Judge John Hodgman - Live From SF Sketchfest 2020
Episode Date: May 27, 2020This week's episode was recorded LIVE in San Francisco! First up is "Night Night Court." Noah is an early-to-bed, early-to-rise guy. His husband Kayden is a night owl. Kayden often stays up until 3 or... 4 in the morning playing video games and sleeps in late. Noah wants him to wake up earlier. Then there's SWIFT JUSTICE: Airport pickup methods, an accidentally matching couple, and then a litigant brings a plagiarism dispute against HIMSELF!BIG thanks to the SF audience for your contributions to the Homeless Youth Alliance. For more information on the fund in memory of Jesse's childhood friend, Evan Larsen, visit maximumfun.org/evan.Thank you to Mary Fahsbender Gottschalk for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, follow Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's Bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week's episode of the Judge John Hodgman podcast was recorded in my hometown, San Francisco, California,
at the beautiful and historic Castro Theater as part of San Francisco Sketch Fest.
It's a doozy. Let's go to the stage.
It's a doozy. Let's go to the stage.
San Francisco Sketch Fest, you've come to us desperate for justice.
We're here to deliver it at the Castro Theater in San Francisco.
Please welcome to the stage Noah and Caden.
Tonight's case, night-night court.
Noah files suit against his husband, Caden.
Noah is an early-to-bed, early-to-rise guy.
Caden is a night owl.
Caden often stays up until three or four in the morning, playing video games, then sleeps in late.
Noah wants him to wake up earlier.
Who's right?
Who's wrong?
Only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
and delivers an obscure cultural reference.
Trashy. Brooklyn hipsters attempting and failing
at being artsy once again.
Performance art in and of itself is supposed to evoke
meaning and emotion.
This show does neither and is genuinely a waste of time.
I was coerced into going after someone pumped me full of booze.
And even with the bonus of being in an elated, tipsy mood, that mood turned flat after witnessing
the feces show they call Judge John Hodgman.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Noah and Caden, please rise and raise your right hands.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help
you God or whatever?
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he never sleeps,
because sleep is the cousin of death?
Yes. Yes. Judge Hodgman,
you may proceed. Nolan Caden, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors. Can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I
entered the courtroom? Let's see. Caden, why don't you start? I have no idea. No idea. Something on Twitter. Something?
More than 140 characters,
so maybe a series of tweets.
Oh. Well,
let me just say this, Caden. You're warm.
Okay.
I'm going to give you that hint, Noah.
I'll give you another hint
since Caden is already ahead of the
game. He's a gamer.
I'll give you...
It's not from Twitter.
It's from Yelp.
Yelp, of course, being my favorite website for short fiction written by the most unreliable
narrators.
As a person who lives in Los Angeles, Yelp is my favorite
website for
racist essays about whether
parking is available.
It's like the Library of
Alexandria. So many stories.
Yeah.
Would you like a further hint, Noah and Caden?
I'll give Caden another chance.
Yes, please.
Here's another review of the same piece of culture.
Have no idea what this progressive play was about.
I thought it was based on
MC Beth.
Tried my hardest. Still
wondering. Was it
a review of Hamilton?
Was it a review of Hamilton?
Who are you? Ken Jennings?
Answer in the form
of an answer.
But I'll put
that second guess into the guess book.
A review of Hamilton.
Question mark?
Alright, Noah. What's your guess?
You can guess the same thing or something else.
I'm going to guess something else.
I think you've got it.
I definitely don't have it.
But the comedian Nathan
Fielder did a great play
that was not a play at one point.
And I'm going to guess that a review of Nathan Fielder's play that it's not a play.
What is the name of the play that is not a play?
Not a clue.
He scripted a bar, observed a bar, saw what people were doing, and then roped off a little seat and told everybody, go look at the bar.
I see.
Oh, hang on.
I hadn't looked here at your biography. I forgot that Noah is Nathan
Fielder's publicist. All guesses are wrong. I gave you a big hint. I thought it was based
on M.C. Beth. Don't say it out loud. The person wrote M.C. Beth. M.C. Beth? Don't say it out loud.
Don't say it.
The person wrote M.C. Beth.
We cannot say the name of this play in a theater.
Oh, okay.
And the play that is based on M.C. Beth is a little something we call in New York City,
Sleep No More.
An immersive theater experience that I will never, ever go to.
Because it is scary sounding.
You go into this fake hotel and everyone has to put on masks, even you.
And I know those masks aren't going to fit over my glasses.
I'm going to look like a dummy with glasses over my mask.
And then you wander around and people do interpretive dance about this play around you.
And then sometimes they ask you to come into a little room.
And just thinking about that, I was like, if I go in there,
someone is going to do the worst thing possible,
which is touch my neck.
And so the reason I obviously picked
this particular reference is the term sleep no more
Because Noah you would like Caden to actually sleep a lot more and Caden on the flip side
You would like Noah to sleep a little bit later. Is that right? Yes. All right, so Noah you bring the case, correct?
Yes, your honor. So state the nature of your dispute. Well, your honor
Caden likes to stay up very late. You don't have to call me Your Honor, by the way.
You're wearing those nice new
robes. Yours is fine.
Yours is fine.
What's the name on the inside of the robe again?
Mr. Justice John Skowronski.
Yeah, you know what? Please call me that.
Good point.
Well, Judge, Caden likes to stay up late,
sometimes during the weekday, sometimes during the weekend,
and it's an inconvenience for me and for other people.
You're not Nathan Fielder's publicist.
What is your profession?
I'm a political consultant.
I raise money for the good guys.
For the good guys?
By which you mean
the Libertarian Party.
Who are the good guys
in the year 2020?
Democrats.
I mean, I think both sides
are terrible.
Of course.
Except for Democrats.
Well done.
Thank you.
I have no opinion.
As an NPR employee,
Jesse Thorne is prohibited from having an opinion
on politics.
There is nothing
going on in the world that is so
extreme that it would warrant an NPR employee from feeling a thing.
I signed a pledge of perfect somnambulance.
Well, thank you for the work that you do.
Caden, what are you up to?
I'm a technical program manager for a tech company. Okay, cool. And so you obviously have some flexibility, Caden, in your work day.
Yes. Because you're staying up late. What I understood from my bailiff, Jesse Thorne,
sometimes three or four in the morning playing games. On a good night.
On a bad night, you accidentally fall asleep at 2.30?
Yeah, yeah.
Those are the rough days.
What's your game?
It's not just games.
That's when I can read.
It's my me time.
It's when I can recharge.
Sure.
And nobody bothers me.
You tricked me into feeling sympathetic for you.
Because I feel that a lot.
I'm often awake in the middle of the night,
and I'm thrilled about it.
But I did ask you, what are your games?
Because I am curious.
So I'm a big console gamer.
I play PS4, Xbox.
Those are the names of consoles. Sorry, sorry, sorry.
Mass Effect.
Can you not remember?
He's playing Mass Effect through the third time.
Jaguar.
Mass Effect, Dragon Age, Anthem, sometimes Fortnite.
With all due respect, Anthem is a health insurance plan.
I'm not sure about Fortnite, but it might also be one.
If Dragon Age is one, then I'm definitely signing up for it.
