Judge John Hodgman - Live From the London Podcast Festival
Episode Date: May 3, 2017"Pleading the Fifth" and Swift Justice taped in front of a live audience at the London Podcast Festival at King's Place. We also hear from Dan Schreiber and Anna Ptaszynski, from QI and the No Such Th...ing as a Fish podcast, with a dispute regarding fact-finding for their own show. Plus, music from Emmy the Great! Thank you to Megan Hodgkiss 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 was recorded live in London, England, at the London Podcast Festival at King's Place with special musical guest Emmy the Great.
Let's go to the stage.
Tonight's case, pleading the fifth.
Will is the fourth in a series of men in his family
with the same name,
and he wants to keep the tradition going,
making his potential future child the fifth.
Jess says this practice is patriarchal.
She'd rather not follow it.
Who's right, who's wrong?
Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom.
You all may be seated. You stay.
I've known you since you were a babe at Joanna's breast.
You smile like Garion and fight like Tig,
and there's some of Kevin in you,
else you would not wear that cloak.
But Tyrion is Tywin's son, not you.
I said so once to your father's face,
and he would not speak to me for half a year.
Weird dads are such thundering great fools,
even the sort who come along once in a thousand years.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Please raise your right hands.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, so help you God, or whatever?
I do.
Or whatever. Or whatever.
I'm not comfortable with that.
Just say I do.
I do.
Okay, good.
I'm in charge here.
John's in charge.
Well, technically, I'm in charge.
There's a chain of command in fake internet laws.
Just, I'd like it to be none.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling
despite the fact that he himself is an emotionally stunted, afraid of conflict only child?
I do.
I do.
It was really tense there, what you were going to say.
You really played that pause well.
I like it.
Good.
Will and Jessica, you may be seated.
For an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors. Can you name the piece of culture
that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
Will, you are brought here against your will,
so to speak,
in order to defend your life choices.
So you get to choose first
whether you guess or Jessica guesses.
Which is it going to be, Will?
Well, I think strategically it's always best
to guess second, so I'll guess second. Right, and also I read my script wrong, Jessica. Actually, it going to be, Will? Well, I think strategically it's always best to guess second, so I'll
guess second. Right, and also I read my script wrong,
Jessica. Actually, you get to decide.
I apologize.
Jessica, you were brought here against your will
by your will.
So therefore,
you get
to choose first. Will you guess
first or will you guess second? I will
guess second.
Classic if cowardly move.
All right.
Will, go ahead.
What is your guess?
I have no idea.
That's impossible. So I'm going to guess I've Got Five on It by the Loomies.
It's a great guess.
I would have said I Got Five on It by the Looney's Bay Ballas remix, but...
All right, that's a guess.
We'll put that in the guess book.
Now, Jessica, what is your guess?
I guess five on it by the Looney's Bay Ballas remix.
Now, it's better.
It's got Drew Down on it.
Another guess.
Really?
You're not the nerds I thought you were.
Very good.
Someone in the audience must know.
Ah, but which book?
Who said it?
Feast for Crows.
That's right.
The most overlooked.
That quote was from George R.R. Martin's
A Feast for Crows.
Thus, all guesses are wrong.
So now we have to hear this dumb case.
So what's the problem?
Jessica, you are brought here against your will by your will, as I had said before.
Why are you doing this, Will?
What is the issue?
Well, I come from a long line of wills.
I'm, in fact, Will the Fourth.
That's your whole name, Will the Fourth?
Well, I have a secret last name, so.
Oh, really?
Because you belong to an international global conspiracy of some kind?
A hidden secret society last name?
His mother will cry if she ever hears this.
Oh, you're hiding your identity.
I'm hiding my identity, or at least the middle part of my identity.
So what, if you were to use an identity-concealing pseudonym,
what would you say your whole name is?
Well, there was a president in the United States
that has had four sons with his name,
so I'm going to go with William Howard Taft.
And you're William Howard Taft IV?
That's right. I'll go with William Howard Taft.
Oh, were it only true.
If only I had son of Taft in my fake courtroom.
There's a V out there right now. I liked son of Taft. I like Taft in my fake courtroom. There's a fifth out there right now.
I liked Son of Taft.
I like Taft Goes to Africa Better.
Those were some fun comedy films featuring ex-president Howard Taft
traveling the world getting into scrapes while stuck in his bathtub the entire time.
Directed by legendary photographer Gordon Parks.
in his bathtub the entire time.
