly driving his wife insane.
And eventually, people stop seeing this couple.
They never leave again.
And after five years,
I didn't write it.
I've got to be honest with you.
I'm making it up right now.
Someone goes in there
and all there is in the house
is the fragogolite
and an army of these weird
Kewpie lamps.
It's not a very satisfying movie.
We must stipulate to the obvious fact you do not need a master's in art curation, etc.,
etc., to know that this thing is super scary.
For Gogolite is a creature of pure terror. As an homage to Dr. Seuss, it is more an homage
to the rumor about Dr. Seuss that I always heard as a kid, which was that Dr. Seuss hates children.
Something I don't think is true, or at least seemed important when I was a child,
not knowing at that time that all adults hate children sometimes.
It is a profoundly disturbing work, and that is almost its incredible merit,
because it is such a weird and compelling thing.
because it is such a weird and compelling thing.
One truly wonders of the motive of the artist and why your grandma seeks to drive you both insane.
Tierney, I appreciate the fact that this is not something
that you want to have hanging in your home.
Zach, I appreciate the fact that this weird Kewpie doll demon lamp
is not something you want to have next to your wife's bed.
When you live together and when you get married, these sorts of conflict of taste will come up all the time.
And there are compromises you can make, but ultimately there are certain things you just can't compromise on.
The Fregogo light is one of those things.
I appreciate the cinematic desire of Tierney
to pass the curse of Fregogolite
on to another member of your family.
But the curse of the Fregogolite,
as we all know, is a five-year curse.
Five years you shall have Fregogolite in your home.
Five years Fregogolite shall hide in your crawlspace.
You say that it cannot fit in that crawl space? Find a way.
And if it can't fit in that crawl space,
hang it in a place of prominence for five years and then choose its next victim.
Tierney, this may feel unfair to you,
but the fact is this is Zach's grandma after all,
and there is a true emotional connection
that Zach is almost able to articulate.
As compensation
for the five-year-for-gogo-like curse,
you may put this weird thing
next to your bed. This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge Sean Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Our thanks to Tierney and Zach. Thanks to Julia Skoczko for naming this week's case.
Thank you, Tierney and Zach.
Hello, I'm your Judge John Hodgman.
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Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
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Jesse Thorne.
Yeah.
I believe we have an extremely talented and wonderful musical guest.
And this would be an appropriate time
to introduce that person. Would
you do it, please? Seems like the perfect time, folks. You might know her as one of the founding
members of the group Nickel Creek. She's performed on A Prairie Home Companion, on Thrilling Adventure
Hour, and across this great nation. Please welcome to the stage our friend and soon to be yours,
Sarah Watkins. Sarah Watkins, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you.
Thank you, Judge and Bailiff. Heavy steps and showing to you
Like all those years of school
What they said is what you say
What they saw is what you see
You're like a clear drone line
Partition and define
So you can rest in knowing
Everything's as it should be
But I want you to move me
I want you to move me
I want you to move me I want you to move me
Oh, we've got our back and forth
And always stay the course
Talking quickly
Doesn't leave much time for questioning
So much is repetition
We mimic
old decisions
And walk the same path
just because we know
where we'll lead
But I want you
to move me
I want you to move me. I want you to move me.
I want you to move me.
I want you to move me.
But you just keep me
I long
to give you all I've got
But I fear you'll disapprove
The underlying open eyes
The heart, the follow through
Take you up and bring you back
But you will not be able
I want you to move me
I want you to move me. I want you to move me.
I want you to move me.
I want you to move me.
Move me, love me
Want you to move me
Move me Sarah Watkins, ladies and gentlemen.
Sarah Watkins singing.
Singing the theme from Forgogo Likes.
Now, Sarah, we have a lot more justice to dispense this evening,
and we could use a musician's keen mind.
Would you be interested in staying on with us for the next segment?
I would be happy. Happy to.
Fantastic.
So nice to have you here, Sarah.
Thank you again for that wonderful song.
When I was backstage and Sarah was singing scales to warm up
and it was floating into our dressing room over the transom,
I felt like a real entertainer.