And so, Noah, what are you?
Are you a 9-to-5-er?
Not really.
Okay.
If I had my way, I would go to bed at about 8.30 and wake up about 4.30.
But I don't have my way.
Hey.
But I stay up late, usually about 10.30 or 11, and wake up about 5 or 6.
How old are you?
29. 29.
29.
Once he's had the 4.30 dinner special at three calendars.
Because you will have your way.
In 20 years, you're going to be...
Well, I don't want...
I understand that I'm weird.
I don't want Caden to be like me.
I just want him to come to bed
at a slightly more reasonable time
than three or four a.m.
Yeah, we'll talk about Caden in a second,
but I'm on you.
What...
Have you always been such a...
Yes.
...early to bed, early to rise type of person?
Yes.
And 8.30, though, that's quite early.
I mean, that's quite early. I mean, you can't even watch
some of the more adult TV shows.
Well, typically I go to bed about 10.30 or 11.
Right, but you'd like to go to bed at 8.30?
I would, definitely.
Would you like to be in bed at 8.30?
Yeah.
Or would you like to...
Wow, that was...
Let the record show that was an extremely sensuous response.
Yeah, that was like as close as a head nod can get to... Oh, yeah.
I want to be in bed and feel those flannel sheets Oh, yeah. Yeah.
I want to be in bed and feel those flannel sheets gently drift down onto my shins,
put my head back onto my buckwheat pillow,
and just go,
nigh-nigh.
Do you want to be in bed at 8.30,
or do you want to be asleep?
Be in bed.
Be in bed at 8.30, yeah.
What do you want to, in bed at 8.30 or do you want to be asleep? Be in bed. What do you want to read and whatnot?
Read a little bit.
Sometimes I fall asleep watching a TV show.
In bed?
In bed?
I'm aware of how the court feels on that subject.
For someone who seems to take
sleep hygiene seriously,
you are really messing up your head
that way. What are you watching about at 8.30?
Little House on the Prairie?
The Simpsons right now.
All right, all right, all right.
And then you want to fall asleep
at about 10.30.
I'll usually, if I was in bed at 8.30, I'd be out by 9.
You'd be out by 9?
Yeah.
He'd be out by 8.35.
Yeah.
And you're married?
Yes.
How long have you been married, Caden?
Three years.
Three years.
Three years.
And how long have you been together?
11 years.
So you were together, you've been together for much longer than you were married, so
you both knew what you were getting into.
Yes.
Has this been a dispute?
Did it take you by surprise that Noah liked to be at bed at 9 o'clock?
No.
Actually, at the beginning of our relationship,
we were long distance for a while,
and I was in the Philippines and he was in Atlanta,
and there was a 12-hour time difference.
Right.
It was true.
I heard no complaints
then. It was awesome. It was great.
But then we moved in together
and that's when the
dispute started. Yeah.
The first day you moved in and you saw him getting
into bed at 8.30, you're like, what the hell?
He has a bedtime alarm.
He has a bedtime alarm at 7.45.
That's not true. That's not true. It's at 7.45. That's not true.
That's not true.
It's at 8.30.
This case is shaping up very differently than I thought.
Yeah, you know, me too.
I mean, you wanted to be here.
So, I mean, I was asking about your work schedule to determine if Caden's gaming me time late night all night long schedule is disruptive to your sleep in some way.
It can be.
I fall asleep better when he's in bed.
And I do. I fall asleep better when he's in bed and... Uh... Yeah. I do. I fall asleep
better when he's in bed.
I don't think you have problems
falling asleep. That's true.
I sleep better. I should say I sleep
better. I feel like you're gilding the lily a little bit.
I sleep better when he's in bed.
And sometimes he'll ask me to spend time
with him at night so I'll sleep on the couch while he's playing
video games.
Yeah, that went from oh to oh.
Yeah.
I do have a case.
I have to say, Caden, that's a grim scene
to picture.
Like you playing Fortnite at three o'clock in the morning
while Noah, illuminated by the blue light
of your video game,
is sacked out on the divan with a thin gray blanket over him.
Let the record show that Noah and Caden can barely collect themselves
due to the sheer punishing accuracy of the word You obviously love to be together.
Yes.
Right?
Yes.
So have you tried to find some common ground?
Have you tried to set different rules in the relationship?
We try.
Much of our relationship is about negotiation.
So we...
Oh.
How unique.
Usually the most lasting marriages are based on a line drawn in the sand.
Oh, God. I find it hard to stay consistent because one of the things I hate most
is just lying in bed
waiting to fall asleep
and for some reason it's just
difficult
there was a quote there was a quote that I was going to read from an author about sleep until I found these Yelp reviews.
And I have to remember it because I'm not going to find it right now on my phone.
But it was along the lines of, why would I fall asleep?
You know, if I fall asleep, then it is just tomorrow.
If I stay awake for another hour, I have another hour of life.
So why would I ever sleep?
And I was like, I feel that.
But do you know who wrote that?
Who?
Sylvia Plath.
Oh!
Kids, ask your mom, dad, or guardian to explain.
The dark and tragic irony of that.
Do you feel, you know, this question is for both of you,
that this disconnect in your schedules prevents you from having enough together time.
Yes, absolutely.
But not only us.
So sometimes we like to hang out with friends,
but all of our friends know on the weekends they can't schedule anything with us
until after 3 p.m. because Caden is sleeping.
And my family for Christmas this year had to rearrange the – we were video conferencing them in Georgia and they had to wait until Caden was away so everybody could get the family together.
And he asked them to move it so that it was later so he could sleep in a little bit longer. You know, it's, I would like to spend more time with him.
How late do you sleep on a weekday?
In fairness to that point, though, it was 7 a.m. I moved it from 6 a.m. to 7 a.m.
No, no, no, no.
Wow.
That is some germane information that you left out.
I mean, when we talk about telling the whole truth, nothing but the truth, you know.
Right.
No, you should become a political consultant.
Is your family a family of early risers?
Does this come from your family experience?
Most of them, yeah.
Yeah.
My sister is the exception, and she's listening.
Hi, Lydia.
Also say hi to your friend Nathan Fielder.
Hi, Nathan.
Caden, would you say your family are more night owls?
Is this a family difference?
Generally, yes. I think that they are... I'm the only one who has a job that's flexible enough say your family are more night owls is this a family um just difference generally yes i think
that they are i'm the only one who has a job that's flexible enough to allow me to be as
night owly as i am so on a weeknight you'll noah's alarm will go off at 8 30
he'll go please please please come to bed. And you'll be like, uh-uh. You can sleep out here on the couch if you want to.
And Noah will be like, no, I'd actually like to sleep in a bed like a human.
Thank you.
And then he'll go into bed and fall asleep.
And then what's your first go-to?
Immediately, like, put on your sunglasses
and dance around in your underwear to Bob Seger
songs and then pop some popcorn and then start a cake and then read and then play anthem and then
play fortnight and then get online like what do you do normally I have already I've already started
a book or I've already started something by the time I've gotten home. Sometimes I throw some work in there.
If I have a PowerPoint that I'm dreading and I have to do, then that's probably what I'm doing it.
So it's a mix.