Directed by legendary photographer Gordon Parks.
So, Jessica,
William Howard Taft IV,
you are married to him?
I am.
You are, I see.
And you do not have a child now.
No.
You would like to have one in the future.
In the future.
And he would like to name that child William Howard Taft V.
Correct.
And you say, no way.
No, Jose. No, Jose.
No, okay.
So you're skipping right over way straight into Jose.
Are you saying we can't name it Jose?
I'd be better than...
By the way, your accents are beautiful.
What part of England are you from?
Cambridge.
Ah, Cambridge, England.
You're studying there, Your professor's there?
What?
I'm a postdoctoral fellow there.
A postdoctoral fellow in what?
Science.
Guys.
Jessica, have you met William Howard Taft before?
Does his story change every time he comes home?
It's always science.
This week, it's podiatry.
It's fine.
We're trying to cure tuberculosis again.
So it's science and medicine.
She's right.
She's right.
What happened to us curing it the last time?
Yeah, that was kind of peevish.
Yeah.
Well, there's still antibiotic resistance out there.
It's coming back.
Kind of like those movie sequels.
Have you heard my cough, by the way?
I haven't.
You've got a cough? Later on, I'd like those movie sequels. Have you heard my cough, by the way? I haven't. You've got a cough?
Later on, I'd like to get a consultation.
Absolutely.
And Jessica, what do you do up there in Cambridge?
I work in London. I'm a consultant.
Excuse me, a consultant.
And that's all you're going to say.
Understood.
She's an assassin.
And where are you from originally?
Middle of nowhere, Illinois.
That's a great, great town.
Free for Illinois, home of the pretzels.
Home of the pretzels?
Mm-hmm.
Let the record reflect that she did a gang sign
indicating pretzels.
You can eat us,
but you can't beat us.
And that's the sports team
at Middle of Nowhere High?
Yes, sir.
Okay, and where are you from originally?
I'm from just outside of Chicago.
Towns have names, you know.
You can just say them.
I'm from Elmhurst.
Elmhurst, all right.
Elmhurst.
Elmhurst, okay, got it.
Good. Well, got it. Good.
Well, welcome here.
We're foreigners, all of us together.
Yes.
So anyway, but you have a very fancy sounding name.
Why do you want to pass this down?
It's very pretentious.
Well, thank you.
I like...
Dr. William Howard Taft IV.
That's me.
Yeah, I like the legacy of it.
I like knowing my family history.
I don't know anything about any of my...
And her family history counts for nothing.
Well, I just don't know it,
and it's hard to know it.
I'm bad with names.
I'm really bad with names.
If only there was some way to find out.
Like you could do research or something.
That's true.
Well, I know...
He's no scientist, ma'am.
Jessica, what if your child is not a William Howard?
Or what if it's a Wilhelmina Howard?
Oh, I don't think we would need to go Wilhelmina Howard.
Oh, okay.
So you're sexist in all kinds of ways.
I suppose.
I don't know how to answer that.
If it's a daughter,
she doesn't deserve your lands and titles.
And therefore,
she's just something to be married off
to another great house outside Illinois,
outside Chicago.
I didn't really think about it that way.
No, clearly you didn't.
I think Jessica thought about it that way. No, clearly you didn't. I think Jessica thought about it that way.
If you were to have
a baby on this stage right now,
first of all, that would be great.
Congratulations.
What name would you
choose, Jessica? What would
you like it to be named? Jessica or
Jessica?
I'm not sure that I have a
particular name, but I would
hope that whatever
child we had shared names
from both sides of our family or our shared
history together. Right, but because you won't
reveal your last name
because you're afraid of your
mother and you're a hired killer.
It's very hard
for me to rule in your favor because I don't
know what the name might be
going forward. Did you take Dr.
Taft's name in your marriage? I did not.
You did not. What is your last name?
James. Oh, really?
I think Jessica James is a pretty good name.
That's a great alias, let me tell you. I think Jessica James is a pretty good name. That is one of,
it's a great alias.
Let me tell you.
Yeah,
I'm an insurance agent from Skokie.
It's go pretzels.
Uh,
it's plausible,
but,
uh,
but it doesn't attract attention.
So,
but I don't know what the last names combined would be.
Right.
Can you whisper it to me?
Can you,
I'm not going to reveal your last names
if you whisper
your actual last names.
I think I've heard
everything I need
in order to make my decision.
I'm retiring
to my secret chambers.