When I was backstage just now,
Tierney came backstage to collect a tote bag she had left behind,
and she turned to me and she said,
I forgot I had a bag of cheese.
a tote bag she had left behind, and she turned to me and she said, I forgot I had a bag of cheese.
And even though I am married, and so is Zach, I proposed marriage to her on the spot.
The fragogolite got me. We have a special segment coming up, Jesse.
We have so many fun cases from San Francisco.
We would love to hear them all at length, but we can't.
We have to do it fast.
So we have a segment called Swift Justice.
What's going to happen, Jesse? Well, we're going to be bringing on three cases in 10 minutes.
That gives us just three minutes and 20 seconds per case
to provide our unique brand of insightful and hilarious justice.
Exactly so. And because...
You would think I would have thought of a thing to say then, but I hadn't.
Because we have Sarah here, I've decided we're going to open up the judgmentalness
to a true tribunal. We will each give a judgment and it'll be a majority rule.
So if I find in favor of one person
and these two find in favor of the other person,
I'm overruled.
That's how it's going to work.
I've set the timer here.
Let's bring in our first litigants,
Tyler and Dawn.
Tyler and Dawn, step forward and step lively.
Tyler and Dawn.
You are automatically sworn in.
Tyler and Don, who brings this case before this court?
I do.
Tyler, speak.
What is your problem?
We have a disagreement about the use of the closet in our guest bedroom.
I believe it should be a utilitarian space where I can put anything and everything.
Don believes it should be well organized with only certain items in it.
You realize something that is well-organized
is also utilitarian.
You believe that it should be poorly organized.
Is that correct?
I think it should fit.
What?
Don, tell me what Tyler is talking about.
So Tyler wants to fill the closet
with things we never use,
such as suitcases, a huge AC unit, boxes full of CDs.
Which I listen to.
No, he does not listen to the CDs.
Boxes full of records.
It's 2017.
It makes it a not functional space so that, you know, it's like if you take one thing out, it just all falls into each other.
And, you know, we can't use it for things that we like.
What's your favorite CD?
I got it, I got it.
We only have a limited time.
I apologize.
What's your favorite CD?
And is it Macy Gray or Hooba Stank?
Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain by Pavement.
Uh-huh, all right.
And why do you want to shove your CDs into the closet
if you're going to listen to them in the future?
Good question. Let the record show
I got them again.
Let the record show.
Dawn, what would you
do with the pavement
CDs and everything else if not
shove them into the closet? So I want to raise
the bed in the guest room so we can
put those things we don't use every
week underneath the bed. On five foot
stilts?
No, just with two pieces of wood we could raise the bed.
Just so you know, Judge Hodgman,
the city of San Francisco has a stilt lending library.
And why don't you want to raise the bed, Tyler?
It's a beautiful bed. It has sentimental value.
Sentimental value?
What's sentimental value? How old are you? Nine?
I just don't want to be smirched at the aesthetics of the bed by raising it. We can have a bed skirt, plus, I mean, the closet that you want is super messy, so...
Wait, wait, wait.
What's the sentimental value of the bed?
Is it your baby bed?
Believe it or not, it is my baby bed.
And you're saying raising it up a few inches on planks
will be a besmirch?
That would be a bed besmirch?
Yes.
Why?
Seven seconds, why?
Someone designed it to not be raised.
Your mommy?
All right, we're out of time.
That's three minutes.
We've got to come to a judgment in 20 seconds.
All right, I have my verdict.
I am going to say besmirch the bed,
because it's time to move on with your life.
I'm sure there's a tasteful way to do it,
and you've got to get that stuff out of the closet.
All right, Jesse?
I'm with you, Judge Hodgman.
I say get a nice bed skirt.
Nice bed skirt.
I trust this woman to get a nice bed skirt.
For me, that's the crux of the whole thing,
a nice bed skirt.
Sarah Watkins, even though the justice has been served
and the bed will be besmirched,
does your verdict differ from ours?
It does not.
I feel that I naturally am more of a Tyler person,
and I have found that the dawn of my life
has been very helpful in these sort of besmirchings of
baby beds. Besmirching?
What is your age, Tyler?
35. 35!