It's time that I don't have to adhere to a schedule.
I can just do whatever I want to do or whatever I need to do.
What percentage of that time is video games?
70% probably.
Noah, that was a very condescending question.
Let the record reflect that Noah nodded condescendingly.
Is this an issue of virtue for you?
Do you feel that it is unvirtuous of Caden?
Or perhaps not adult, not 29 enough?
Like a real 29-year-old adult would be getting into bed at 8.30.
No, no, no.
Are you concerned your family may not have enough worms?
Worms?
The, uh... No, I'm fine with him playing video games.
I just...
If he has the option,
I'd like him to play video games until, say, 11 o'clock or midnight
and then come to bed with me.
It's the 3 a.m., the 4 a.m.
Last night he was up until 3 a.m. and got up at 7 a.m.
I don't think it's healthy for him.
When you wake up at 7, how do you feel?
Normally I'm tired, but by 8 o'clock I'm okay.
But that's not, in all fairness, that's not the typical night.
This was kind of an exception.
Yeah, you're like, I'm only going on a fairly popular podcast tomorrow.
I don't need to be fresh or anything.
So, you know, like, there are a lot of nights
where I am in bed before midnight.
But usually I'm winding
down. I'm still, I'm not asleep until
12.30. So it's not every night
that it's 4 a.m. because there are days
that I have 8.30 meetings.
And I get a lot of sleep.
Today was the exception. Normally
I get at least eight hours.
Yeah, but you're sleeping late.
How late are you sleeping to get that eight hours?
Usually nine, maybe ten, and then I'm at work.
2 a.m. to 9 a.m. is seven hours of sleep.
I've done that math.
I remember that one.
So the 3 a.m., the 4 a.m., that's usually during the weekends.
Right.
And that's probably why it affects Noah the most because he's already up at 4.30 on a Saturday,
and he wants me to be awake as well at 4.30 on a Saturday.
Right.
But more than likely, I have been awake until 3 or 4 in the morning on a Friday night,
and so I won't wake up until like 12 or 1.
It's a lot of numbers for me to take in, Caden.
But do you know what?
I don't begrudge it because
another husband
might have come in with a spreadsheet.
And I appreciate
you're not doing that. Thank you very much.
I almost brought my spreadsheet but I thought better of it.
I asked you both if you had enough together time and Noah, you suggested that your togetherness
was a little challenged by Caden's late sleeping. Caden, do you, do you worry that if you followed
Noah's strict and bizarre schedule that you would not have enough me time. I do worry about that.
I have a job where I interact with people all day,
and I'm actually a natural introvert,
so the fact that I'm on this stage
is kind of a statement of my love to my husband.
And to us...
That's not true.
Sorry, Bailiff.
Just to let you know, he called you Judge John Hoffman just a couple of minutes ago.
Wow.
He probably listens to Comedy Bank.
More of a Rogan guy, are we?
Like to hear a lot of viewpoints, do we?
So I do worry about that.
I feel like we get enough time on the weekends,
but I don't think it's just my sleeping in.
I think it's also that we have time with friends.
We have times with, you know, our weekends are always packed.
And so it can feel like maybe we don't have just two of us time.
Do you think that Noah has difficulty being alone?
I do.
I think that would probably be very difficult for him.
Noah, do you have difficulty being alone?
Oh, definitely.
How do you feel when you're up at 4.30 in the morning on a Saturday
and you realize that not only your beloved Caden is not with you,
but most of humanity is not?
Well, on weekends I like to sleep in.
What does that mean?
5.15?
9 or 10. I usually wake up at 4.30
because the cat wakes me up.
Okay.
Now see, another husband would have brought
a picture of the cat.
There's one floating around somewhere.
Let us stipulate that your cat is adorable.
Its name is? Primrose.
Forget it.
One of the great names of cats.
So if I were to rule in your favor, Noah, how would you
have me rule? I would just ask
for a midnight bedtime.
Midnight bedtime?
Midnight on the weekdays. On all
weekdays. There's a. Midnight on the weekdays. On all weekdays.
There's a lone applauder in the audience.
Midnight bedtime on weekdays.
Any other, any exceptions?
No, I think that's fine.
Caden, is that doable for you or do you feel that that's unreasonable?
So one of the things that I have a hard time with is restrictions on my freedom. So in theory...
It's like Gary Johnson says.
So in theory, that could sound good, but the fact...
If you don't like restrictions on your freedom, then why did you marry a democratic fundraiser?
Because he was cute, smart, and had a great family.
Yeah.
So that feels like a restriction.
You want to have the-
The flexibility to- The adult agency to decide for yourself. Yes, exactly. Personal
responsibility and personal choices is important to me. I see. What
would you have me rule if I were to rule in your favor? Maybe we could check in
about it periodically and decide if it's still working for the both of us? I don't know.
Are you a sound sleeper, Noah?
Yes, mostly.
You're good at it?
I think I've heard everything I need to
in order to make my decision.
There are a number of mattress companies
that advertise on podcasts.
Not even one of them
advertises on Judge John Hodgman.
So I'm going to go into my sleep chamber
and lie upon my hated collection of Lisa's, Casper's, and sleep numbers.
And I will not fall asleep, but will ponder my decision.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Caden, how are you feeling about your chances in the case?
I think the judge is going to be fair, regardless of what he rules.
So bad?
I think the judge will be fair.
Noah, how are you feeling?
Terrible.
Yeah, I bet you didn't expect to turn on you like that right at the beginning.
To be fair, though, you have insane habits.
It's a valid point.
Have you guys thought about having children and never choosing when you go to sleep or wake up ever again?
We have thought about this.
It occurred to us, yeah.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom
and delivers his verdict.
There's no way to solve it.
There's no solution.
You're doomed, You're doomed.
You didn't know what you were getting into.
You both made a perfectly fair error.
You met on opposite sides of Greenwich Mean Time.
You didn't know.
Never occurred to you, Caden,
that Noah was this strange-o who, as an adult, goes to bed at 8.30 p.m.
Like some kind of seven-year-old.
Seven-year-old trapped in a 29-year-old's body.
7-year-old trapped in a 29-year-old's body.
Nor could you know, Noah, that Caden was a 13-year-old trapped in a 29-year-old's body.
You know, this court has discussed bed and sleeping arrangements a lot, because it's obviously such an important part of a loving relationship,
but it is a paradoxical part of a loving relationship because sleep is a brief moment of togetherness
before utter apartness where you each go into not merely your own figurative worlds, but
your semi-literal dream worlds where you're only alone, which is how you were born and how you're
going to die.
The fact that married couples
actually share a bed remains
confusing to me.
Since what you are
sharing is not your
self and your love
for each other if you are asleep,
right? What you're sharing
are your farts
while you are unconscious with each other.
And yet there is something, Noah, that moved me
when you said that you sleep better when Caden is near you.
I think that even on an unconscious level,
the human body knows that they are with someone
that they care about. And I've never, as a father of human children, I do not sleep well at night
because unconsciously, you know, there is an evolutionary impulse that I have to be on alert for wolves. And yet once my family is
awake all I want to do is sleep. Then I realize they're looking out for wolves
so I can now finally rest. And Caden, something you said also, though, moved me,
which is that while you are playing video games,
and the case was presented by Noah as merely playing video games,
that all you do is just play Fortnite until 5 a.m. every morning
and just eat Cool Ranch Doritos.