I'll be back in a moment
with my verdict.
Please rise metaphorically
as Judge John Hodgman
exits the courtroom.
I think the obvious question here, Jess, is how many of you killed?
Why would you count?
Fair point.
As long as it keeps working out for you.
Will, do you think that you're a sexist?
Historically, no,
but my perspective is changing quickly, yeah.
Is your goal here to connect your child's name
with, you know, four generations back in your name
and thus the legacy of American slavery?
Man, I gotta say no.
Will, why am I picking on you so much?
You seem like a nice man.
He is a pretty nice man, other than this.
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, metaphor metaphorically be seated.
We've had baby-naming disputes in this courtroom before,
and it is challenging in these days and ages
when we realize that women are whole human beings
who deserve recognition and heritage of their own,
to figure out how to combine last names,
say, when a child is born.
Please don't hold hands.
Please.
Please.
You don't know what I'm going to rule yet.
In fact, you may hold hands,
because that may be the last time.
It may get harsh in here.
You never know.
And it is challenging to rule not only on the rightness of naming a boy child after the father
and leaving poor mom out in the cold forever for all of history.
Do you have any siblings?
I do.
You do? Okay, well, then they'll carry it on, I guess.
But leaving your wife in the cold forever. But it's also challenging because
you have to know whether or not the name is going to be aesthetically pleasing going forward. And
that was not information I had to the very end of this case. Obviously, I am not going to allow you
to do what you want to do, sir. I apologize to you and all of the Howard Tafts going back many, many generations. But it is time
to merge. Now that you have merged your life with Jessica's, it is time to appreciate that
you're going to be merging other things. And out of that genetic stew will come a new human being
that shares parts of you both in body and in name. Now, one of the great solutions that people
often use if you want the child to have one last name,
is you either make up a last name,
or you choose one of them to have a last name,
and then the other one's last name becomes their first name.
And with that in mind, and we'll beep this out for the podcast,
I hereby name your child, boy or girl,
Hodgman, first of his or her name.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as the litigants exit the courtroom.
Thank you so much, Will and Jess.
Will and Jess, ladies and gentlemen.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org.
Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join.
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Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
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What's up next, Jesse? Well, I thought we might do some music. What do up next, Jesse?
Well, I thought we might do some music.
What do you think about that?
I think that would be wonderful.
We have an incredible musical guest.
Yeah, we do.
We do.
You saw her over the summer touring with Beth Orton.
You've heard her on the Mystery Show podcast.
Let's hear it for our musical guest this evening,
Emmy the Great. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I'm starting to lose my social-move. I'm starting to lose my Oh no, everything's moving so close
I'm starting to lose my social halo
I see you sometimes when I'm in Soho
I'm starting to lose my social halo
I'm starting to lose my social halo.
I'm starting to lose my social halo.
And I like you.
I like you, but you're just so cold,
the opposite of volcano, volcano
And I saw you today when I was in Soho
You held me and then you
You let go, you let go
I'm starting to lose my social, social halo.
Oh no, I see you and then I say hello
You and your friends, you turn back so slow
I think that you might be
Laughing at me
laughing at me And I like you, I like you
But you're just so cold
The opposite of volcano, volcano
I saw you today when I was in Soho
You held me and then you held me and then you let go you let go and all of your friends there
they called me your co And I like you, I like you but you're just so cold
The opposite of volcano, volcano
I saw you today when I was in Soho
You held me and then you, you let go, you let go
I'm starting to lose my social
My social halo
Social
Social halo
Social Social hello Social
Social hello Emmy the Great, ladies and gentlemen.
We'll hear more from her later on this evening.
It's right there in the name. Great.
Oh, that's what that means.
Yeah. It's also her given name.
Judge Hodgman, here's my...
Here's what I'm thinking.
I had an idea.
I feel like we came all the way here from the United States.
Yes, you can tell from my hat.
God's United States of America.
Yes.
And if we only do one more case tonight,
I feel like we won't have spread enough justice across this great land.
Yes.
We need to fit more justice in.
We need to pack it in.
How are we going to do that?
Here's my idea, Judge.
I say we take 10 minutes right now and see if we can knock out three cases in succession.
That's only three minutes
and 20 seconds per case.
Do you think you can do it?
No.
Audience, do you think Judge Hodgman
can judge three cases in 10 minutes?
I can fly.
Thank you for bringing me back to life.
Yes, let's get it going.
Let's get some litigants out here,
and we'll see if I can get, finally,
some British people to fight for my pleasure.