I was going to say
it's time to besmirch babyish things,
but in fact, that was five years ago.
I find in favor of Dawn.
Our next litigants.
Please welcome Dana and Betty.
Step right up.
You're automatically sworn in.
Okay.
Who brings this case to my court?
Who seeks justice here?
I do, Dana.
Dana, what is your dispute?
Betty and I are both mothers.
Our children are five years old and they're best friends,
but they don't go to the same elementary school.
I see. How old do they go to the same elementary school I see, how do they go to the same elementary school? What? No
And Betty believes in prison rules when it comes to schooling
She wants to teach her very short child to befriend the largest child she can find and then do that child's homework
Let me show you how I understand this.
Betty, what is the name?
Don't tell me the name of your child.
We'll call your child.
Come up with a code name for your child.
Biff?
Biff sounds great.
Biff?
Yeah. You're counseling Biff to find the largest thug in the prison yard and become that person's friend.
What grade is this?
Okay, so Biff is in kindergarten.
Yeah!
You're going gonna be eaten alive
in kindergarten
if you don't get
a protector
this isn't pre-k
there's no Montessori
preschool
this is hard time
I should clarify that my issue is not that her
she wants her child to befriend the largest child but she wants to teach her
child to do that kid's homework as a weird transaction like in exchange for
protection. That's my problem with this scenario.
Betty, did you do this in your childhood?
Did you do homework for kids to get protection?
In junior high, yes.
In junior high.
Yes.
And you were like, I did not start this soon enough.
Do you have any other past experiences with doing other people's work?
Yeah. Do you have any other past experiences with doing other people's work? Yeah, in junior high, I did befriend somebody
and do her homework assignments for her.
But there's an ethical quandary there.
Don't you agree?
You're breaking the rules.
Is that what you want to teach Biff?
Yes.
All right.
I like that answer. Dana? Yes. All right. I like that answer.
Dana?
Yes.
25 seconds.
Why is it any of your business how Betty raises Biff?
I mean, it's not my business, and it just makes me really sad.
Like, I love her child.
Our children are best friends.
We do daycare together.
What is your child's code name?
George.
George. You're afraid
that Biff
and Dozer
are going to beat up on George,
aren't you? No, my child is
much larger than her child.
But they don't go
to the same school. Would you say George is more of a Lenny?
Oh, yeah.
It makes me sad.
Her child is very smart, and it makes me really sad to think that she would be teaching her that friendship is transactional in that way.
And also her child goes to a...
Well, she's going to have to learn sometime.
Thanks for doing this podcast with me, Judge Osmond.
Thank you, Jessie.
Would you like a receipt?
All right.
I'm sifting this through.
I agree that teaching your child that friendship is transactional and encouraging your child to break ethical rules in order to avoid,
I would say, highly theoretical bullying is problematic on every level.
But Biff is Betty's child,
and I can't get in the way of that.
I would advise you guys go to the same preschool,
and then your thug son
can be the protector of Biff.
But until that happens,
I find in Betty's favor.
Sarah, what is your verdict?
I just, I feel like the first step would be to befriend
the large kid, I forget his name.
I think I called that person Dozier.
To befriend the kid that seems like a potential future threat.
And then without any transaction really spelled out,
just start with the friendship thing.
And maybe it won't ever come to the blows.
So you disagree with my verdict.
All right, Jesse, you're the tiebreaker then.
I mean, again, like I'm thinking prison economy first and foremost.
And, you know, since they banned cigarettes in federal prisons,
the new thing that is used as a de facto currency is called
max.
It's packets of freeze-dried mackerel, which are used because they're freely available
in commissaries and they cost exactly $1.
My first instinct to say, yeah, get them some of that mackerel, see where they can go from
there.
But yeah, I think I'm with Sarah on this one
I think recommending
genuine friendship first and foremost
is not a bad idea for a small kid
even in kindergarten
and yeah I would keep the cards
close to the vest
you know there's no need to let them know
you're willing to do homework until they demand it
Judge Sean Hodgman is overruled.
Finding in Dana's favor.
Please welcome to the stage
Jen and Ed.
Jen and Ed.