In fact, you have a full life of your own in the middle of the night where
you're able to pursue some of the solitary things that every person in any couple has
to nurture in themselves in order to then, when the other partner is finally awake, in
order to share of yourself, you need to have time where you tend to yourself, right?
So there are very meaningful but completely diametrically opposed competing impulses.
So, Caden, I'm going to introduce you to a concept that I learned from a great podcast called Stuff You Should Know.
Our friends Josh and Chuck, who are doing a great show here at San Francisco Sketch Fest.
Before there was, never mind electric illumination, before candles were widely available,
people went to bed as soon as it got dark. And then when candles were available, they started to extend their evening hours, obviously because they could. They could stay up late and play Fortnite in the 17th century. Different kind of Fortnite. It was a two-week game of fighting.
But they were still trained, biologically, they were still trained to wake up in the middle of the night.
And there's a whole lost history of what's called second sleep.
And in 15th and 16th century literature and drama,
there are often references, I will meet you at second sleep,
and no one knew what they were talking about because this part of human history had been lost to time,
especially once electric illumination became available to everybody because people just stayed up late at that
point. They could. But before that, the biological rhythm was to fall asleep more or less at
dusk and then wake up again. And that period of waking between first and second sleep was
this almost post-hypnotic state where you were awake
but very alone untroubled by the world because it had stopped and and
contemplative and people would wake up they would work on a poem it would make
a little model they might go do a little project they might visit someone else in
the middle of the night maybe it may maybe a lover or a neighbor or both,
and then they would go back to sleep.
And when I heard this, I felt suddenly very seen and affirmed
because that is completely my sleep pattern.
I fall asleep, and then I wake up,
and it had been happening to me since I was like you, Caden, a 13-year-old.
I would like you, Caden, a 13-year-old. I would fall asleep, then wake up wide awake at 1, 2, or 3 in the morning
and worry that there was something wrong
and worrying that I was worrying about the wrong thing
and going into this cycle of worry because I was awake.
And then I would eventually fall back asleep.
And when I realized that this was a biologically very natural thing to have happen,
this period of second sleep for me became this wildly comforting and productive period.
I wouldn't necessarily get out of bed and, like, make a cake or anything,
but I would often get up and I would read a book or think about the day
and really enjoy a profound sense of aloneness in that quiet.
And then I found it very restorative and nourishing.
And I feel you when you say, this is my time.
And I also feel you, Noah, when you say, I want my husband with me,
even if I have to go sleep on a rug in the living room next to primrose.
Eventually, Noah, you will get what you want.
As you guys grow older together, Caden, you will discover you can't do what you do anymore.
Your body will begin to betray you and you will want to go to bed at 8.30, and your eyes, like mine, will wake up at 5 a.m.
and wonder, why can't I get on an airplane now or something?
But until then, my advice to you is that you go to sleep with your husband,
and once he's asleep, get out of bed.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Noah and Caden.
Hello, I'm your Judge John Hodgman.
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Jesse
we we found justice
in the case of Noah and Caden
looks like our job here is done
all justice has been served in San Francisco.
This is a lawful land.
Goodbye.
Wait.
Hold on, Judge Hodgman.
I'm going to put this to the audience.
San Francisco,
do you think there's more justice
within your bounds?
I think, John,
that we can find more justice.
How about this?
This is my pitch to you.
We'll put just 15 minutes on the clock
and see if we can blast through a powerful string of justice
such as never been seen in the city by the bay.
Sounds gross, but fair.
I call it swift justice.
Swift justice.
That's what it says on this piece of paper.
Who seeks justice before me, Jesse?
Please welcome to the stage Heidi and Neil.
Heidi and Neil, please step forward.
Who comes to this court to seek justice from me?
Your judge, John Hodgman.
That would be me.
And you're Heidi.
I am Heidi.
Hello.
Hello.
What is the nature of your dispute?
When we have visitors come to the Bay Area,
when we get in the car to pick them up at the airport,
there's much tension between my husband and I
because I love the cell phone lot.
I've heard that sentence many times.
And Neil feels that it's important to either park
and go in and greet our visitors, or circle around.
Let the record show that some of the people in the audience hissed
at Neil's circle around scheme.
What is your relationship to Neil?
We are married.
And how long have you been married?
30 years. Let the record show Heidi has no idea.
It's true.
And looked to Neil either to confirm her memory or to confirm what lie she was supposed to tell.
Almost certainly the latter.
Heidi, if you need help,
blink twice.
Yes.
Okay.
We'll meet you in the cell phone lot.
Yeah.
So, Neil,
what is your scheme for
picking up people at the airport?
I was raised in the Chicago area
and my family
taught me that what was best would be to make it as comfortable as possible for someone coming in from out of town.
They've traveled five or eight hours.
They've had three delays.
And so the idea.
They should plan their travel better.
better. So the idea is that you are there to greet them and help them with their luggage and bring them to the car or if appropriate you just be there magically the moment that they arrive at the curb.
Okay. That's the goal anyway. And Heidi were you raised differently?
She was raised in a cell phone lot.
Yeah, that's right.
That's why you like that cell phone lot.
It feels like home to you.
She really does.
Neil's idea of graciousness from the Midwest, I believe,
is different than mine, where for me,
I like our guests to believe that it was effortless to get them.
I don't want them to worry about me paying for parking
and I don't want them to stress about me circling around
while they're getting off the plane and getting their luggage.
Yeah, well, I mean, whatever way I rule,
I want to relieve you of a burden that you have
by letting you know,
most people aren't thinking about you.
This is true in general.
Most people are thinking about themselves.
There may be some.
There may be some, I don't doubt.
Perhaps there are some people going,
I hope Heidi's okay. Not I need to find my luggage or what happened, you know, I have to go to the bathroom very badly. Maybe their first thought is, is Heidi okay? Is it cold in the cell phone lotto? I don't know. Is she circling around? So, Neil, let me understand. First, I mean, obviously, one of the things is that you were raised in a city, a small town, with a small town airport.
That's right.
With no traffic whatsoever, where it's just easy to just pull up at any time.
That was once true.
In modern-day airports, it does take a little bit of different...
No, I mean, this is an issue that I take with your scheme. Because if you were to park in the parking structure, and then greet them, and then walk them to the parking structure, that's one thing. But this circling around until they arrive is not merely imprecise
because you could get caught on this,
you know, on the far side of the airport
when they're walking out.
Which is not much different than waiting in the cell phone lot
except you're adding to the traffic
going around the airport.
There...
There are risks to the scheme.
May I at least congratulate you for being the first husband in a heterosexual relationship to say those words.
To acknowledge that there are risks.
There are risks.
There may be flaws in the scheme.
Now, you brought a spreadsheet, I'm sure.
Let's take a look.
I'm in love with the idea that Neil war-gamed this thing out.
You're picking people up from the cell phone lot.
We're talking about San Francisco International Airport?
Yeah, any airport. Yeah, but what are you driving to other states to pick people up from the cell phone lot? We're talking about San Francisco International Airport? Yeah, any airport.