Who's first, Jesse?
Our first case, Colin.
No, it's fine.
You're doing great, guys.
Colin and Jessica.
Colin and Jessica.
You're doing great, guys.
Colin and Jessica.
Colin and Jessica.
Hello, Colin. Hello, Jessica.
Hello.
Hello. I'm sorry that you came out so soon.
I'm sorry. Someone opened the door and I went for it.
No, I'm sorry. Truly, I'm the one who's sorry and I apologize.
That should never have happened.
Colin, did you think that was an exit?
Were you making a break for it?
There's a possibility, yeah.
It's so nice to have you here.
Where do you live?
Here in London or where?
We live just north of Brighton,
which is a city on the coast.
Oh, very nice.
And you journeyed in here?
Yes.
But you're not the farthest to journey today.
Some people just came into the room from Germany, right?
Latecomers?
Germans?
Yay!
There they are.
All right, well done.
Colin and Jessica.
Way to be late, by the way.
Yeah.
Not your usual reputation.
And Jessica,
what is your relationship to Colin?
I'm his wife.
You're his wife.
And what is the nature of your dispute?
As the person who brought the case,
I'll do the summary. Jess is from the United States. I see. brought the case yes sure yeah jess is from the
united states born born raised and educated i'm from the uk whenever we travel anywhere including
the united states including her hometown if someone asks where we're from she will jump in
very quickly and say we're both from the uk we're from the uk no't care for that. You guys are from the UK? I thought you were from Connecticut.
She's actually from rural Pennsylvania.
Where are you from, Jessica?
I'm from a tiny village called Ligonier,
which is just outside of Pittsburgh.
Wait a minute.
I've been to Pittsburgh,
and yins don't talk like those guys talk.
Go stillers.
Let the record show
that Jessica said
almost inaudibly,
Go Steelers.
That's the traditional way
to say it.
Go Steelers.
That's some real
football spirit there
from you, Jessica.
And not only have you lost
your Pittsburgh accent
if you ever had one,
but you seem to be, I don't want to say affecting,
something of a non-American accent.
Yeah, we get a real Madonna situation.
Is that fair to say?
I think it's fair to say that I've adapted to my environment.
This is weird and uncanny.
Why are you doing this?
How long have you been living here?
Nearly 15 years.
Nearly 15?
Well, that's almost as old as the country itself.
So I guess...
And Colin, how long have you been married?
Great.
Yeah.
All right, I find you, Jessica.
Great.
Yeah.
All right, I find you, Jessica. I'm a great singer.
Colin, you have to learn how long you've been married.
Jessica, you know,
I urge you to seek authenticity within yourself.
There is beauty in Western Pennsylvania,
and there's a kind of harsh guttural beauty
in the Pittsburgh accent.
If you want to go neutral, that's fine.
You're going to be facing challenges in life
if you don't acknowledge who you are.
But you can talk whatever funny way you want to.
Just don't say you're from the UK.
You were born in Pennsylvania.
Judge Anne Hodren rules.
Colin and Jessica,
our next one against Dave and Felix. Dave and rules. Colin and Jessica, our next one against Dave and Felix.
Dave
and Felix.
Please,
you may be seated. We have to move very
swiftly here because
we want to make sure we meet out as much justice as possible.
Thank you for bringing beer to the stage.
Dave
or Felix, which one of you is
going to give me a sip of your beer
good
cover for me Jesse
Judge Hodgman's drinking beers
I'm not 100% sure
what the premise of this bit is
Felix
I find in favor of Felix colder beer that's called what the premise of this bit is. Felix.
I find in favor of Felix.
Colder beer.
That's called trial by lager.
I have a feeling you're correct, Felix.
Let's see what happens when you tell me things.
Felix, what's the nature of the dispute?
So the nature of the dispute is
my brother believes that we should
abandon the traditional family Christmas in favor of moving to Leeds, where he lives.
I see.
To, rather than the rest of the family joining us, just me, Dave, our partners, and some of Dave's friends.
You're trying to rewrite Christmas, Dave.
Yes.
Yeah, similar to a recent podcast judgment in which you expounded upon how lovely it was to, once you've reached your mid-twenties, strike out and have your own incredible, wonderful time.
Yes, what podcast was that?
Building your own traditions.
I think it was on Serial. It was related to an American holiday, Thanksgiving.
Oh, I see.
But this is Christmas, Dave.
It is.