Jen
and Ed.
You are automatically sworn in.
Who brings this case before my court?
I bring the case.
What is the dispute?
Our family lives in a 700-square-foot cottage, as you do in San Francisco.
What is the size of the family?
It is currently two grown-ups, 1.7 children, and a dog.
Oh, I like the kid better.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
So in anticipation of your growing family, what change would you like to make to your
cottage?
So in the downstairs of the cottage, we have a finished extra room that's only accessible
by a door outside.
And I would like to add trapdoor stairs to our house so that we can access the downstairs
room without having to go outside.
Trapdoor stairs?
That is correct.
Can I ask you a question?
Would you put little rubber things on the corners of the trapdoor stairs so they're
safe for babies?
There has been a lot of discussion around this, both in terms of the nomadic door that
I plan to open with a button and also various safety measures involving netting.
It's going to be super safe.
Do you mean to say, have you considered
installing a flying trapeze?
We actually
have very high ceilings.
Yes, you have considered that. This is San Francisco.
Let me just understand what you're talking about here.
You're talking about cutting
a hole in your floor.
That is correct.
And then you would open it up.
How would you go down there?
So there are stairs that would be permanently installed downstairs.
Oh, okay.
And just the access point would be covered by a trap door.
Oh, okay, okay.
So it's not like an attic trap door where the ladder comes down or anything else like that.
No, no, the stairs are permanent.
Right.
It's just that you have to open the trap door.
It's just a death hole.
But your death will be slowed by stairs.
For your baby.
I understand.
Well, Ed, I have to say,
this would be an amazing Fred Gogolite chamber.
And would certainly free up some extra room in your home. What, I can't possibly guess,
is your problem with this?, as has been alluded to,
I think there are safety issues with having
a death hole in our hallway.
So,
and I think you've covered those already.
And I think it would be very hard to
make safe even with the most advanced netting.
And there's some real good
netting out there, folks.
It would also, the trap door would mean taking up space upstairs,
which is pretty limited because you wouldn't be able to put anything
on top of the trapdoor, lest it be, you know,
and also you wouldn't want kids running around.
What if you go down there and you close the door
and then there's a fire and your dumb dog is sleeping
on top of the trapdoor?
We would still have the second exit that would lead directly to the trap door.
No, no, no, no.
You'd have to brick that up.
Don't you know anything about building codes
in San Francisco?
Would the trap door you said in the hallway,
would it be like something
that you would necessarily have to walk over?
Yes.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
How often would you need to get down there?
Is this like a seasonal room?
Is this a...
This would be a...
Well, the idea of putting the stairs in
would be to use it every day.
Every day.
All the time.
But for what purpose?
As the baby's room?
No, but what's going to be down there
if not a monster?
So right now we use it as a guest room.
We could use it more frequently as a playroom.
You know what?
You have 700 square
feet. No guests allowed.
Ever. Ever, ever, ever.
You don't
deserve to have guests yet.
Eventually, though.
And you're going to have a baby.
Who's gonna come?
A parent?
Tell them to get
a hotel room. They're grown-ups.
If you want guests, move to Vallejo.
What about a bridge?
Could you put a bridge over, like a little curved bridge?
Oh, what about like a dope slide?
Like out the window and hit another window?
Look, they're putting a hole in the floor
and they got high ceilings.
Why not a fire pole?
Yes.
How long do you intend to stay in the shed that you live in?
Forever.
Really? You love it?
You want to live there forever?
You're a tiny homes type people?
We kind of have to be in San Francisco.
Yeah, we don't have a choice.
Yeah, no, no, I understand.
But all right, I got you.
And do you anticipate that this will increase
or decrease the value of your home?
I think that it might be, it might,
I mean, some people might see it as a feature,
but I think most people would find it worrying.
I totally would be into a house with trap doors.
I think everyone would be into a house with trap doors.
Have you discussed this with a professional, like a contractor?
Not yet. I see.
Are you going to do it yourself?
Are you going to do it yourself, Chuck Bryant style?
No, we always like to get a ruling
first before we go through the bid process.