Oakland.
What are you, driving to other states to pick people up?
You live here in the Bay Area?
Yes.
The airport you're talking about is San Francisco or Oakland?
San Francisco or Oakland, yeah.
Okay, right.
Got San Jose?
Got a beef with Normanetta?
What do you do in the cell phone lot while you're waiting?
How early do you get there?
Let the record show for the listener at home,
Heidi's face lit up with great delight
and an inward gasp of, oh, let me tell you
about the joy she takes in being sitting in the cell phone lot.
I listen to a ball game.
I listen to podcasts.
I play games on my cell phone.
I draw.
It's me time.
I think about the people flying in and flying out.
And once I even saw the dog sniffing dog playing fetch.
Wow.
You are living an entire Richard Scarry book
in that cell phone lot.
Yeah, I'd like to just amend an earlier ruling, if I may,
pursuant to the case of Noah versus Caden, an amendment to
that ruling, Caden, you have to fall asleep with Noah. When Noah falls asleep, you get
up and drive to the cell phone box.
Because that sounds...
That sounds like a delight.
Obviously, you both have different styles,
one of which causes zero harm to the traffic patterns at the airport,
one of which causes harm one of which adds traffic rather than the opposite
but neither style harms the other in the sense that if Neil goes to pick someone
to the airport you can go you can stay at home and listen to the ball game and
watch service dogs catch play fetch or whatever.
So why should I adjudicate between the two?
Why can't you each have your own style?
We have our own styles when we're independently picking people up,
although I have to admit that I still grill him about whether he's just circling or whether he's...
Oh, you're thinking about it.
Yes.
But when we're together and picking people up,
we don't bring the subject up,
but as we approach the airport,
the tension level...
There's a certain air of tension.
...rises a lot.
Well, I can imagine so.
I wonder whether he... A lot. Well, I can imagine so.
I wonder whether he... Because if you're going together,
and you go to the cell phone lot,
then Neil's being robbed of his cultural heritage.
Thank you for understanding.
And if you circle around,
then you're being robbed of your baseball time
and also the anxiety of
why are we burning gas or electricity
when we could just be sitting, having a good time.
You could even, I mean, how long have you been married?
Oh, 30 years.
30 years.
But the magic is still there.
You guys could be getting frisky in that cell phone lot.
No, let the...
Yeah, John, I don't know...
Let the record show the withering contempt
that Heidi had for that idea
as I stepped into the organ pit and never took the leave.
John, I don't know what Richard Scarry books
you're reading, but.
You're saying Loli Worm never found a lady worm
in that apple car, come on.
Maybe not a lady worm,
just maybe another worm.
John was reading Get Busy Town.
Sorry.
I thought of it and had to say it.
Neil,
do you doubt the efficiency
of the cell phone lot method?
Because I got picked up
by a volunteer named Lenore
here at SF sketch fest and uh and I
stepped out of that door and I texted her I mean you're his you're your ancient family practice
perhaps predates cell phones it does at that time cell phone lots were just for growing corn
that's right I don't know why they even called them cell phone lots.
They hadn't even been invented yet.
It's a modern adaptation.
But now we do have cell phones and texts.
Yes.
And I got my baggage and I stepped out of door number 16 and I texted Lenore saying,
I'm ready to go.
And within three minutes she was there.
It was a pretty efficient practice. It's a long wait. Lenore saying, I'm ready to go. And within three minutes, she was there.
It was a pretty efficient practice.
It's a long wait.
But if you had been on the other... All right, you know what?
I had a great time.
I listened to a ball game.
You asked for it, Neil.
Now it's going to be put to the test.
First of all, by the way, Neil, what you're doing is wrong.
Second of all, you have the right to do it.
Second of all, when you go individually to the airport,
you do whatever you want.
And that's, yeah.
Third of all, to settle this once and for all,
the next time someone comes to the airport, it's going to be a race.
Heidi, you're going to go to the cell phone lot.
Neil, you're going to circle around.
Okay.
The person...
I'm up for that.
I'm up for that. Yeah. I don't know whether you have two cars or whether you can borrow one or rent a second car.
They have to be comparable, right?
One can't be faster than the other.
Okay.
The second that person lands or is ready to go,
text both of you simultaneously.
The first person who gets there and picks that person up, that's the way you do it when you do it together.
Neil is supremely confident.
Heidi and Neil, please welcome Matt and Wiki. Thank you.
Welcome Matt and Wiki.
Matt and Wiki, hello.
Hello.
Let's see here.
Who seeks justice before me?
I do, Your Honor.
And you would be Matt?
I am, yes.
And what do you do all day long?
As Richard Scarry might say, what do you do all day?
I'm a professor and a filmmaker.
A professor and a filmmaker?
Yes.
A professor of what?
Filmmaking?
Film and video production, screenwriting. Where do you profess?
Actually, on the other coast, Monmouth University.
Monmouth University.
Yeah, Jersey.
That's in New Jersey.
And yet you live here.
Part-time, yes. We're bi-coastal. Okay. Yeah, Jersey. That's in New Jersey. And yet you live here. Part-time, yes.
We're bi-coastal. Okay. Yeah. Summers and winter break, I'm here. The rest of the time, I'm over there. Okay. And Wiki, you are a product designer at Expedia. You love to cook, learn new types of
design, and play music. And of course, Wiki, I know this because there's
a huge portion of the internet that's organized just around facts about you.
The Wikipedia. You see what I mean?
Oh, of course, yes.
I'm a dad.
Check it out, everybody. Not sponsored.
Check out my website, Wikipedia.
Do you commute across the country like you're... Are you married?
We are, yes.
Yes, yes, we are.
Do you commute across the country with your husband,
or do you live here full-time,
and that's why he comes back, or what?
Yeah, so Expedia, that's where I work.
My job is mostly here, but they're very flexible. Thank you so much. Not sponsored by Expedia that's where I work um my job is mostly here but they're very flexible
thank you so much not sponsored by Expedia but thank you um so I got to and yet you still managed
to say Expedia three times yeah wiki I know that's what I do when I'm nervous I just mention
where I work all the time it's weird um but yeah so we've been married for a while but
he has to live there because he teaches and it's harder to get a job as a professor I guess um
and I there's so I have I'm based here but um during the summers because he has the summers
off and the winters off so he really just works like six months out of the year.
But he does the good work.
It's okay.
So when he's not working, he spends time... This is not germane to your case.
It's just run-of-the-mill contempt for your husband.
Yes.
Yeah, this isn't about the case.
This is just a list of reasons you're mad
you're married to your husband.
No, I love him, but when he is working,
I spend half of my time there,
so I do like two weeks here, two weeks there, so on.
But none of this has anything to do with your dispute.
It does not.
Which of you seeks justice?
I do.
And what is the nature of your dispute, Matt?
You can't tell from the looks of us right now,
but we dress eerily similar.
On purpose?
No, not intentional, not coordinated.
Okay, it just happens.
We will enter the bedroom dressed,
I mean, I'm telling you, near identically.
Right.
Wait, enter the bedroom from what,
your respective ante rooms?
Once the ladies in waiting
and gentlemen's
valets have finished dressing you.