You're trying to bring the precedent of the Judge John Hodgman court,
where I said it's okay to blow off Thanksgiving because it's stupid and made up.
I think they're analogous situations.
Christmas is yours.
You are taking it up a notch.
Perhaps, but my family...
Are terrible?
Barring the people invited
I've got to be careful here, haven't I?
No you don't
I'm going to say my name, I'm going on record
Yeah, that's right
Hi mum, my family are monsters
Hi mum
They're terrible
Felix, do you concur or disagree?
I love my family, especially... Mother, hi, thank you. You're lovely.
But they are somewhat confrontational at times.
What I would say is that...
What's an example?
So, for example, and this occurred to me earlier this evening,
my mother fell out with her mother about 20 years ago.
They've not spoken since
because my mother didn't invite her to Christmas one year.
So it's a family tradition.
Somewhat, yeah.
Ah, I see.
And yet you want to include Felix
even though you say your family are monsters.
Felix is obviously not a monster
even though he looks like a young vampire.
I love my brother and his wife very dearly.
I would very much like for them to join me this year.
I think we can have a genuine good time.
And it'll be just you and your partner.
There will be some wayward souls who live in the same city as me who will join us.
Wandering ghosts and magi and stuff.
Who have no family to join.
Oh, okay.
Marley and Marley, the Marley
brothers, they might turn up. Okay, good.
And do you see this as an ongoing
thing or a one-off?
We'll see how it goes.
Do you anticipate, Felix, that your mother will be
very upset should you go, should you both
break off and celebrate Christmas separately and
leave this Christmas? Ultimately, I
will at some point be going to see her,
whether it's on Christmas Day or otherwise.
Obviously, having a wife,
it's sort of accepted that we rotate Christmases,
that sort of thing. But she's not going to stop talking
to you for 20 years, which is obviously what Dave
wants. As long as she doesn't hear this podcast,
I think I'm probably fine.
Oh, I'm going to send her an LP
of this podcast.
Dave, I'm going to send her an LP of this podcast. Dave, I order you
to have a separate Christmas to give it a try.
Felix, I order you to go at least
one year to see what it's like,
the transgression against one's mother. You have
to throw your parents out of the house sometime.
And here is a
shilling. Go buy a big fat goose.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Thank you so much. Next cave and field.
Thanks, ladies and gentlemen.
Sorry, Mom.
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,
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If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I-R.
Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah!
We are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Our final dispute on stage from QI and the hit podcast,
No Such Thing as a Fish.
Here with the dispute, please welcome Dan Schreiber and Anna
Tyshinsky.
Dan and Anna,
what a pleasure to have you here.
We have one minute and 24 seconds on the clock.
No Such Thing
as a Fish is one of my very favorite podcasts
and I've met you before, Dan.
We're old friends. We're practically brothersave and felix and i look forward to seeing
you at christmas uh and i've never met you before and it's a pleasure to see you in person but let's
get to the dispute what is the problem anna the problem is that we present a factual podcast that
people actually listen to buzz marketing your podcast on my podcast yeah that's the reason
we're here we're doing a show tomorrow, a few tickets.
No.
And every week, Dan has to provide us with one fact
to present on the podcast,
and I keep having to reject his facts
on the grounds that they're not interesting
and they're not facts.
Yeah.
And I argue that they are.
Well, you and I both know that non-facts are usually more interesting than facts.
Yeah.
But do you dispute, I mean, you're disputing the factuality of what he is asserting.
Is that correct?
I'm disputing about 17 things about it, but let me give you an example.
Please.
So, one fact that Dan's presented for consideration is that the real reason the Titanic sank is
not that it hit an iceberg, but that so many time travelers
visited it at the same time that the weight
of them all pushed it underwater.
Yeah.
That's kind of s*** I'm dealing with.
Let me qualify this slightly, John.
It's a theory that that is
the reason that the Titanic sank. So I say
my fact is there is a theory that
the real reason the Titanic sank is because
of time travelers. Is it a theory
that came from your brain?
No, but... Someone else's brain.
Yeah, but definitely no more than one other person
believes in it.
One other person. That's an acknowledgement
that you believe it. You see, secretly
I think... Well, that's an issue. Now, do you...
Is your problem
with him that he puts forward
these facts or believes?
No, my problem is that
I think it's very dangerous
for us to be spreading
these facts.
You know, we have
at least 10 listeners
and if they'll only,
you know, if Donald Trump
has taught us anything,
it's that people hear
tiny little random bits
of stuff that they
half remember
and then cling to them
for life.