I think we're out of time on this
one, so
I yeah, totally put a trap door on your floor. I think we're out of time on this one, so... I, uh, I...
Yeah, totally put a trap door on your floor.
I think your anticipation of living in this house forever
is highly delusional.
You're going to have to have more space eventually
because you have a child coming.
And what kind of dog do you have?
He's a mutt. He's like 50 pounds.
All right.
Average, right? Average dog?
And in the meantime, you're going to be doing something
really fun and weird to your home,
and maybe you'll get to go on
tiny house hunters or something.
So I think it's fine.
I think eventually you're going to have to sell that house,
and people are going to be glad you...
Some dum-dum like me is going to go,
oh, trapdoor, yay, I'll buy it.
Is there potential for an outside entrance to this,
as like a separate room that somebody could access from outside?
Yeah, it can go around back.
It has an outside entrance now.
Okay, I missed that part. I see.
It's a finished room,
but you have to go out of the house and around back
to get into it. Unless you have a trapped
door in the middle of the floor.
You couldn't just put outside stairs?
That's what I'm thinking.
Like, protected outside stairs?
Well, yeah, so we have outside stairs now.
I guess we could put some sort of
canopy over it.
The other thing is our cottage is in the backyard
of someone else's house.
Do they know you live there?
Yes.
Jesse, what is your verdict?
I mean, it sounds dangerous and expensive.
Yeah.
But yeah, I mean, what am I going to say no
alright
that's two in favor
Sarah
your ruling is not binding
but you may issue a minority report
I have no interest in that
I feel like
there's a great solution to this
problem there has to be one I don't know exactly that. I feel like there's a great solution to this problem.
There has to be one.
I don't know exactly what it is.
But I would like to see a mechanism,
like maybe the floor lowers,
almost like an elevator.
Like a drum riser.
So you can't fall. What in a drum riser?
You can't fall.
As it falls, there will be like...
And a bunch of drums, like Sheila E.,
like...
Yeah.
270 degrees of drums. Like Sheila E. Like... 270 degrees of drums.
I think there's a lot of ways you could... I mean, maybe not a lot, but there are options.
And you should always absolutely call it a trap door.
No matter what.
Whatever it is, it's a trap door.
So ordered.
Sorry, Ed.
Jen and Ed, thank you so much, Jen and Ed.
Sarah Watkins, thank you so much. Sarah and Ed, thank you so much, Jen and Ed. All right.
Sarah Watkins, thank you so much.
Sarah Watkins, thank you.
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.
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Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Judge Hodgman, shall we bring one last case to the stage?
Let us please dispense a little bit more justice.
Do you want to excuse yourself?
Oh, sorry.
I just want to point out that I developed a heel spur over the past couple of weeks,
and all this walking back and forth really hurts.
weeks and all this walking back and forth really hurts.
Please welcome to the stage Vicky,
Alyssa, Einaro, and David.
Tonight's case,
property bothers.
Vicky, Alyssa, Inaro, and David all live next to each other and share a backyard.
Inaro and David have been stockpiling found objects for home projects.
Vicky and Alyssa say they've gone too far with what they call eco-hoarding.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and delivers the obscure cultural reference.
The cat is going to the bathroom right in back of my portrait.
You know what? I'm glad he is.
I'm glad somebody's doing something they want to.
Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
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?
Yes.
Whatever.
Do you swear to abide
by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact that he knows
no eco in his hoarding?
Yes.
Very well, Judge Hodgman.
You may be seated
for an immediate summary judgment
in one of your couple's favors.
Each couple gets to guess the source of the cultural
reference that I made as I entered the courtroom. Let's see who goes first. Who
is the defendant? Oh the both of the dudes right? All right. Okay so it's girls
versus guys. So guys you can guess first or force your partners to guess first.
I'm going to go with the Full Moon theme and your Lycanthrope bailiff and say Teen Wolf.
Is it from Teen Wolf?
We'll put that in the guess book now.
Women, do you have a guess?
The Garfield comic.
The Garfield comic.
That would have been the funniest Garfield comic. The Garfield comic. That would have been the funniest Garfield ever.
Although, you know what?
I was rereading some.
Some of them are pretty good.