She enters the bedroom
from the bathroom. He enters the bedroom
from the magical portal that leads to Monmouth,
New Jersey. A fantasy
land where people only work
six months out of the year
and goats and beavers talk.
I love the picture of you guys entering the bedroom
at the same time dressed exactly alike and going,
what?
As though it's part of the opening credits montage
of a 1991 sitcom.
I was imagining that same entrance and then do do do do do do do
ah just trying to paint a picture you're both fresh makers I get it so so what I'm
a psychically connected what sartorially, psychically connected? Just, yeah. That was hard for a person who had a whiskey a little while ago to say.
I think we both entered the relationship with a similar eye for fashion,
if you can call it that.
You both look pretty put together right now.
She looks, I mean, great, yeah.
You're hipster cash, and your sneakers are new,
and, Wiki, you've got a cool leather jacket on,
and you've got some cool boots and stuff.
You didn't dress alike.
It looks like what you're saying is not true.
We actually spent a long time today discussing if we should dress alike,
which was the original.
Yes.
Yeah, we were wearing the same T-shirt.
That would have been funny for a stage show.
It would have been illustrative of your case and amusing to see.
For a podcast.
You know, don't make me bang this cattle down.
Judge Hodgman, you know I hate to do this.
You know this is the last thing in the world I want to do.
I'm here in my hometown.
My parents are here.
My brother's here.
All these great citizens are here.
They're probably all Giants fans, too.
I don't want to have to do this,
but I feel like I have to do this.
Shut your pie hole!
Since you decided not to present any evidence in person,
let's look at the evidence that you did send in.
Exhibit A.
Now, Matt, I'm not sure that you knew that this was possible, but we have visual material
here.
You heard the audience react to it.
And it's incredible that I, a professional writer, can actually describe to the listening
audience. You remember the devastating word
painting that I painted earlier? I can do that too with your evidence. So we have here two photos
of adorable Matt and Wiki together. On the left there is a photo of them on a couch. Both are wearing matching Asbury Lanes bowling alley t-shirts.
Wiki, you've got a really jaunty kerchief on.
And that, you're wearing the same sneakers you're wearing tonight.
Unless you have 35 identical pairs, which I would not put past you.
And whether this was intentional or not,
you're sitting framed beneath a painting of a sad couple
sitting exactly the same way.
Listeners at home,
if that was not an adequate word painting for you,
you may go to the Judge John Hodgman page at MaximumFun.org
or our Instagram, at Judge John Hodgman.
Then there is a picture of the two of you in what looks like pajama tops,
both of which are featuring the Grinch,
and they are identical pajama tops.
So in both of these cases, you are dressed eerily alike.
Is it eerie? Was it planned or unplanned?
It was unplanned.
That was, it's become such a joke.
To which are you referring?
Yeah, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. I want you to remember, this is become such a joke. To which are you referring? Yeah, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
The pajama.
I want you to remember, this is a podcast, man.
The pajama tops, it's become such a joke amongst our families that my mom bought us matching pajamas.
Just so, not only are we twins during the day,
but at night.
While you sleep.
Yeah, while we sleep.
And your Asbury Lanez shirts,
was that a coincidence or was that a plan?
No, it was like I had a bunch of those t-shirts,
so I gave one to Wiki,
but that's one of her favorite t-shirts.
Forgive me for wearing the shirt that you gave me.
I'm so sorry.
Sue me.
Oh, Lord.
How did this start happening?
So neither of these are actual evidence of what you claim happens,
which is that you guys accidentally dress alike.
So here are my questions for you, Matt.
How did this start happening?
And why does it bother you?
Okay, so it started happening just because, I mean, I think beyond these photos, we...
These photos prove nothing, Matt.
I know.
Is there more? Next one.
Okay.
Here we see you both in sort of lumberjack-style sweatshirts.
Excuse me, over-shirts.
Wiki, you're sporting that incredible red kerchief again.
Matt, you're wearing a Descendants t-shirt.
You're cool.
And then there are four people down here, you and two friends down here in the third
picture.
Who are these guys?
So that's Wiki's sister and her boyfriend.
But I do want to note for that picture of four I put my my jacket around my neck because when I wore it
around my waist too we looked like we were like that couple that like coordinates together was
we're both wearing jean shorts black like graphic tees so though these photos do not illustrate the
problem that you bring to the court of you guys dressing alike coincidentally,
I will take it on faith that that happens. You are concerned that you look like you're coordinating your outfits when you are not. Almost every night, yes. And why does that bother you? Why would that
worry you? I just don't want to be that couple that like walks out the door, you know, like the
couple you see at a theme park
or on vacation together where they have team,
whatever the last name is of the couple,
and they just walk around like that couple.
Yeah.
I don't want to be that couple.
No, but I'm getting a really good idea
of what my sentence is going to be.
Wiki, do you verify that this is true, that you guys occasionally dress alike?
Well, yeah.
So just in general, I feel like I have a uniform and whatever.
I admit it.
I like to wear what I know I look good in, which is dark jeans. Yeah, what's your style?
I like to wear what I know I look good in, which is dark jeans. Yeah, what's your style?
Dark jeans, like a band T-shirt, sneakers, like a plaid or like a jean jacket or this or whatever.
You're a cool rock and roll babe.
Yeah, I'm a cool rock and roll babe.
And so I think what happens is that when, so we're by Coastal.
Well, I think what happens is that when, so we're by Coastal, so when Matt comes here, he brings a little suitcase with the same things that he knows that I wear all the time.
And he has very little options.
And so when I come into the room from this really mysterious other room, he's like, what you're wearing, what I'm wearing. And I'm like, well, one, even before I knew you, dude,
like, I was wearing this.
So you probably should have looked at my OkCupid pictures
a little more carefully.
If you didn't want to come across this problem.
Like, I swear to God,
I've just been dressing this way all my life.
Are you saying that Matt has been biting your style?
I kind of think so, but okay, fair enough.
So if you dress up matchy-matchy, do you mind being matchy-matchy, or is that just Matt's thing?
I really don't mind that much, because part of my whole thing is I like to wear hoops, and I like to wear earrings.
I don't know if you've seen it.
Let the record show that Matt has hoop earrings in right now.
And I like to wear earrings.
And I don't know if you've seen it. Let the record show that Matt has hoop earrings in right now.
Not right now because I'm trying to change it up for Matt.
Just kidding.
Anyway, so I really don't mind.
And then I'm not even thinking about that.
I'm thinking about what are we going to eat?
Or who's going to call the lift?
Or whatever the next step is.
And he's like, oh, my God.
We can't look alike.
And I'm like who cares like and
and if and also like I don't really I don't need to be like a cute couple but like if we I'm not
paying attention so if someone happens to mention like oh you look alike I'm like oh my god that's
so cute right I don't know are you afraid of being cute Matt no? No, I love being cute.
Yeah.
Well, you're both very cute.
He does not like being cute.
When you dress alike, who changes?
I think Wiki has a, in terms of scale and scope of her wardrobe, she usually does.
It's not me telling my wife to change.
You're like, I don't want to be matching.
You change, Wiki?
It's literally, there's another flannel I can put on.
There isn't much I can change into.