And I think they'll
half remember what Dan said
and then think it was the truth
and then go away
with these insane convictions.
You understand that in our country, we've given up on facts.
I should move to America.
This is clearly where I'd be taken in.
I tried another time traveler fact for our show, which is that in Britain, according to some conspiracy theorists, the National Lottery actually hires specific members of staff
to stop time travelers from winning the lotto.
And that was rejected as well.
And why did you reject that?
I just think don't give these people air time.
Actually, Dan, I want to talk to you more about that.
What's going on?
There's this special branch of the lottery,
time travel.
Special branch of the lottery.
How do they stop them?
They have time travel detection devices and then they stop them they have time travel detection devices
and then they murder them i think or do they go back in time so they were and kill them as babies
yeah i haven't actually gone further than the headline of that fact it might be the case that
if you do actually win the lottery they go to your house and they say ah clearly a time traveler no
money for you and then yeah well that's just a scam. But the Titanic, you're talking, you're saying that tourist time travelers from the future
are going back to the Titanic to check it out
because in history it sank,
but they are paradoxically causing it to sink?
Exactly.
Yeah.
And how much sense does that make as well?
It's just like what happened with the Hindenburg.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah, same thing.
There we go.
I just, so I questioned Dan on this exact logical paradox
at one point and
said how is it possible that they sank it if they were going back to see the moment that it sank and
dan said oh no the first time it sank because it hit an iceberg but then all the times after that
it was because the time travelers were visiting it it's a theory of many worlds
yeah that is not a that is not a fact it is conspiracy theory. But it's a fact that it's a conspiracy theory.
But is it a well-worn conspiracy theory or one lone nut?
Well, I'm trying to help this guy out and spread his message.
Did you end up discussing this on the podcast?
No.
He's tried.
We cut it out.
Right.
Well, I am going to be a guest on the podcast this Monday,
and that's the fact that I'm going to bring so i look forward to discussing it then i find in favor of dan just
because it's a great theory sorry anna ladies and gentlemen you did my homework for me thank you
judge hodgman i look I can only speak for myself,
but I would love to hear some more music.
I also would love to hear some more music.
Unfortunately, we already heard one song.
That's all there is.
Hold on, Judge Hodgman.
What? You're saying there's more music in the world than one song?
I'm just spitballing here, but what if there was a second song?
Well, I'd have to see it
to believe it. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome back to the stage, Emmy the Great. The phoenix is headed west
Cross country Nebraska, Nevada
The phoenix has to leave its nest
But change is good for some
It is not good for others
First there were five
There were four
Leafy changed his colors, that's for sure
River was your favorite, his eyes were aqua
He's in our history now like Cleopatra and you
My screen grab beauty queen
Typing something on the screen Like we were seventeen
Like we were seventeen
Like we were seventeen
Like we were seventeen
When we first met we read Bliss
Soon we were too old for this
We thought that weight loss was survival
We thought that Vogue was French for Bible
Up on the wall we put them all leafy changed his colors that's for sure river was your
favorite his eyes were aqua he's in our history now like cleopatra and you my screen grab beauty typing something out in green like we were 17 like we were 17 like we were 17 like we were 17 piano plays softly And liberty, river, rain, summer, leaf And liberty, river, rain, summer, leaf
And liberty, river, rain, summer, leaf
And liberty and you
My screen grab beauty queen
Are you working out your next life dream
Like we were seventeen
Like we were 17 Like we were 17
Like we were 17 Like we were 17
Like we were 17 Like we were 17
Like we were 17 Like we were seventeen Thank you.
Our thanks to the litigants for joining us and to Megan Hodgkiss for naming the case, Pleading the Fifth.
We also want to thank Emmy the Great for joining us in London.
You can find her music and tour dates at emmythegreat.com.
Our producer on this episode was Jennifer Marmer.
She had help from Colin Anderson.
You can follow Judge Hodgman and me on Twitter, at Hodgman and at Jesse Thorne.
Hashtag your tweets, hashtag JJHO,
and like the Judge John Hodgman page on Facebook
to talk about the show.
You can also check out the MaxFun subreddit
at maximumfun.reddit.com. Always a fun conversation about every Judge John Hodgman episode there. I
try and participate myself. You can email us at Hodgman at MaximumFun.org about pretty much
anything. And to submit a case, no case is too big or too small. We always need your cases.
Go to MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
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