Some of those Garfields.
Some of the early years.
Pretty good.
Pretty good.
That cat loves lasagna.
Yeah.
It's like, what about cat food?
But, no, he's just like, you know.
He's just like... It's really something.
You guys gotta see this thing.
Jim Davis,
remember that name.
It was when Garfield started standing
up on his hind legs, on those cat
hind legs that aren't meant to be stood up on that way,
and I was like, that's the end for me.
All guesses are wrong!
Of course, I was quoting from the great documentary Grey Gardens about two a mother and daughter living in a house full and a property
full of garbage which is what brings you guys here today now uh Vicky and Alyssa you think that
you're are you uh both married to these gentlemen?
We are.
So I may refer to them both as your husbands?
Yes.
Your husbands, you guys, this dispute is over a yard.
And there is no fence, you are neighbors, but there is no fence between your yard.
Correct.
Because of the old common saying, no fences make for future lawsuits.
And here we are, it happened.
Ta-da!
But the issue isn't that you don't have a
fence. It's that you guys, Sonaro and David, keep stuff in the backyard. How would you
describe the stuff that you keep back there? Gentlemen.
Potential beautification. Building materials.
Building. What kind of building materials are we talking about? Like bags of Sancrete and Rebar?
Rebar, of course.
There's some of that.
I was not expecting yes to Rebar.
Also Sancrete.
And Sancrete too?
I was worried that there wasn't a thing called Sancrete that I was going to get yelled at the way I was about Wednesday Addams.
Judge Hodgman, my neighbor hoards building materials.
Not only does he have rebar, scaffolding,
plastic pallets, wooden pallets,
all these things in his backyard.
I just looked out there,
and there were just two bowling balls sitting there.
I was like, come on.
Do you have any bowling balls back there? No bowling balls.
But if you found some bowling balls,
realistically. I have access
to bowling balls.
I know where to take them.
How, is this organized
neatly in the backyard? No.
I see. I believe there is some evidence, and I think
we should look at it. I'm going back to my viewing station.
May we see some photos?
Please. Ah. think we should look at it. I'm going back to my viewing station. May we see some photos?
Please.
Ah.
Well. Let the record reflect that it's worse than the audience had imagined.
Yeah.
I can't say I completely understand
your organizational system.
Neither do we.
There are not two bowling balls,
but there is one rotting soccer ball
that is abutting a mishmash pile of egg crates
and a lot of old wood.
Next slide, please.
There's a child.
I did not realize there was a child.
First of all, there is a moldering aquarium full of rotting water.
But I didn't even see that, but I saw there's a child in this equation.
Is this one of your children or something you found?
That's our older daughter.
How many children are endangered in this backyard?
Five in total.
Five in total.
Whoa.
And for the purposes of the listening audience,
this is a child on a rope swing,
swinging over a two-basin kitchen sink
that is full of dead leaves.
Next slide, please.
Is this the whole of it?
These pictures are distorted.
These pictures are?
Yes.
Oh, really?
Is it like a magic eye picture that if I sort of unfocus my eyes, I see an actual backyard
instead of a junk pile with ducks.
Ducks are in here.
That is a clearly man-made pond for ducks.
Are those your ducks or just local ducks at Refuge?
Because your backyard looks like wilderness full of old,
and also with some old wagons and wheelbarrows in there.
They are our ducks, yes.
What are their names?
Stormfly and Windshear. wheelbarrows in there. They are our ducks, yeah. What are their names?
Stormfly and Windshear.
Did you just make up those names right now?
Stormfly and Balcony.
All right, next.
So it looks like you're holding up your trellis with a stack of old tuna cans.
So it looks like you're holding up your trellis with a stack of old tuna cans.
And this is another terrifying aquarium.
This seems to be indoors.
Is this evidence suggesting that you live in squalor indoors as well as that?
Actually, no.
Our indoors, it's workable.
It's nice.
What is this then?
This is a recycled aquarium filled with rare plants that I have acquired from eco hoarding.
Is this what you call this, eco hoarding?
No, that's what they call it. Ah, I see. That's why you made those scare quotes.