Like, I think today is a good example of she can rock.
Like, she has like, in terms,
she's a more adventurous dresser than I am.
Are you biting Wiki's style?
Am I what?
Biting Wiki's style.
I'm 48 years old.
I hope not.
No.
Wait, can I say something?
You may.
Okay, so... I love Matt, I really do, but sometimes...
Okay, so here's the thing.
It's like the reason I wear the same thing all the time
is because I can imagine myself in it,
and I feel comfortable, and I don't have to, like,
that's not another worry I need.
But sometimes I'm like, I'll try something new.
And so, like, I have, like, a few things that I'm like,
okay, maybe I've, like, created this image of myself,
and I'm like, I think maybe I can do it.
And then he's
like what are you wearing he's like no no no no no I'll allow it okay no no okay not okay guys
again not don't it's not a like it's not a crazy like he's just gonna whatever it's just like
and I'm just like okay like it's something that my like my's just whatever it's just like and I'm just like okay like
it's something that my like my mom would say like really you're gonna go out
I'm just like okay no I'll go back and put on my flannel and my jeans and my sneakers thank you
yeah Matt I've seen a lot of pictures of the two of you supposedly dressed the same
in all of them Wiki is wearing a cool neckerchief,
and I haven't seen you wear a cool neckerchief once.
So who are you to make fun of her
when you don't even have a single cool neckerchief?
I think his beard might be too long.
You can't see it.
I have a big, long beard, and I literally make and sell neckerchiefs.
All right, here's what. beard and I literally make and sell necker chips. Alright,
here's what.
A. Matt,
you should be proud of being team Wikimat.
You guys are cute.
B.
It's cute
to be matchy-matchy. You shouldn't care
what other people think, but since you're obviously
someone who does, if you don't want to be matchy-matchy, it's on care what other people think, but since you're obviously someone who does, if you don't want to be
matchy-matchy, it's on you. Bring more
clothes. Get stuff that she doesn't wear.
Get wild things that
Wiki does not have in her,
you know, like, don't get a neckerchief.
Get your bandana
and tie it around your leg like Scott Baio.
Showing a little shachi.
Liven up your outfits.
And C, start wearing neckerchiefs,
Matt.
Put this on shop.
Put this on shop.com.
Right.
And I order you to buy a neckerchief.
A neckerchief,
the most distinctive neckerchief
that is available via Jesse Thorne's
men's and persons fashion website.
Put this on shop.com.
One that Wiki would never ever wear
and wear that neckerchief team Wiki Matt forever with pride.
That is all.
Wiki and Matt,
please welcome to the stage Jason Robertson.
All right.
Let's see.
Who did you say?
I said Jason Robertson.
And who else?
On my paper here, it just says Jason Robertson. And who else? On my paper here, it just says Jason Robertson.
Sorry. Jason.
Is there someone
with you? Someone you have a dispute with?
No, no. No.
Jason,
you know the rules of this court, do you not?
There shall be no disputes
against Society A,
B, me, C,
yourself.
Are you bringing a case against yourself,
Jason? Kind of.
Ah!
You're going to make me drop the scavel.
I'll allow it. Tell me the nature of your
dispute, if that's what it is.
Well, in first grade
I won a state
writing competition. Oh, I see., I won a state writing competition.
Oh, I see.
It's just a brag.
By plagiarism.
It would be great if you just walked off stage.
Yeah, yeah, that's it.
Okay, so in first grade, you won a state writing competition.
Yeah, yeah, and by plagiarizing a very popular children's book,
which I...
Excuse me?
Yeah, yeah.
A very popular children's book
from the mid-80s,
Dr. DeSoto,
which I learned
that you like quite a bit.
Yeah, I love that book
by William Steig.
Yeah, so when I heard that,
I wrote you.
I know.
Oh, look, I know why you're here.
When I heard that, I wrote you.
I know.
Oh, look, I know why you're here.
So how do you mean you plagiarized it?
So I guess the assignment, you had to write a short story, I think, in class. You didn't get to take it home or, yeah.
And I just copied the plot wholesale.
Just the whole thing. Nothing original. I changed the two types of animals in it.
Well, that makes it fair use. You brought some evidence. Let's take a look at the
evidence. Oh, there you are in first grade.
Yeah.
Who's that?
That's my dad.
That's your dad.
So for the listener at home, this is Jason in first grade on his dad's shoulders attempting
to strangle his own dad.
And then what is the other thing there?
It's what I'm holding in my hand here.
And it's the...
My mom saved it.
It's the compendium of all the winning stories from that year.
All the winners got to go to a multi-day writing workshop at the University of Iowa.
So it's the Irish Republican Army Prose Writing Contest.
It's the IRA.
What does IRA stand for there?
International Reading Association.
International Reading Association.
You've got some extremely beautiful dot matrix clip art of quills and scrolls on either side
that speaks to the authenticity of this being a document from 1991 to 1992. Next slide, please.
And here is your winning entry, The Squirrel and the Wolf. Now, for those of you who do not know,
Dr. DeSoto is the story about a dentist who is a mouse who... Look, why are you laughing?
Anyone can be a dentist. Just like anyone can be a Dracula.
That's...
Shh.
Anyway, well, how would you describe the story of Dr. DeSoto?
I forget what the animal is in the original.
Fox. It's a fox. I forget what the animal is in the original.
It's a fox.
A fox has a toothache,
and so he goes to a widely renowned dentist who's very good at what he does, this mouse.
And the mouse and his wife are nervous
about accepting a fox as a patient, but they do.
And then the fox gets hungry in the middle of the procedure.
And Dr. DeSoto is so small,
he's got to climb into the fox's mouth to fill the cavity or do whatever work he's doing. Yeah,
that's the suspenseful bit. The mouse is in the mouth and you're like, oh my gosh, is he going to
be eaten? Yeah. Yeah. And the fox is under the influence of the gas they've given him for the
procedure and starts to mumble to himself.
What kind of thing does he mumble?
He starts mumbling about how hungry he is and how delicious mice are and how easy it would be to have a quick snack while the dentist is in his mouth.
And, spoiler alert, that mouse gets et up.
And that's the end of the story, right?
No.
That's it.
How does Dr. DeSoto avoid his fate?
So Dr. DeSoto says,
well, you know what?
We're not done with your treatment yet.
You have to come back tomorrow.
And he hatches a plot with his wife overnight
and administers a glue in the fox's mouth the next day and then tells him it has
to, it's going to keep his mouth shut for 24 hours because it has to set into his dentine.
And then what happens?
And then the fox realizes that he can't open his mouth and he's frustrated in his goals
of eating the mouse, and he leaves.
I don't remember the exact ending.
Seems like you've blocked it out for some reason.
And what happens in your story?
The same thing?
Pretty much.
Yeah, I just simplified it, you know?
I didn't hit all the plot points, but I hit all the major ones.
He sends them home, he comes back,
and he glues his mouth shut,
and everyone lives happily ever after.
You simplified it.
You're saying that William Steig used too many words?
Yeah.
In a way, I made it my own, because... I mean, it's like jokes.
Anyone can take them and put their own riff on them.
Yeah, yeah.
Even if it's like a National Book Award winner.
So,
this
evidence of your
misdeed will be available on the
Judge John Hodgman Instagram page and our
show page. The change that
you made was, instead of a mouse,
you made it a squirrel.
Which is ridiculous, because squirrels
can never be dentists.
At least not on my watch.
No.
It would be ironic because squirrels have disgusting teeth.
And the fox becomes a wolf, and you submitted this, and what happened?
I won first place for first grade in my county.
It was like 100 kids or something across the state.
And no one noticed that you had stolen this plot?
No, which it's so weird.
Like even in the moment when I won, I was like, nobody called me out.
And then I had to go to a county awards ceremony in like a big theater like this.
And I read the story out loud to all these educators and parents of other children who lost and won and both.
And the whole time I just thought someone...
And no one stood up at any point and said,
Shame to you?
I expected it the whole time.
And how did you feel when it didn't happen?
You know, it was probably the beginning of the end, a little bit.
It probably made me a little more jaded earlier than I would have been otherwise.
And what grade are you in now, third?
Yeah.
I wish.
I wish I was still in third grade.
How old are you?
Oh, how old am I?
I'm 35.
It was almost 30 years ago.
Yeah.
And has it haunted you?
Yeah, yeah. I think about it. I think about it now and then, and I, I have no idea what I could do to atone.
Have you tried to atone for this? No, I don't know what to do. I was too ashamed in the moment.
I didn't do anything the rest of. Ashamed or afraid of what would happen? Afraid. Afraid. It
was fear. Because you were cognizant of your wrongdoing. Yeah. I mean, you changed those animals for a reason.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You know what I mean?
That's evidence of knowledge of guilt.
Yeah, I was smart enough to do that.
You changed some details.
Do you think you did it because you were on the spot?
I sympathize with you.
If you were told to write this story in class,
you couldn't even go home and work on it.
Did you feel like you were put on the spot and you had to come up with something and this is the best you could
do no i was always a good student even in first grade you make a conscious decision to cheat
i can't remember to be quite honest you knew that you did cheat but i knew that i cheated
yeah all right and what do you seek from this court um The rights to the book Sylvester and the Magic Pebble.
So granted.
It's just weighed on me all the
I'm like what could I do? You know I mean
some other kid could have won. It was really
cool. I got to go to the University of Iowa
and there were all these workshops about
writing and kids and I thought
it'd be so cool to go to a college and
be a writer. You got drunk with Raymond Carver.
Yeah right.
Got to hang with George Lish.
Yeah, yeah.
Gordon Lish.
Sorry.
Fraud.
Shame.
But you haven't answered my question.
What do you want from me?
I don't know.
We've never had a case of self-recrimination on this show.
I know.
you want from me?
I don't know.
We've never had a case of self-recrimination on this show. I know.
I know.
When I wrote you, I just asked for your injunction and punishment.
And then I immediately regretted it when I realized it might actually end up here.
Yeah.
Jason, you may not know this about yourself, but you have a history of doing things impulsively.
Not realizing that there may be ramifications.
Yeah.
Well, I could order you thrown into this organ pit here at the Castro Theater.
Where you could live in darkness and shame alone
forever, but I instead think that you need to process what you expected to have happen
that never did happen.
So please stand up on the stage and face everyone here.
Come further. Come into the light.
I want you to look at everyone here, think about what it was like reading your obviously
fraudulent story.
At some point you could have turned to your mom and dad and said, I can't take this award.
I can't accept it.
I can't go there and read this.
I made a mistake and they would have understood, but you didn't.
And you expected to be called out and you weren't.
And now I'd like everyone in the room to stand up.
Do not do anything yet, do not say anything.
Point with either your right or left hand at Jason.
Jesse, do you have a phone with a timer on it?
I've got to get a picture of this.
Yeah. I've got it here.
I'm setting a timer for 20 seconds.
I want everyone in the room,
this is for Jason's benefit,
to yell shame over and over at the top of your lungs.
Starting three, two, one, now.
Shame! Shame! Shame! Shame! of your lungs. Starting three, two, one, now.
Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. I'm just pausing it here at 10 seconds. you're doing an okay job
but
you're yelling all in unison
as though you are automatons in my cult
and as much as I would like that to be true
I need Jason to feel the full force of your wrath
so I need you to don the full force of your wrath. So I need you to, like,
some of, like, don't do it all at once. And really feel, like, betrayed. All right? Ten
more seconds. And go.
All right, all right, all right.
Enough, enough, enough, enough, enough.
That was too good.
That was... Jason, I have to apologize.
All right.
Hang on, hang on, hang on.
Don't worry, don't worry.
I know it's coming.
You may sit if you want.
Jason, what do you...
What do you do for a living?
First grade teacher.
At the moment, I work for a small construction company in the East Bay.
Okay.
So that was hard for me as well as you.
It hurt you more than it hurt me.
Did you feel anything in that moment?
The second half was pretty good, but...
Oh, I didn't realize it's some part of your weird kink.
John, we're in the Bay Area. It's all part of a weird kink.
I hope that the second half, at least, was a little bit, I guess, cathartic is maybe the word I'm looking for.
Punishing, I think.
Now for atonement. You have gotten the punishment, now you atone, and by atoning I would like you to seek
out one or more elementary schools in your community and offer to tell your
story to a first grade and explain to them why what happened and how you felt and why it is
wrong because truthfully truthfully what you did was not precisely plagiarism
right because you did not use the actual words you you stole a plot and yet my
wife is a high school teacher and plagiarism is something that kids do not, is a real problem
among high school kids.
It is not necessarily seen as something that is bad, and it is a problem that is getting
progressively worse.
And I think that if you were to tell your story and tell people how you felt about it
and why it was wrong, that that would put some good in the world that would
make up for the relatively petty theft that you engaged in.
And it wasn't merely that you, in the moment, made an error of judgment.
It's that you accepted a reward and praise for something that you didn't deserve, right?
And therefore, someone else didn't get that prize.
And they did the right thing and you did the wrong thing.
So you need to get that message out there into the world
and talking to kids.
Just one school.
Do one school, I think you'll feel better.
You might want to do more.
But I'm only going to order you to do one.
And will you agree to do that?
I can do that.
All right, good.
Now, I want everyone, sure.
That was spontaneous applause.
That was not the automatons of my cult.
That was real human beings appreciating you.
But now I would like the automatons to yell for 20 seconds
forgive ready go
that sounded weird that sounded you're still in mob mode.
Let's just say we forgive you all together. One, two, three. We forgive you. Jason,
thank you for sharing. Thank you. Jason Robertson.
Thank you to all of our litigants for sharing cases and to the staff at the SF Sketch Fest and the Castro Theater.
You know, I used to work for this Sketch Fest. Good people. Great comedy festival.
Thanks to Mary Fassbender Gottschalk for naming the episode Night Night Court. This episode recorded by Matthew Barnard, edited by Jennifer Marmer, produced by Hannah Smith.
Backstage visit by my mom.
Follow us on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman, where you can see a little video that I recorded
from the stage of our litigant being shamed by the thousand or so people in the Castro
Theater.
You can also follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
Submit your cases at MaximumFun.org
slash JJHO
or email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
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