When you say that you call it that, do you mean that's your pitch to the New York Times style section?
Because if you're looking for a pitch to the New York Times style section,
I mean, Adventure Playground.
You're set. You're good as gold.
So this is the product of something you made
from the junk that you had out back.
The junk that I found, collected, and brought to my house. No one disputed that you're to blame for the junk that you had out back? The junk that I found, collected, and brought to my house.
No one disputed that you're to blame
for the junk.
And Naro, this represents
a good outcome from the junk?
Again,
the pictures are distorted.
How is this distorted?
This one is very nice in person.
It's not a very good picture.
There's about a dozen rare plants
that few people have in cultivation right now.
I find that very valuable.
Maybe not monetarily, but...
Very valuable for...
They're a great comfort
when your wife kicks you out of the house.
What's your favorite rare plant that you've got going up in there?
It's a philodendron hastatum in the very back under the fish.
Do you see the fish there?
It's a fishmobile.
Yes, correct.
All right, gotcha.
And final slide.
No, this isn't the final slide.
Oh, it is.
No, one more.
And there, oh, you have chickens as well.
This seems to be a larger on the inside kind of thing,
an interdimensional junk garden
which just goes on and on and on.
How did I miss this chicken pen in the first panorama shot?
It's behind the other panorama shot.
All right, you guys.
Do you not acknowledge, gentlemen,
that the backyard is currently in disarray
to the point of potential danger?
It's always been potential danger.
It's not just the current status.
It's not the current.
It's always been dangerous.
It's just prettier now than it was six years ago.
You consider this to be prettier?
Oh, yeah.
Not this, but the photos that I saw.
Well, we don't have pictures from eight years ago.
What was different then?
Nothing. There was nothing. There was years ago. What was different then? Nothing.
There was nothing.
Ah, no.
There was nothing there.
It was an empty yard.
It used to be a Superfund site.
The difference was the problem with your garden was not full of junk that I found.
Okay, what are you going to do with this junk, you guys?
Well, this chicken coop...
I don't want to talk about the chicken coop anymore.
We took in the whole picture.
We all know what you're living with back there.
What is the end game, or is this it?
That's the question.
Is there anything that's going to be done with all this stuff?
Well, that was made out of that stuff.
Oh, I see. That's the point you're making.
Yes.
You made a chicken coop,
and next you're going. Yes. You made a chicken coop. And next you're gonna make
a tiger sanctuary?
Your
honor? Don't give them any ideas.
There's missing pictures
there, too.
We submitted pictures of raised
beds that we
constructed. Raised beds?
Raised beds for growing food. Yes.
Made out of recycled 4x4s.
Yes.
May I interject?
Yes, you may.
The 4x4s.
How many?
10?
10, 12.
10 4x4s sat between our driveways for three years, riddled with...
Hold on.
Riddled with nails sticking out in all directions.
They're about 15 feet long.
About 15 feet long.
And now you...
Wait, wait, wait.
No, no, no.
No, you wait.
Okay.
There's more.
I don't...
There's not a lot you have to say.
Okay.
Alyssa lost her keys there for a year.
I don't...
I'm not waiting for one of...
for either you, Alyssa, or you, Vicky,
to come in and convince me.
Okay.
In fact, I'm going to ask one more question,
and I'm not even going to retire to Chambers
because we're short on time.
Inaro, what are you growing in your raised food beds?
Currently, at the moment?
Yes.
Garlic.
Oh.
Garlic?
Man, it's expensive.
That's an awesome answer.
I have to say, you won me over a little bit with that one.
Because you baited and switched me.
Because you were delaying. You're like,
currently, at the moment, what I expected you to say is, I have plans for garlic in nine years,
but you're actually making use of the thing. All right, look, I admire that you are repurposing
are repurposing obvious garbage and gradually and eventually terraforming your backyard into something that I hope will not be dangerous to humans in the
near future and productive in terms of growing your garlic and rare plants.
The problem is your staging is terrible.
The first thing I saw was all this wood piled up in complete disorder.
Your Honor.
Yes.
That first picture was actually the storage areas, the designated storage areas in each backyard.
All of it is a problem.
Which they're not using.
All of it is a problem.
It needs to be, if you seriously want to eco-hoard a bunch of stuff
and repurpose it, you have to neaten it up, you guys.
Neaten it up.
You can't have dangerous stuff.
You can't just throw stuff in willy-nilly. If you've got wood, pile your woodin' it up. You can't have dangerous stuff. You can't just throw stuff in willy-nilly.
If you got wood, pile your wood.
Stack it up.
You could have showed me...
What?
It is stacked.
I know what I saw in our house!
Stop telling me that the pictures were doctored!
Okay, hold on.
Are you telling me these pictures are fake news?
No. For people in the
third balcony or at home,
David and Inaro just
shared a look like,
oh, we've got this thing won.
And then Inaro's like,
the one is stacked.
Ha ha!
Ah.
No.
Your Honor.
We will be back here next year, I hope.
And I will like to see some photos of a backyard that has been thoroughly cleaned up
and doesn't look like something that's going to show up on a reality show.
Be that hoarders or American pickers, I want it to look like Property Brothers, but quick.
I find in favor of Vicki and Alyssa.
This is the sound of a gavel that is...
Vicki, Alyssa, Inaro, and David.
Judge Hodgman, this seems like a perfect time
to welcome our friend Sarah Watkins back to the stage.
What do you say?
Ladies and gentlemen,
Sarah Watkins has a brand-new record album
called Young in All the Wrong Ways
and is about to go on tour.
After you listen to this song,
go to sarahwatkins.com and find out all about it.
Ladies and gentlemen, Sarah Watkins.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You know, sometimes when you feel a little overwhelmed by what the judge has ordered
that you take on, the good place to start is just by saying the words, you know?
Just get rid of that non-stack of wood. So I'm going to sing this song in encouragement.
Here we go.
Enough is enough
Come back to us
We can't have lost you yet
We can't have lost you yet
The flame in your eyes
Is dimmed by this disguise
The chill went on too long
Yeah, you kept it on too long
But the flame's not gone
Not if you say so
Hope, hope is where you stay
Deep, deep as you can dig for me
When you're ready to begin
Just say so
Just say so Hands spin round the clock
But one day they will stop
And you're running headlong
And racing to your end
Time is yours to burn
But the key is yours to turn
Some will watch and wait
Afraid of mistakes
But what do they know
Oh, what do they know
Oh, hope is where you stay
Deep, deep as you can dig for it
When you're ready to begin
Oh, show, show yourself away
Hear, hear the words from your own lips
Tell yourself you're up for this
guitar solo
Ooh Hope, hope is where you stay
Deep, deep as you can dig for it
When you're ready to begin
Say so
Oh show, show yourself a way to live
Hear, hear the words from your own lips
Tell yourself you're up for this
Say so
Oh, say so
Say so, say so Say so, say so
We can't have lost you yet
We can't have lost you yet
Just say so, say so Our thanks to all of our litigants on the SF Sketch Fest stage.
Huge thanks also to our friends from SF Sketch Fest, Cole Stratton, Janet Varney, Dave Owen and Heather Gallagher.
We also want to thank Sarah Watkins for joining us in San Francisco.
She'll be touring the entire United States of America this summer.
You can check out the dates and her music at SarahWatkins.com.
Music at sarahwatkins.com.
The cases in this week's episode,
named by Julia Skoczko and Jen McGillivray.
Sorry, Jen and Julia.
This episode produced by Jennifer Marmer. We had help in San Francisco from our friend Michelle Mitchell.
Thank you, Michelle.
You can follow Judge John Hodgman on Twitter at Hodgman,
and you can follow me at Jesse Thorne,
J-E-S-S-E-T-H-O-R-N.
Hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO. You can also check out the Maximum Fund
subreddit at MaximumFund.reddit.com. Lots of great talk there every week. You can also email us at
Hodgman at MaximumFund.org. If you've got a case to submit, go to MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
That's MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
We're particularly looking for cases in the New York City and London, England areas.
So if you're in one of those places, let us know.
That's all for this week's Judge John Hodgman.
Thanks. Bye.
MaximumFun.org
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